Then repeat the search with your next citation. (Too many similar results? Try putting quotes around your searched title.) If your citation is listed, click the folder icon to the right of the result to add that result to your list. If your citation is in Discovery, it should be the first result listed. Simply copy the title of the article, book, book chapter, conference paper, or whatever source you've used, and search that in Discovery. Most of your citations should exist in Discovery, particularly if you click the "Include results from outside your library's collection" facet, which will show results even if we don't have local access (for instance, items you got through interlibrary loan). We'll use our Discovery database and leverage its large size. But you can get most of your citations into EndNote without manually retyping them there. ![]() There's no automated way to do this, since that would require a system to recognize all the parts of each citation, based on the citation format you are using, and unusual citations (like a government report, business analysis report, or other non-standard source).
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