Some AI tools that can be used for research/teaching:
1. SciSpace – Useful for chatting with papers, and understanding mathematical expressions. It also has a paraphrasing tool, a citation generator, and a tool for generating video abstracts and presentations of papers. If you have a subscription to GPT-4, you can also use its GPT. @Scispace
2. Research Rabbit – Free tool for finding and organizing academic papers. You can visualize networks of papers and co-authorships. @RsrchRabbit
3. Glasp – Free browser extension (Safari, Chrome, Opera, Edge, …). Useful for highlighting, taking notes and getting AI-powered summaries of webpages, YouTube videos, and more. Glasp is also available on mobile devices. @_Glasp
4. BingAI – Useful for searching, reading articles, describing images and more
6. Bard – Useful for searching and generating text, among other things
7. Semantic Scholar – Academic search engine using AI for precise results.
8. GPT-3.5 – Language model that can summarize, rewrite, and generate text, among other things.
9. Llama-2-70b – A generative text model optimized for dialogue use cases
Freemium and/or paid
1. Claude 2 – AI assistant that can summarize academic papers and provide insights.
2. GPT-4 – Language model that can summarize, rewrite, and generate text, among other things.
3. Advanced Data Analysis (The Code Interpreter) – Useful for analyzing data … and coding
4. Consensus – Answers questions based on academic research.
5. Elicit – AI research assistant that finds and summarizes relevant papers.
6. Scite – Checks citations and analyzes credibility of sources.
7. Perplexity AI – Search engine using scholarly and other credible sources.
8. Iris – It suggests relevant literature for research.
9. DeepL – Useful for translating (31 languages) and rewriting text (English and German) with AI
10. Gladia – Useful for transcriptions of lectures, seminars, … (1 hour of audio in less than 60s)
11. Paperpal – AI grammar checker and online academic writing tool
12. Scholarcy – Online article summarizer tool
13. Connected Papers – Enter a DOI or the name of a paper and it builds you a graph of similar papers in the field