Zotero provides the ability to save references from most library catalogs (including RIT Library's) and databases, and even some regular web pages, with one click. (Zotero publishes a list of compatible sites, and many sites not on this list also work.) If Zotero detects that you're looking at a book or article on a catalog, database, or a site like Amazon.com, LibraryThing or the New York Times, you'll see a book or page icon appear in the address bar of your browser.
Open the Zotero program from your desktop or file menu
Then when viewing an item in your browser you want to save, just click the browser connector icon and Zotero will automatically save the citation. Sometimes the icon will look like the type of reference it recognizes. In a library catalog, you will see it appear as a book:
For other sources, the icon might appear as an article page:
If you're on a page of search results with many items, you'll see a folder icon instead:
Click this to get a list of all the items on the page, and check off the ones you want to save.
Have the book in front of you and want to add it to your Zotero library
without having to search for a citation?
If you have a book's ISBN, an online article's DOI or PMID number,
just click the magic wand button: "Add item by identifier." Type in the
book or article's number, and Zotero will automatically download its
information and save it to your library.
It's easy to add PDFs to your Zotero library and automatically import their citation info.
First, enable PDF indexing on the Search tab of Zotero's preferences. Zotero will download and install a small plugin.
Next, just drag your PDF files into the Zotero pane.
Right-click the PDFs and choose "Retrieve Metadata for PDFs." Zotero will retrieve their citation data from Google Scholar and turn them into citeable items with PDF attachments.
If Zotero can't find a match on Google Scholar, don't worry -- you can still save the citation from another catalog or article database, then drag the PDF onto the citation to make it an attachment.
The "Save to Zotero" icon may not work when collecting references found in RIT Libraries' Summon search system. Zotero will try to save search results from Summon as generic web pages.
Instead, Summon allows for you to export references to Zotero Standalone in a more manual fashion.
Saving a single Summon reference to Zotero
In the right corner of the brief display of your selected reference, click the three dot icon labeled "More Actions." Select "Export to - Zotero." Open the downloaded file using Zotero Standalone as the application.
Saving multiple Summon references to Zotero
First, select the references you wish to export from your results list by clicking the "Save this item" icon in the upper right corner of the brief reference display.
Open your temporary saved folder of references. Open the "Export To" drop-down menu and select Zotero as the export format. Open the downloaded export file using Zotero Standalone as the application.
You've probably seen the yellow MORE button in some article databases that allows you to locate the full text of an article online. Zotero Allows you to use the same feature.
To set up Zotero to access the MORE server, click the gear button on the Zotero toolbar and choose Preferences. At the bottom of the preferences window, paste this URL into the "Resolver" box.
Then click OK. Once you've set this up, you can click the locate button on any citation you are viewing to search for an item online.