Re: Scite.ai, Consensus, and Other Tools
From: Lewis, Denice (lewisjdwfu.edu)
Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2025 08:11:32 -0800 (PST)
Greetings Chris,

ZSR Library conducted trials for scite.ai in Spring 2022 and Elicit in Spring of 2024. The library negotiated the site license for scite.ai, however we decided not to adopt Elicit. Information Systems acquired a site license for Gemini, Microsoft Copilot, NotebookLM, and Zoom AI Companion.

Regards,

Denice


J. Denice Lewis

Research and Instruction Librarian for Engineering and Science

Pronouns:  she/her/hers

Z. Smith Reynolds (ZSR) Library, Room 475

336.758.1927

lewisjd [at] wfu.edu

P. O. Box 7777, Winston-Salem, NC 27109

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Feel free to schedule a 30 meeting (personal research session) with me at https://wfu.libcal.com/appointments/denicelewis!  If an hour is needed, feel free to use Calendy at https://calendly.com/lewisjd/1-hour-1-1-meeting



On Thu, Nov 13, 2025 at 11:01 AM Morales, Laura <lcmorales [at] wm.edu> wrote:
Chris,

William & Mary has a subscription to Scite. It was negotiated and paid for by the library. I think we've had it for two or three years now (we were an early adopter). VIVA is currently doing a VA-wide trial of both Scite and Consensus that just started yesterday.
Laura

Laura C. Morales
Associate Dean of Collections & Content Services
William & Mary Libraries

lcmorales [at] wm.edu

 

*I don’t expect you to respond to my email outside your work hours. Feel free to read, act on or respond at a time that works for you.*

 

William & Mary acknowledges the Indigenous peoples who are the original inhabitants of the lands our campus is on today – the Cheroenhaka (Nottoway), Chickahominy, Eastern Chickahominy, Mattaponi, Monacan, Nansemond, Nottoway, Pamunkey, Patawomeck, Upper Mattaponi, and Rappahannock tribes – and pay our respect to their tribal members past and present.

 


From: aserl-collection-strategy <aserl-collection-strategy-bounces+lcmorales=wm.edu [at] aserl-lists.org> on behalf of John Burger, ASERL <jburger [at] aserl.org>
Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2025 10:53 AM
To: Morales, Laura <lcmorales [at] wm.edu>
Cc: Email list for Collection Strategists & Managers working in ASERL libraries <aserl-collection-strategy [at] aserl-lists.org>; etzoc [at] clemson.edu <etzoc [at] clemson.edu>; lewisjd [at] wfu.edu <lewisjd [at] wfu.edu>; Way, Douglas E. <doug.way [at] uky.edu>
Subject: Re: [aserl-collection-strategy] Scite.ai, Consensus, and Other Tools
 

Hi Chris –

 

I don’t know about Consensus – never heard of that one – but at least a few ASERL members are using scite.ai – including Clemson, Wake Forest, and (I think) U-Kentucky.  I am copying the contacts at each library so they can confirm / discuss their experiences / connect you to the right people.  There may be others as well – those are the ones I know about.

 

ALSO/ FYI:  ASERL has a standing discount offer for scite – see https://www.aserl.org/member-area/ -- that may be helpful in your deliberations.

 

I hope this helps.

 

Kind regards,

 

--j.e.b.

 

John Burger, Executive Director

Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)

c/o Robert W. Woodruff Library / Emory University

540 Asbury Circle, #316

Atlanta, Georgia  30322

 

 

From: aserl-collection-strategy <aserl-collection-strategy-bounces+jburger=aserl.org [at] aserl-lists.org> On Behalf Of Palazzolo, Christopher
Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2025 10:48 AM
To: John Burger, ASERL <jburger [at] aserl.org>
Cc: Email list for Collection Strategists & Managers working in ASERL libraries <aserl-collection-strategy [at] aserl-lists.org>
Subject: [aserl-collection-strategy] Scite.ai, Consensus, and Other Tools

 

Please pardon duplication!

 

Good morning.

 

Here at Emory Libraries, we are starting and expediting a process to establish a policy re: AI product promotion and/or acquisition. As I am sure many of you have experienced, vendors are offering quite a few options (most for additional purchase) for such products. Two vendors in particular have been relatively persistent—Scite.ai and Consensus. Note that Emory has not yet signed on to a university-wide academic AI tool such as ChatGPT or Microsoft Copilot Academic, but is currently exploring such alternatives. Supposedly, a new AI policy is to be unveiled in December. In any case, I am curious if anyone on these lists has a site license to either Scite.ai and/or Consensus and if so, who is paying, who negotiated the license, etc.

 

Thanks for any and all information you’re able to share!

 

Chris

 

 

 

Chris Palazzolo, PhD

Director of Collections and Open Strategies

Woodruff Library

Librarian for Economics, Political Science, and French and Italian

Emory University

540 Asbury Circle NE

Atlanta, GA 30322

cpalazz [at] emory.edu

404-727-0143

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