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Possible Duplicate:
What tools make it easy to maintain (or avoid!) the N versions of your CV?

When writing a CV (applying for an academic position, workshop or a scholarship), it's important to include one's list of publications, conference talks and posters, awards, etc.

Moreover, the list need to be tailored to the respective scope (and with the appropriate fine-graining).

The question is, is there a specific workflow (or software) to keep tracks of one's academic records, so that later it's easy to cherry-pick the relevant stuff?

Piotr Migdal
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    Related: http://academia.stackexchange.com/questions/4903/what-tools-make-it-easy-to-maintain-or-avoid-the-n-versions-of-your-cv – Zenon Nov 24 '12 at 22:43
  • Your question seems to be very close to that linked by Zenon, could you please explain how is it different? –  Nov 25 '12 at 11:13
  • @CharlesMorisset I somehow missed that question, and mine should be closed (you are right, it's too similar). – Piotr Migdal Nov 25 '12 at 11:21

2 Answers2

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Google Scholar and Microsoft Academic Research (also DBLP for computer science) collect a decent amount of one's publications (in particular Google Scholar).
If you are writing your CV in Latex/LyX, I would suggest finding/creating BIBTEX entries for your papers then import the .bib file into your CV.

seteropere
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On my website I keep a list of my academic achievements. This only includes journal publications, official reports, and conference proceedings though. When I need to make a list of my most relevant publications, I take a look at that page. A nice way to tracking your papers and such is to create a Google Scholar Citations page. This automatically looks for your publications and keeps record of the number of citations you receive.

Paul Hiemstra
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