by Dr Chris Lovejoy.
The purpose of an academic knowledge management (AKM) system is to enable you to:
- Aggregate and organise academic papers of interest
- Extract and synthesise their key findings and insights
- Combine these insights for a birds-eye view of a research field's cutting edge
- Exporting references and citations when conducting a research project
This folder contains a template academic knowledge management system. It is best utilised by using the free Obsidian software.
For a more detailed description of this system, its motivations and configuration, see this article.
(NOTE: This README is best read in Obsidian, to enable all links to be visualised correctly and followed.)
The pipeline works as follows:
- Save it into a citation manager (e.g. Zotero - using the chrome extension "Zotero Connector")
- Configure that citation manage to automatically download the PDF and save it into the folder '3_PDFs' (using the Zotfile plugin)
(I use a folder structure to organise my papers in Zotero, with folders for projects and for areas of interest - [[Zotero_folders.png|see this screenshot]].)
- Create a note within folder '1_papers' with the title of the paper (see [[Blockchain-Based Access Control Scheme for Secure Shared Personal Health Records over Decentralised Storage|this example]])
- Add the [[paper_template]] template (using the 'Templater' Obsidian plug-in)
- Read the paper in PDF format while adding highlights
- Export those highlights into markdown format (using the Zotero Mdnotes plugin)
- Put those highlights into the note that was created (in the 'Highlights' section)
- Write a summary and high-level thoughts in own words
- When reading many papers on a particular topic, create a note for that topic within the folder '2_topics' (see example [[Decentralised data storage|here]])
- Add the [[topic_template]] template (using the 'Templater' Obsidian plug-in)
- Create links for all relevant papers that you read from within that note
- Review the summary and high-level thoughts for all linked papers and write a topic summary
Over time, these summaries can be improved and serve as a key self-reference on topics of interest.
- Generate a unique citation key for each paper (using the Better BibTex plugin for Zotero) and include these in each papers markdown note
- When writing the research paper, add citations using \cite{citation_key}. These will automatically be recognised in LaTeX.
- Export the bib file from Zotero and add to LaTeX.
NOTE: The Obsidian Citation Plugin provides an alternative to elements of this flow - I'd recommend checking it out too.
Some example papers are shown here:
- [[Blockchain-Based Access Control Scheme for Secure Shared Personal Health Records over Decentralised Storage]]
- [[GluNet - A Deep Learning Framework for Accurate Glucose Forecasting]]
An example topic-level note is shown here:
- [[Decentralised data storage]]
This demo vault was Runner up in the Obsidian October 2022 competition. See all competition submissions here.