Faculty and researchers : We want to hear from you! We are launching a survey to learn more about your library collection needs for teaching, learning, and research. If you would like to participate, please complete the survey by May 17, 2024. Thank you for your participation!

UMass Lowell Library Logo

  • University of Massachusetts Lowell
  • University Libraries

ResearchGate

  • Publications
  • Sending Invitations
  • ResearchGate Profile
  • Question & Answer

How do I edit my publication’s details?

  • Go to the publication’s ResearchGate page
  • Click Edit on the toolbar below your publication’s title and abstract
  • Make the necessary changes
  • Click Save changes.

Quick Links

  • Join ResearchGate (free)
  • ResearchGate Help
  • ResearchGate News
  • ResearchGate Recruiting

Publications  is one of the most useful features on ResearchGate: whether you are adding your research (Journal articles, conference papers, and more), looking for research in your field, or simply downloading other researcher’s work. This research guide contains some useful tips on about adding or editing publication on ResearchGate. 

Two Ways to Add Publications

1. To add your unpublished work to your profile: 

Step 1:  After you are logged in to ResearchGate, go to your profile  Step 2:  Click on Add unpublished work in the top right-hand corner  Step 3:  Upload the file and enter the title, authors, and a description of your research  Step 4:  Click on Add to profile.

Second way to add a publication:

 Step 1: Once you are logged in to  ResearchGate , go on the top-left corner, and click on publications

Step 2:  Click on Add your publications in the right-hand corner  Step 3:   Upload the file and enter the title, authors, and a description of your research  Step 4:  Click on Add to profile.

Category of research

  • Journal Articles
  • Conference Papers
  • All other Research

Another way to add your journal articles to your profile is by searching it on the ResearchGate database:

Step 1: On your profile page, click on Add your publications in the top right-hand corner

Step 2:  Select Journal articles 

Step 3:  Select Author match to be shown any author profiles matching your name

Step 4:  Confirm authorship of your research by clicking Yes next to anything you authored

Step 5:  Click Save to add your publications to your profile.

You can also add your own journal articles if you can‘t find on the ResearchGate database:

Step 3: Enter the title of the journal article you want to add to your profile

Step 4: Upload a full-text version of your article (optional)

Step 5: Click Continue

Step 6: Enter applicable details such as the authors, journal name, and publication date

Step 7: Click Finish to add your article to your profile.

To add research you presented at a conference to your profile:

Step 1: On your profile, click on add your publications in the top right-hand corner

Step 2:  Select Conference papers in the box that appears

Step 3 : Click Select file to find and upload your research (optional)

Step 4:  Enter the title of your research and click Continue

Step 5:  Enter details such as the authors and the conference name and date

Step 6: Click Finish to add your research to your profile.

To add other types of research to your profile (book, thesis, chapter, and more):

Step 1: Go to your profile, and click on add your publications in the top right-hand corner

Step 2:  Select all other research in the box that appears

Step 3: Select the type of research you are adding 

Step 4: Click Select file to find and upload your research (optional)

Step 5:  Enter the title of your research and click Continue

Step 6:  Enter any applicable details about your research

Step 7: Click Finish to add your research to your profile.

  • << Previous: ResearchGate Profile
  • Next: Question & Answer >>
  • Last Updated: Oct 31, 2022 1:50 PM
  • URL: https://libguides.uml.edu/c.php?g=334810

University of Virginia Darden School of Business

Scholarly Publications: Creating and Maintaining a ResearchGate Profile

  • Getting Started
  • Editing your Profile

Adding publications to your ResearchGate profile

Academic journal copyright policies.

  • Adding Full Text

Screenshot with arrow pointing to Add new button

If you have questions you may find the following ResearchGate link helpful.

How to add research (researchgate.net)

If you are using a mobile device, you can also view a PDF version of this guide with screenshots .

In general, authors who publish articles in academic journals are required to sign a copyright transfer agreement, which grants the journal's publisher copyright for the article.  This limits whether the full text of an article can be posted on sites like ResearchGate (citations for any article may be posted anywhere, including RG).  

The guide below contains a chart with guidelines detailing whether articles from specific journals may be posted on ResearchGate.

  • Scholarly Publications: Posting Journal Articles Online by Nicholas Cummins Last Updated May 20, 2021 84 views this year
  • << Previous: Editing your Profile
  • Next: Adding Full Text >>
  • Last Updated: Apr 4, 2023 9:51 AM
  • URL: https://darden.libguides.com/researchgate

Darden Camp Library, First Floor, 100 Darden Blvd., Darden Business School, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22903 Mailing Address: Darden Camp Library, PO Box 6550, Charlottesville, VA 22906-6550  Google Map with Darden Library Email: [email protected]    Phone: (434) 924-7321   FAX: (434) 924-3533

Darden Portal   |  Darden Homepage   |  UVA Homepage

Manchester Metropolitan University homepage

Covid–19 Library update

Important changes to our services. find out more, q. how do i reference articles and papers located on research gate.

