Foundation Route

Create a Research Paper Summary With Methodology and Findings

That 30-page research paper has 3 pages of findings that matter to you. Extract them into a structured summary your team can read in 5 minutes.

10 steps ~45min For all professionals Free

A research paper summary with methodology and findings takes about 45 minutes on aidowith.me. The Answers From Documents route covers 10 steps: uploading the paper, extracting the research question, mapping the methodology, and pulling key findings with statistical significance. AI identifies the study design (RCT, cohort, survey, meta-analysis), sample size, variables, and confidence intervals. Your summary follows a standard structure: objective, methods, results, limitations, and practical implications. Professionals who summarize papers with AI spend 75% less time on the extraction phase. The finished summary is 1 to 2 pages and includes a methodology table, a findings breakdown with exact numbers from the paper, a limitations callout, and a 'so what' section that connects results to your specific context or industry.

Last updated: April 2026

The Problem and the Fix

Without a route

  • You need to present a research paper's findings to your team but the paper is 34 pages of academic prose with jargon you have to decode.
  • You skimmed the abstract and conclusions but missed a methodological limitation buried in section 4.2 that changes how to interpret the results.
  • Your summary ends up being a copy-paste of the abstract because you don't have time to read the methods section line by line.

With aidowith.me

  • A structured summary covering objective, methodology, findings, limitations, and practical implications in 1 to 2 pages.
  • A methodology table showing study design, sample size, and variables, so readers see how findings were produced.
  • A 'so what' section that translates academic results into implications for your specific industry or project.

Who Builds This With AI

Marketers

Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.

Sales & BizDev

Prep calls, draft outreach, research prospects in minutes.

Managers & Leads

Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.

How It Works

1

Upload the paper and set context

Upload the research paper (PDF or text). Tell the AI your context: what decision this paper informs, what industry you're in, and what level of detail your audience needs.

2

Extract methodology and findings

AI maps the study design, sample size, variables, and key results. It pulls exact numbers, confidence intervals, and statistical significance markers from the paper.

3

Generate the structured summary

Review the summary covering objective, methods, results, limitations, and practical implications. Add your own 'so what' commentary and export.

Summarize Any Research Paper in One Session

Upload a dense paper and extract a clear, structured summary your team can act on.

Start This Route →

What You Walk Away With

Upload the paper and set context

Extract methodology and findings

Generate the structured summary

A 'so what' section that translates academic results into implications for your specific industry or project.

"I summarized a 40-page clinical study for our product team in 20 minutes. The methodology table alone saved 3 back-and-forth emails asking 'how did they measure that?'"
- Product Researcher, health tech company

Questions

AI reads the full paper and extracts the research question, study design, sample details, key results, and limitations. It organizes these into a structured summary. You review, add context for your audience, and export. The process takes about 45 minutes.

Yes. AI pulls specific statistics: sample sizes, p-values, confidence intervals, and effect sizes. The summary cites exact figures from the paper so readers can trust the numbers without going back to the original 30-page document.

The route focuses on one paper per session for depth. If you need to compare multiple papers, summarize each one separately, then use the cross-source synthesis feature to combine findings into a comparative brief. Two sessions cover 2 papers.