@Beanc
Just make sure they all exist, and that you can find support for your thesis! I've been skimming a LOT of literature lately for my own projects, and I'm amazed how well keyword searches in PDFs facilitate homing in on what I want.
@Helical_Code
Always do.
Requiring source links helps it not lie 😁
@Beanc @Helical_Code ...which is also a problem with Google Scholar. Nice tool but the index could be changing daily, no idea what's in it.
@b4cks4w @Helical_Code All that said, there's a dude I konw that is working to create a research AI.
probably subject to the same limitations as its base, I think, is chatgpt, but it is super helpful.
beta stage, rn, I believe.
@Beanc @Helical_Code You might know two then ;-).
I'm not using LLM per se, am just putting a front end on a static-ish corpus. Just to have a better nature language query tool. I see the potential.
@b4cks4w Small world =D
Haha let me know when you've got a beta I'll test it for you
@Beanc @Helical_Code No silver bullets but I remind myself how much better faster this is than wandering the stacks. Which I loved doing when they were a thing. Okay grandpa, time for dinner.
More efficient, at least.
I mean, 20 years ago, I could probably have a pretty good handle on most of the key areas within my area's body of literature in my field, but today????? Not a chance.
So many branches of the tree.
@b4cks4w @Helical_Code
I guess the answer is you never rely solely on the results, you rebuild history based on forward and back citations.