Mendeley Plugin Chrome __exclusive__ Review

The Mendeley Chrome Plugin is the ultimate "set it and forget it" tool for researchers. It removes the friction between discovery and organization. Once you start using it, you will wonder how you ever survived a literature review without it.

If you are on a search results page (like PubMed), the plugin will offer to save all the articles on the page at once. Perfect for when you are doing a systematic review. A word of caution (Read this) The Chrome plugin is a saving tool , not a syncing tool.

Enter the (officially known as the Mendeley Web Importer ). It turns a tedious five-minute process into a single click. mendeley plugin chrome

Whether you use Google Scholar, PubMed, JSTOR, Wiley, Springer, or arXiv, the plugin lights up and says, "I got this."

Here is everything you need to know to save hours on your next literature review. The Mendeley plugin lives in your browser toolbar. When you are on a research database, journal site, or even a news article, it detects the content and allows you to save it directly to your Mendeley library. The Mendeley Chrome Plugin is the ultimate "set

[Download the Mendeley Web Importer] and go close those 30 tabs. You deserve the peace. Do you use Zotero or EndNote instead? The concept is the same—most reference managers have a similar plugin. But for Mendeley users, this is the one tool you can't live without.

It sends items to your cloud library, but it does not pull items down from your library. For reading, annotating, and inserting citations into Word, you still need the or Mendeley Reference Manager app installed on your computer. If you are on a search results page

If you have ever found yourself with 15 tabs open, one foot in a PDF, and no idea where that perfect citation came from, this post is for you.