
π― The Short Answer: Use AI tools to speed up your research workflow, not to generate your dissertation/thesis text. Choose specialized AI research tools like Consensus, Elicit, or Research Rabbit instead of broad generative AI. Always verify your university’s policies on AI use, and never copy-paste AI-generated text into your work.

If you’re working on your dissertation or thesis, you’ve probably wondered whether you can use AI tools to speed up your literature search. That’s totally understandable, especially when you’re drowning in papers and trying to figure out where to start. But there’s a right way and a wrong way to use AI research tools, and the difference could affect your academic integrity and the quality of your work. Let’s talk about how to do this safely and effectively.
π¨ Use AI for Process, Not Product
This is the golden rule, and it’s worth repeating: use AI as part of your process, not your final product. What does that mean? It means you can use AI to help you speed up your research workflow, organize your thinking, and discover papers more efficiently. But the moment you start copying and pasting AI-generated text into your dissertation, you’ve crossed the line.
Think of AI as a research assistant who helps you find papers and organize your thoughts, not as a ghostwriter. You’re doing the heavy lifting, the critical thinking, and the writing. AI is just helping you move faster through the early stages of research. This distinction matters because it keeps you on the right side of academic integrity and ensures your work is genuinely yours.

β Check Your University’s AI Policies
Before you start using any AI tools, you need to know what your university allows. This is non-negotiable. Universities are changing their AI policies rapidly, and what was acceptable last semester might be prohibited this semester. Some universities are banning AI use entirely, while others allow it in specific circumstances. Some even require you to use AI detection tools, which (fair warning) aren’t very accurate and can cause problems.
Here’s what to do: check your university handbook, talk to your advisor, and ask specific questions about what’s permitted. This is especially important if you’re using AI research tools as part of your process. You don’t want to get caught on the wrong side of this policy.

π― Choose the Right AI Tools for Literature Search
Not all AI tools are created equal when it comes to research. This is where many students go wrong. Using broad generative AI tools like ChatGPT or Gemini for literature searching is a mistake. These tools are designed to generate text, not to find accurate academic papers. They hallucinate, pull irrelevant articles, and sometimes make up citations that sound convincing but don’t actually exist.
Instead, you want to use specialized AI research tools that are specifically designed for literature searching. We often see our clientsΒ using these tools to jump-startΒ their research process. There are two main categories worth knowing about: tools that read and filter papers, and tools that map citation networks.

π Tools That Read and Filter Papers
The first category includes tools like Consensus and Elicit. These tools actually read academic papers and pull out the ones most relevant to your specific question. You chat with them, ask them questions about your research topic, and they search through papers to find the best matches. Both tools have free and paid versions, so you can test them out without commitment.
Here’s the catch: these tools won’t find everything. There will be gaps in their results, and you’ll still need to do other research steps like mining references and searching databases yourself. But they’re excellent for getting momentum if you’re stuck at the beginning of your literature review and don’t know where to start. They give you a solid foundation to build on.

π Tools That Map Citation Networks
Research Rabbit is the standout tool in this category. It works by visualizing how papers connect through citations. You upload a paper or drop in a DOI link, and Research Rabbit shows you all the papers written by that author, all the papers they cited, and all the papers that cited them. It creates network graphs that let you explore different research paths really quickly.
What makes this tool powerful is that you can move in multiple directions. You can trace backward through the papers an author cited, or forward through the papers that cited them. If you find a paper that’s ten years old but still relevant, you can instantly see who’s built on that work since then. This approach helps you build a comprehensive view of your research area much faster than traditional searching.

π¬ Write Better Prompts for Better Results
If you’re going to use AI tools, you need to ask them the right questions. A bad prompt gets you a bad answer, or an incomplete one. Spend a few minutes learning how to prompt AI tools effectively (there are plenty of YouTube videos on this). One of the best techniques is to ask the tool: “What other information do you need from me to complete this task?” This forces the tool to tell you what it thinks is necessary to solve your problem.
Good prompting saves you time and gets you better results. It’s a small skill that makes a big difference, especially when you’re trying to narrow down your research focus or find papers on a specific angle of your topic.

π Key Takeaways
- Use AI as a process to speed up research, never as a product to generate text
- Check your university’s AI policies before using any tools
- Choose specialized research tools over broad generative AI
- Consensus, Elicit, and Research Rabbit are reliable options for literature search
- Write effective prompts to get better results from AI tools
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