citrus search
Select a paper, explore related research

About | Details |
---|---|
Name: | citrus search |
Submited By: | Lamont Strosin |
Release Date | 10 months ago |
Website | Visit Website |
Category | Productivity Education Science |
Citrus is a similarity-based search engine for scientific literature: Select a paper, start the search and jump right to the heart of your research domain. Get an overview of important contributions from seminal papers to the state of the art.
Thanks for sharing this! It looks like a valuable tool for researchers who need to quickly identify relevant papers beyond standard keyword searches.
10 months ago
if this tool finds all the papers I'm missing, I might need to start a new shelf for all the new research! Excited to see how well it works.
10 months ago
The idea of using similarity-based search for scientific literature is really exciting.
10 months ago
I have been lookin for a way to efficiently explore scientific literature, and this seems like the perfect solution. I’ll definitely share this with my research colleagues!
10 months ago
It might be helpful to add filters or sorting options based on publication date, citation count, or relevance to refine search results further.
10 months ago
Great job on Citrus! This tool looks like it will be incredibly useful for researchers needing to explore and understand the landscape of scientific literature.
10 months ago
This tool has the potentials to revolutionize research. Consider adding a user feedback option to continually improve the search experience.
10 months ago
I'm excited about this tool! Adding a summary or abstract preview for each paper could help in quickly assessing relevance.
10 months ago
This is nice for researches. Perhaps integrating citation management would make it even more powerful.
10 months ago
Citrus is a powerful tool for finding relevant scientific literature through similarity-based searches! I’m curious—will future updates allow users to customize search criteria, like focusing on specific keywords or narrowing results by publication year?
10 months ago