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AI Research Assistant for Students
An AI Research Assistant for Students to summarize, organize, and accelerate academic research from your notes
AI powered (Demo)
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Add a file
Drop in anything you'd like to use.
OR TRY WITH A SAMPLE
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Add a file first — then any prompt runs against it.
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248M
Registered Users
5B
Notes Created
2M
Notes Created Daily
Frequently Asked Questions
The AI Research Assistant is an Evernote feature that helps students summarize documents, generate study plans, extract references, and turn notes into quizzes or outlines to speed up academic work.
Students, researchers, and educators who use Evernote can use the assistant to interact with notes, draft summaries, create study schedules, and get help extracting actionable items from their materials.
Yes. The assistant can generate concise summaries or expanded outlines from long notes, highlighting key findings, decisions, and next steps while preserving citations and dates when available.
Absolutely. The assistant can create study plans tailored to your deadlines and exam dates by analyzing the topics, estimating study time, and suggesting a spaced-review schedule you can save in Evernote.
Yes. From lecture notes or research material the assistant can produce multiple-choice, short-answer, and flashcard-style questions for self-testing, with suggested answers and difficulty levels.
The assistant can extract references and format them into common styles or a simple reference list. It pulls DOIs and URLs if present in the note, but always check formatting for publication submissions.
Yes. You can request side-by-side comparisons, pros and cons, and suggested follow-up experiments from methods described in your notes to inform research planning.
The assistant can generate structured outlines for literature reviews, methods sections, or full paper drafts based on your notes and the arguments you want to emphasize.
It can parse meeting notes to extract attendees, decisions, and action items, then format them into a checklist with owners and deadlines you can track in Evernote.
It can analyze text from PDFs and recognized text from images you attach to notes to summarize content, extract references, or generate quizzes, provided the text is readable.
The assistant can rewrite or condense passages into different tones (e.g., formal, conversational) or lengths (e.g., 200-word abstract) to suit presentations or submissions.
Very large collections can be processed, though for extremely long files it may be helpful to request focused summaries by chapter or section to get the best structured output.
The assistant extracts references from your notes and any detected metadata. It greatly helps to verify details like page numbers or DOI entries before using them in formal citations.
You can ask follow-up clarifying questions, provide corrections, and request a revised summary. Evernote keeps the original notes so you can compare outputs and iterate quickly.