Zotero can import the following bibliographic file formats:
Zotero RDF
MODS (Metadata Object Description Schema)
BibTeX
RIS
Refer/BibIX
Unqualified Dublin Core RDF
getting_stuff_into_your_library [Zotero Documentation] - 0 views
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Titles In English, titles are typically either Title Cased or Sentence cased (for the distinction, see http://blog.apastyle.org/apastyle/2012/03/title-case-and-sentence-case-capitalization-in-apa-style.html ). Because citation styles differ in their casing requirements, and because automatic conversion of sentence case to title case is much more accurate than the other way around, we recommend that you store titles in your Zotero library in sentence case. Zotero can then reliably convert titles to Title Case in rendered bibliographies when the chosen citation style calls for it. To help with changing the case of titles, the title fields (e.g., “Title”, “Publication”, “Series Title”, “Short Title” for the “Journal Article” item type) can be right-clicked. This shows the “Transform Text” menu, with options to convert the title to either “Title Case” or “Sentence case”. Zotero does not recognize proper nouns, and transformed titles should always be checked for capitalization errors.
retrieve_pdf_metadata [Zotero Documentation] - 0 views
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Zotero can take PDFs of scholarly papers and query the Google Scholar database for matches. The most straight-forward way it does this is by matching up an embedded Digital Object Identifier (DOI), but that's far from necessary. If Zotero finds the PDF in Google Scholar, it creates a new library item for the paper, downloads the bibliographic metadata from and attaches the original PDF to the new item.
research-blog - 0 views
Academic Productivity » Introducing citeproc-js - 0 views
Zotero Apps Go Mobile - 0 views
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