

According to a recent experiment, title extraction of our tool is around 70%. The precision of our metadata tool depends on two factors, A) the precision of the title extraction and B) the coverage of Google Scholar. If this happens, a captcha should appear, and after solving it, you should be able to proceed. It might happen, that your IP will be blocked by Google Scholar when you use the service too frequently. when you select to create a blank entry, the option will be pre-selected when open that dialog the next time. Of course, all other options you already know are still available, such as creating a blank entry, or importing the XMP data of PDFs.
#Link to specific node in docear from a document word pdf
For instance, when you named your PDF already according to the title, select the radio button with the file name, and the file name is sent as search query to Google Scholar (you may also manually correct the file name before it’s sent to Google Scholar). You may also chose to use the PDF’s file name for the search. If the title was extracted incorrectly, you can manually correct it.
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In the background, the extracted title is sent to Google Scholar and metadata for the first two search results are shown in the dialog. The dialog shows the file name of your PDF file, and the extracted title. To do so, select a PDF in your mind-map and chose “Create or Update reference”, … The new Docear 1.1 is able to extract the title of a PDF and fetch metadata from Google Scholar for that title. Thanks to all the generous donors, our student Christoph could work on an improved PDF metadata retrieval for Docear. If you have tried already one of the previous versions, there is not much news. Finally, after releasing the alpha and beta, today we release Docear 1.1 stable.
