Research Paper Checker
Extension Actions
- Extension status: In-App Purchases
- Live on Store
Checks research legitimacy: DOI, indexing, trial registration, retraction flags, ethics cues, ORCID, affiliations, and PDF parsing.
Not all research is created equal — some studies are rigorous and trustworthy, while others raise red flags. Research Paper Checker helps you tell the difference instantly. With one click, it analyzes a research paper’s webpage or PDF and shows you whether it looks credible or suspicious.
What it checks
DOI & Metadata – Finds DOIs, titles, and journals from page content or embedded in PDFs.
Indexing – Looks up the study in Crossref, OpenAlex, and PubMed to confirm if it’s properly indexed.
Retraction Flags – Detects if the study has been retracted via Crossref or OpenAlex signals.
Trial Registration – Searches ClinicalTrials.gov and scans text for registry IDs (NCT, ISRCTN, EudraCT, etc.).
Ethics & IRB Mentions – Flags whether ethics approval or informed consent is mentioned.
Journal Checks – Verifies if the journal is listed in DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals).
Authors – Pulls ORCIDs and institutional affiliations from OpenAlex.
Quick results you can trust
Instead of making you interpret technical metadata, Paper Legit Checker gives:
A Legitimacy Score (0–100) that summarizes overall credibility.
A plain-language Quick Summary that explains strengths or red flags (e.g., “Claims to be an RCT but no trial registration found.”).
Works on webpages and PDFs
Whether you’re on a publisher landing page, PubMed entry, or directly viewing a PDF, the extension can extract key information. If a PDF doesn’t expose metadata, Paper Legit Checker scans the raw text to find DOIs, registry numbers, and ethics references.
Power features for researchers
Side Panel: Keep it open while browsing multiple papers; paste in DOIs/titles to check them in bulk.
Right-Click Menu: Highlight a DOI or title anywhere on the web, right-click → Check this DOI or Title… and get instant results.
Who it’s for
Students verifying papers for assignments or theses.
Researchers doing quick triage before diving into full texts.
Journalists & fact-checkers checking whether a cited study is reliable.
Curious readers who want to know if a flashy headline study passes a credibility test.