  • 5 Access to the Library
  • 3 Accessibility
  • 319 Databases - more information
  • 18 How to find?
  • 10 Journals, newspapers and magazines.
  • 1 Laptop loans
  • 1 Library account
  • 26 Library databases
  • 11 Library study spaces
  • 5 LinkedIn Learning course videos
  • 29 Logging in
  • 28 MMU Harvard
  • 6 Need some help?
  • 1 Photocopying
  • 1 Reading lists
  • 39 Referencing
  • 1 Research data management
  • 1 Research Gate
  • 2 Reservations
  • 7 RSC Referencing
  • 4 Software IT
  • 4 WGSN database

Answered By: Rebecca Eyres Last Updated: Dec 16, 2021     Views: 1156

Research Gate (RG) is an online academic networking platform, on which researchers and academics upload their research papers, articles, chapters and other types of publications. The version of the paper may be the published version, for example if it is open access. However, if it is not open access the RG version may not be the final published version. When this is the case often the RG version will be missing essential information you need for your reference. Because of this, it is important to check for the most up to date version and consult this version to ensure it includes the same information you are using in your work. If available, you will also have the required information to cite and reference it accurately. When trying to locate a more up to date/published version, first try using Library Search , entering the title of the paper into the search box. For papers on RG that are chapters you may need to search for the book title, rather than the chapter title. If you are unable to locate it on Library Search, try searching Google . This search will also retrieve the RG version so you will need to check the results to see if the paper is located on another website. Once located, you should have more detail of the type of source it is and be able to identify the reference type to follow in the MMU Harvard referencing guide .

If you are unable to locate the paper anywhere else and there are minimal details on a paper on Research Gate, for example, only Author, Year and Title, with no other details to identify the publication type (e.g. book, journal, conference or publisher details) the only option would be to reference it following the format for a Webpage . However, please note, without any publication details, it is difficult to assess the academic quality and rigor of the paper, and therefore whether you can rely on it as substantial evidence in your assessed work.

  • Share on Facebook

Was this helpful? Yes 1 No 0

Related Topics

  • MMU Harvard
  • Research Gate
  • © 2022 Manchester Metropolitan University
  • Library privacy notice
  • Freedom of Information
  • Accessibility

Weekly hours for all locations

Understanding Academia.edu and ResearchGate

← go back to the impact challenge table of contents.

We’ll be honest – we thought long and hard about including this chapter and its activities in the OU Impact Challenge. Academia.edu and ResearchGate both seem attractive to scholars, but they also have their share of disadvantages and downsides.    Ultimately, we decided to include this information, because so many of you at OU have accounts on these two sites. A quick search turns up 3,849 OU-affiliated users on Academia.edu and 4,731 on ResearchGate! But instead of diving right into the “how tos,” we think it’s especially important to place these two sites into context and preface them with important considerations.

Consideration #1: You Are Not the Customer

merge papers researchgate

Consideration #2: You Might Be Breaking the Law

Another consideration with these particular services is the legality of uploading your work there. Most publishers require authors to sign a publication agreement/copyright transfer prior to a manuscript being published which outlines what you can/cannot do with your own work in the future (we will cover this in Chapter 11 of the OU Impact Challenge). Uploading your work – especially a publisher’s pdf – to a site such as Academia.edu or ResearchGate may be a violation of the terms of the publishing agreement, whereas uploading it to an institutional repository may not be (or can be negotiated not to be). Several years ago, a major academic publisher actively went after Academia.edu, requiring them to take down all of the publisher’s content that had been illegally uploaded, much to the surprise and dismay of these authors. And Academia.edu is not the only target . Earlier this year ResearchGate was set to take down nearly 7 million articles or about 40% of their content.

Consideration #3: Understand the Privacy Implications

Finally, some of these sites’ tactics are troubling from the standpoint of privacy and intellectual freedom. Personally and professionally, many find it distressing that a private company, which doesn’t adhere to the same professional ethics as librarians and other scholars do, collects information about who is reading what. Academia.edu, in particular, then offers to share that information with you if you subscribe to their “premium service.” And while their analytics dashboard doesn’t reveal readers’ names, it may provide enough information for you to know exactly who read your work.    You may decide not to pay for Academia.edu’s premium service, but even so – what you view and download will still be tracked. This may not be troubling to you (the “I’m not doing anything wrong, so I don’t care” argument), but we think it sets a bad precedent. What about tracking researchers who study terrorism? Or whistleblowing? Or even climate change? How might people at these academic social media companies create profiles and make judgments about you based on what you are reading? And what will they do with the information they collect, especially if asked for it by government entities?    We’ve posted some additional reading and resources below. And we will continue to cover some of these topics in the future, since they are highly relevant to sharing scholarly work. If you’re still interested in Academia.edu and/or ResearchGate after reading these articles, we’ve gone ahead and included those activities further down below. We’ve purposefully kept these activities brief, at least for now.     

