Smart academic search
Search peer-reviewed sources by topic, OECD field of science, or arXiv category. You stay in control of what gets included.
For educators · researchers · students
Aulect searches peer-reviewed articles, extracts their full text, and lets AI compose a structured lecture you can edit and download as a Word document — in minutes, not days.
Try climate policy, quantum cryptography, or generative AI in medicine.
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From discovery to a polished, ready-to-teach Word document — all in one place.
Search peer-reviewed sources by topic, OECD field of science, or arXiv category. You stay in control of what gets included.
Every PDF is parsed into clean, structured text via GROBID — tables, references, and metadata are filtered out so the AI works on the actual content.
Multiple articles are merged into a single coherent lecture, preserving every key fact, name, and figure from the originals.
One click downloads a Word document in Times New Roman 12pt with proper headings — drop it straight into your slides or syllabus.
Watch each pipeline stage live: which articles are being scraped, classified, and merged — with a streaming progress bar.
If an article or LLM call fails, the pipeline checkpoints. Click resume and it picks up exactly from where it left off.
A transparent pipeline. You see exactly what is happening at every step.
Prep next week's lecture in an evening. Generate a first draft from the latest peer-reviewed sources, then edit in Word. Your time goes into pedagogy, not literature search.
Build study guides from primary sources. Turn a topic into a structured summary backed by actual papers — perfect groundwork for term papers, presentations, and exam revision.
Onboard new collaborators fast. Generate a quick literature briefing for any sub-topic and share it with new lab members instead of pointing them at a folder of PDFs.
Aulect searches peer-reviewed academic sources for articles on your topic, downloads and parses each PDF into clean structured text, and uses an LLM to merge them into a single coherent lecture — preserving facts, names, and figures from the originals.
A ready-to-teach Word document (.docx) in Times New Roman 12pt with proper headings. You can edit it like any normal Word file, drop it into your slides, or hand it to students directly.
You pick the count between 1 and 30 articles. Three is a good starting point for a focused topic — increase the count for broader coverage at the cost of a slightly longer pipeline run.
No. Aulect runs entirely in the browser. Sign in with Google, type a search topic, and download the resulting .docx — there is nothing to install.
Yes — daily use is free with no credit card required. There is a daily quota on how many runs you can start; the limit resets at 00:00 UTC.
The pipeline checkpoints after every step. If an article download or LLM call fails, you can resume the run from where it left off — no need to start from scratch.