Researchers often use note-taking apps to organize findings, literature reviews, and methodologies. Notearama allows them to share this work beyond traditional academic journals, fostering collaboration and transparency.
“Turn research notes into open knowledge.”
“Publish your research insights beyond academic journals.”
• Annotated Bibliographies / Literature Reviews: Notes organized into shareable digests for niche fields. These can also be comprehensive, searchable resources for others.
• Research Summaries: Key findings and insights simplified for broader audiences. This includes abstracts of their work.
• Data Collections & Visualizations: Tables, charts, and datasets with interpretations. Researchers can also share data analysis templates.
• Field Notes: Observations from lab work, interviews, or site visits.
• Open Access “Notebook” Papers: Early versions of work, hypothesis notes, or “living” research. This can include a personal "research log" or lab notebook, creating a public record that attracts collaborators and funding.
• Research Methodologies and Protocols: Publishing the methods and processes used in their research.
• Research Proposals, Reference Lists, and Annotated Source Collections: Allowing collaborative work and information sharing.
• Conference Notes and Key Takeaways: Insights from academic events.
• Grant Application Resources: To assist others in the field.
• Academic Writing Guides and Citation Tools: Providing practical assistance to fellow researchers or students.
• Educational Content Based on Research: Transforming findings into teaching materials, presentations, or mini-courses.
Academic Researchers
Why they benefit
Researchers keep structured notes on:
methodologies
experiments
findings
literature analysis
Notearama use cases
Authoritative education content → explain research topics in accessible language
Knowledge base / FAQ → explain common questions about the field
Behind-the-scenes content → document research processes and lab work
Project updates → communicate ongoing research progress
Examples
“Understanding CRISPR Gene Editing”
“Research Methods for Social Science”
“Data Collection Workflow for Field Studies
Computer Science & Artificial Intelligence
Why this field fits
Researchers in computer science frequently publish:
technical tutorials
experiment notes
code documentation
literature reviews
They are already comfortable sharing knowledge publicly through platforms like:
GitHub
ArXiv
Notearama use cases
research method documentation
experiment notes
algorithm explainers
curated reading lists
Example content
“Transformer Architecture Explained”
“Experiment Log for Reinforcement Learning Model”
“Key Papers in Computer Vision”
Public Health & Epidemiology
Why this field fits
Public health researchers produce large amounts of practical knowledge that benefits the public.
They often maintain notes on:
health policy
disease research
statistical models
community interventions
Notearama use cases
public education guides
research summaries
policy explainers
conference insights
Example content
“Understanding Epidemiological Modeling”
“Best Practices in Community Health Programs”
“Key Findings from the Global Health Conference”
Education & Learning Science
Why this field fits
Education researchers already produce:
teaching frameworks
instructional models
curriculum materials
Much of this knowledge is shared informally through blogs or teaching resources.
Notearama use cases
teaching guides
lesson frameworks
curriculum resources
classroom case studies
Example content
“Active Learning Techniques for Large Classes”
“Designing Effective Online Courses”
“Assessment Frameworks for Higher Education”
Environmental Science & Climate Research
Why this field fits
Environmental researchers often publish public-facing knowledge.
They frequently maintain:
field research notes
environmental datasets
climate policy insights
Notearama use cases
research explainers
field study summaries
environmental guides
conference reports
Example content
“How Climate Models Work”
“Field Study Notes from Coastal Wetlands”
“Key Research on Ocean Temperature Trends”
Digital Humanities & Social Science Research
Why this field fits
Scholars in humanities and social sciences produce extensive:
literature reviews
research notes
interpretive analyses
Many already publish knowledge outside journals through:
blogs
digital archives
educational websites
Notearama use cases
annotated research collections
literature review libraries
archival research notes
conference reflections
Example content
“Annotated Sources for Early Modern History”
“Qualitative Research Methods Guide”
“Digital Archives in Historical Research”