  • A Social Networking Site is Not an Open Access Repository , by Katie Fortney and Justin Gonder
  • I Have a Lot of Questions: RG, ELS, SN, STM, and CRS , by Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe
  • Dear Scholars, Delete Your Account At Academia.Edu , by Sarah Bond
  • Academia, Not Edu , by Kathleen Fitzpatrick
  • Reading, Privacy, and Scholarly Networks , by Kathleen Fitzpatrick
  • Upon Leaving Academia.edu , by G. Geltner
  • Should You #DeleteAcademiaEdu , by Paolo Mangiafico
  • Should This Be the Last Thing You Read on Academia.edu? , by Gary Hall (downloads as a .pdf)

Make Profiles on Academia.edu and ResearchGate

You know all those things you wish your CV was smart enough to do – embed your papers, automatically give you readership statistics, and so on? Academia.edu and ResearchGate are two academic social networks that allow you to do these things and then some.    They’re also places where your some of your colleagues are spending their time. Actively participating on one or both networks may give you an opportunity to have greater reach with other researchers. And getting your publications and presentations onto these sites legally will make it easier for others to encounter your work. They do this not only through the social network they help you build, but also by improving the search engine optimization (SEO) of your research, making you much more “Googleable.”    Both platforms allow you to do the following:     

  • Create a profile that summarizes your research
  • Upload your publications, so others can find them
  • Find and follow other researchers, so you can receive automatic updates on their new publications
  • Find and read others’ publications
  • See platform-specific metrics that indicate the readership and reach you have on those sites

Let’s dig into the basics of setting up profiles and uploading your work on these sites.

Getting Started on Academia.edu

merge papers researchgate

Fill Out Your Profile

Now it’s time to add your OU affiliation and interests to your profile. Adding an OU affiliation will add you to a subdomain of Academia.edu which will allow you to more easily find your colleagues. The site will try to guess your affiliation based on your email address or IP address; make any corrections needed and add your department information and title.    Then, add your research interests. These are also important; they’ll help others find you and your work.

Connect With Others

Now let’s connect with your colleagues who are already on Academia.edu. You can either connect your Facebook account or an email account to Academia.edu, which will search your contacts and suggest connections.    You now have an Academia.edu profile! You can continue to spruce it up by adding more publications, as well as adding a photo of yourself, other research interests and publications, and connecting your Academia profile to the other services we’ve covered like ORCiD , GoogleScholar , Twitter , and LinkedIn . See how this might be coming together?!?

Academia.edu Homework

Now that you have a profile, set aside half an hour to explore two uses of Academia.edu:     

  • Exploring “research interests” in order to discover other researchers and publications; and
  • Getting more of your most important publications online; and

merge papers researchgate

Make a Profile on ResearchGate

Next, we’ll help you with the other major player in the scholarly social network space, ResearchGate. ResearchGate claims 15 million users, and it will help you connect with many researchers who aren’t on Academia.edu. It can also help you understand your readers through platform-specific metrics, and confirm your status as a helpful expert in your field with their “Q&A” feature.    Given ResearchGate’s similarity to Academia.edu, we won’t rehash the basics of setting up a profile and getting your publications online. Go ahead and sign up, set up your account (remember to add detailed affiliation information and a photo), and add a publication or two.    Got your basic profile up and running? Great! Let’s drill down into those three unique features of ResearchGate.

Find other researchers & publications

merge papers researchgate

  • Top co-authors

merge papers researchgate

ResearchGate Score & Stats

merge papers researchgate

Limitations

We’ve covered many of the limitations of Academia.edu and ResearchGate in the first section of this chapter. But there is yet another one. It has been pointed out that Academia.edu and ResearchGate are information silos – you put information and effort into the site, but you can’t easily extract and reuse it later. This is absolutely correct. That’s a big downside of these services and a great reason to make sure you’ve claimed your ORCiD in Chapter 1 .    One solution to this drawback (and the ones mentioned above) is to limit the amount of time you spend adding new content to your profiles on these sites, and instead use them as a kind of “landing page” that can simply help others find you and three or four of your most important publications. Even if you don’t have all your publications on either site, their social networking features may still be useful to make connections and increase readership for your most important work.

