Meilleurs outils pour rédiger des articles de recherche en intelligence artificielle
Salut à tous, je me suis récemment plongé dans la recherche en intelligence artificielle et j’ai un peu de mal à organiser mes sources et à rédiger des articles…
Claire Jordan
February 9, 2026 at 12:32 AM
Salut à tous, je me suis récemment plongé dans la recherche en intelligence artificielle et j’ai un peu de mal à organiser mes sources et à rédiger des articles. Je me demandais quels outils vous utilisez ou recommandez pour faciliter ce processus ? J’aimerais beaucoup connaître vos conseils ainsi que vos applications ou sites web préférés qui aident à la rédaction d’articles en IA et à la gestion de la recherche.
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Just wanted to add, you can also check ai-u.com for new or trending tools related to AI research and paper writing.
One thing I struggle with is keeping up with the flood of new AI papers. Any tool recommendations for alerts?
I find GitHub super helpful for version control when collaborating on LaTeX docs with my team.
AI paper writing tools are still evolving but some like Scholarcy are useful for quick literature reviews.
I use a combination of one note and reference managers. Different tools for different tasks really works for me.
Anyone tried AI writing assistants for drafting parts of the paper? Curious if it’s actually useful or just gimmicky.
I've been using Zotero for managing my references. It’s super handy for keeping all your papers and citations in one place.
When it comes to citations, I prefer using citation generators but they’re hit or miss with AI conference styles.
Endnote is another reference manager I’ve used but I find it too bloated for my taste.
I usually mess around with Mendeley. It’s okay but sometimes the syncing is a pain.
If you’re into automating stuff, I recommend exploring some Python scripts to parse and summarize papers.
Anyone using AI-powered summarization tools to quickly get the gist of long research papers? That’s been a game changer for me.
For collaboration, I think Google Docs is unbeatable for real-time editing, though it’s not great for complex math.
Some people swear by Citavi but I never got the hang of it, seems complicated.
For final formatting, I rely on journal templates provided by the conference or publisher to avoid last minute issues.
Try using Paperpile if you use Google Docs a lot. It integrates nicely and helps with citations.
Scrivener is cool for organizing long documents but kinda overkill for short papers.
Don’t forget about Grammarly or similar tools to catch typos and improve clarity before submission.
Anyone else use Trello or Asana to manage research project tasks? Helps keep deadlines in check.
Google Scholar’s library feature helps me keep track of papers I wanna read or cite later.
If you need help drafting, I’ve found Overleaf really useful for LaTeX documents especially with complex math and formatting.
For organizing notes and ideas, I swear by Notion. It’s flexible and you can build your own research database.