Connected Papers
Visual graph tool that helps researchers explore relationships between academic papers and discover relevant research.
Most research involves hours of digging through academic papers, only to find conflicting studies or sources that don't quite answer your question. Consensus takes a different approach — it's an AI-powered search engine that specifically hunts through peer-reviewed research to give you evidence-backed answers. Instead of just finding papers, it synthesizes findings from multiple studies and shows you what the scientific consensus actually says about your topic. The tool is particularly valuable for researchers, students, journalists, and anyone who needs credible, science-based information rather than just opinions or marketing claims.
You start by asking a research question in plain English — something like 'Does meditation reduce anxiety?' or 'What causes procrastination?'. Consensus then searches through millions of peer-reviewed papers and uses AI to identify relevant studies that address your question. Instead of giving you a list of papers to read, it synthesizes the findings and presents a clear answer showing what the research actually says. Each claim comes with citations showing exactly which studies support it, and you can see how much agreement exists among researchers. Think of it like having a research assistant who's already read thousands of papers and can give you the key findings in minutes rather than weeks.
Consensus offers a generous free plan that includes basic search and synthesis features, making it accessible for casual research needs. When you upgrade to paid plans, you get unlimited searches, advanced filtering options, and deeper analysis features. The free tier is substantial enough for most occasional users, while the paid upgrade makes sense if you're doing regular research work. The pricing feels fair considering you're getting access to synthesized findings from expensive academic databases that would otherwise cost hundreds per month to access directly.
Users consistently praise Consensus for making academic research accessible and saving enormous amounts of time on literature reviews. Researchers and students particularly appreciate how it synthesizes findings rather than just dumping paper titles on them. Some users note that the AI synthesis can occasionally miss nuanced arguments or oversimplify complex topics, and others wish it covered more recent studies faster. The biggest recurring complaint is that search limits on the free plan can be restrictive for heavy users, though most agree the quality of results justifies the constraints.
Q: How recent are the studies that Consensus searches through?
Consensus includes studies from major academic databases, though there's typically a lag time as papers need to be published and indexed. You'll find research from the past few decades, with newer studies added regularly as they become available in academic databases.
Q: Can I trust the AI's interpretation of research findings?
The AI synthesizes what studies actually say rather than interpreting them, and always provides citations so you can verify the sources yourself. However, like any tool, it's worth checking the original papers for complex or controversial topics where nuance matters.
Q: What happens if studies contradict each other?
Consensus shows you when there's disagreement in the research and indicates the level of scientific consensus. If studies conflict, you'll see that reflected in the results rather than getting a false sense of certainty.
Q: Does this work for business or marketing research?
It works best for topics that have been academically studied — psychology, health, education, economics. It's less useful for industry-specific questions or very current business trends that haven't made it into peer-reviewed research yet.
Q: How many searches do I get with the free plan?
The free plan includes limited searches per month, though the exact number isn't always specified upfront. Most casual users find it sufficient, but if you're doing regular research, you'll likely need to upgrade.
Consensus fills a real gap between Google searches that return questionable health blogs and expensive academic databases that are hard to navigate. If you regularly need evidence-based answers — whether you're writing content, making policy decisions, or just trying to separate health facts from fiction — this tool can save you serious time and improve your credibility. The free plan is generous enough to try it properly, and the focus on peer-reviewed sources makes it trustworthy in ways that general search engines simply aren't. Just remember it's designed for questions that science has actually studied, so don't expect help with very recent trends or purely business-focused queries.
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