ResearchGate Homework

merge papers researchgate

Content for the OU Impact Challenge has been derived from “ The 30-Day Impact Challenge ” by Stacy Konkiel © ImpactStory and used here under a CC BY 4.0 International License.

COMMENTS

  1. Reporting duplicate research items and profiles

    Here's how you can merge your accounts: Log in to the ResearchGate account you want to keep. Visit the profile page of your other account. Click on More on the right side of the page and select Report duplicate. Enter the email addresses associated with both of your accounts and click Save .

  2. Preprints

    In general, a preprint is an author's own original or draft version of their paper before any peer review has taken place and before they publish it - sometimes in a peer-reviewed journal. Adding your preprints gives you a great opportunity to start gaining visibility for your work early on and lets you get valuable feedback from your peers.

  3. Research & Publications

    Research & Publications. Understanding the terminology. Discovering and requesting research. How to add research. Research Spotlights. Adding and removing figures. ResearchGate DOIs. Reviewing, editing and featuring your research. How to make content private or remove it.

  4. When will the two publications be merged?

    Hi, I think that the two versions will remain as such, two versions, because each has a different status, one has it as a preprint, and the second one is the final version. Merging must be ...

  5. ResearchGate

    ResearchGate Help Center provides answers to common questions and issues about the platform, its features, and its policies.

  6. Publications

    Two Ways to Add Publications. 1. To add your unpublished work to your profile: Step 1: After you are logged in to ResearchGate, go to your profile. Step 2: Click on Add unpublished work in the top right-hand corner. Step 3: Upload the file and enter the title, authors, and a description of your research. Step 4: Click on Add to profile.

  7. Duplicate profiles

    Here's how you can merge your accounts: Log in to the ResearchGate account you want to keep. Visit the profile page of your other account. Click the drop-down arrow next to More on the right-hand side of the page and select Report duplicate. Enter the email addresses associated with both of your accounts, tick the box below if you understand ...

  8. How to add research

    ResearchGate members can create publication pages for their content. If you create a publication page for your work, you are completely in control of it. You can edit it at any time, add or remove a full-text, or delete the page entirely. You can add all kinds of work to ResearchGate, such as conference papers, preprints, or even negative results.

  9. Update a preprint on ResearchGate to conference publication after

    I contacted Researchgate requesting to them merge two papers once (a preprint and a postprint). All they did was to delete one of the papers (unfortunately the 'better' of the two). Not recommended. Instead, I would suggest you either update the previous upload or upload a second version, preferably both. Update the old for your followers.

  10. Scholarly Publications: Creating and Maintaining a ResearchGate Profile

    This limits whether the full text of an article can be posted on sites like ResearchGate (citations for any article may be posted anywhere, including RG). The guide below contains a chart with guidelines detailing whether articles from specific journals may be posted on ResearchGate.

  11. publications

    To add publications, click on the + button and select from the list of the following options: c) Add article manually: If the article cannot be found you can create an entry manually. First choose the publication type at the top of the form then fill in as many fields as possible. Then, you can merge the manually-added article with the preprint.

  12. How do I reference articles and papers located on Research Gate?

    Dec 16, 2021 1119. Research Gate (RG) is an online academic networking platform, on which researchers and academics upload their research papers, articles, chapters and other types of publications. The version of the paper may be the published version, for example if it is open access. However, if it is not open access the RG version may not be ...

  13. How can I import my papers to my ResearchGate profile from Google

    Can I import them to my ResearchGate profile? Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow , the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.

  14. Enhanced Merge Sort- A New Approach to the Merging Process

    6th International Conference On Advances In Computing & Communi cations, ICACC 2016, 6-8. September 2016, Cochin, India. Enhanced Merge Sort- a new approach to the merging process. Smita Paira a ...

  15. How to merge publications in google scholar?

    Sometimes we get two/three version of the same study from pre-prints, conference proceeding and university repository. However, in the end only the final jou...

  16. Understanding Academia.edu and ResearchGate

    Academia.edu and ResearchGate both seem attractive to scholars, but they also have their share of disadvantages and downsides. Ultimately, we decided to include this information, because so many of you at OU have accounts on these two sites. A quick search turns up 3,849 OU-affiliated users on Academia.edu and 4,731 on ResearchGate!

  17. How to split two papers that Google Scholar incorrectly thinks are the

    The day after scholar merge them again and again. I have the correct pdf on researchgate and academia. But scholar keeps merging them - user57791. Jul 9, 2016 at 14:45 ... Moreover, the 2017 paper is a review in a monograph/book and the 2014 paper is a standard journal paper. Unfortunately, both have been published - someone has asked about ...