Related Work Generator
Draft related work sections grounded in your paper library. PapersFlow identifies themes across your sources and writes citation-verified prose you can edit and export to LaTeX.
PapersFlow drafts related work sections by analyzing themes across your paper collection, grounding every sentence in real citations, and exporting to LaTeX — so you edit instead of starting from scratch.
It is 11 PM, the conference deadline is in 36 hours, and you still have not written the related work section. You have 28 papers you intend to cite, but organizing them into a coherent narrative feels impossible. You know you need to show how your work fits into the landscape, but every paragraph you write either reads like a disconnected list of paper summaries ('Smith et al. did X. Jones et al. did Y.') or makes claims about the literature you are not confident are accurate. Meanwhile, you keep discovering papers you should have cited and have to restructure the entire section.
Key Features
- Automatic Theme Detection
- Citation-Grounded Writing
- LaTeX Export with Citation Keys
- Collaborative Editing
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Frequently Asked Questions
- How does PapersFlow ensure citations are accurate and not hallucinated?
- Every claim in the generated text is traced back to a specific paper in your selected set. PapersFlow does not invent papers or attribute findings to the wrong source. Each citation is linked to the passage in the original paper that supports it, and you can click through to verify in the editing interface.
- Does the LaTeX export work with my existing .bib file?
- Yes. When you export, PapersFlow matches papers to your .bib file's citation keys using DOI, title, and author matching. If a paper is not in your .bib file, PapersFlow generates a new entry and adds it. It supports both natbib (\citep, \citet) and biblatex (\parencite, \textcite) citation commands.
- Can I choose different writing styles for different sections?
- Yes. You can set a global style (e.g., thematic organization, formal tone, high technical detail) and override it per section. For example, you might want a chronological overview for foundational work and a methodological comparison for recent approaches, all within the same related work section.
- How do I edit the draft without losing the citation grounding?
- The editing interface preserves citation links as you edit. If you rephrase a sentence, the citation remains attached. If you delete a citation, PapersFlow warns you that the claim is now ungrounded. You can also ask PapersFlow to regenerate a specific paragraph while keeping your edits to the surrounding text.