This list seems to leave out some other solutions, although it is possible that they rely on the same underlying technology. The JISC ConnectedWorks project produced a review document that considered Zotero, Mendeley, Google Scholar, CB2BIB, Metadata Extraction Tool, pdfssa4met, pdfmeat, GNU libextractor, FITS, Apache Tika, XPDF, PDFTOHTML, pdf2xml, CiteSeerX, and Paperpile. I cannot find any documentation on the meeting and anything else that came out of it. This SO answer suggests that the 2010 London Dev8D meeting, whatever that is, ran a contest for meta data extraction and resulted in pdfssa4met. NB: My answer does not differentiate between open and closed sourced projects and I have not used any of the seemingly big list of solutions. You could write a very small script to scan a list of DOIs and download the citations. This doesn't answer your entire question, but may be useful (for example, you might have got the papers from a list of DOIs in the first place).Īssuming these are PDFs with CrossRef DOIs, if you can extract the DOI from the PDF, you can get citation directly from CrossRef's API. There are possibilities to export to other formats as well. #Pdfextract into bibdesk pdfI use the standalone version to extract reference information from pdf and then export to, in my case, BibTeX. I use Zotero which in itself is a system for handling references, it comes as both a plugin to Firefox and as standalone.
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