Dados e análise Fonte oficial
Pesquisa e síntese de artigos com Firecrawl
Localiza e sintetiza papers, whitepapers, PDFs e relatórios técnicos com busca semântica, expansão por similaridade e verificação.
Ver código no GitHub Instala diretamente do repositório-fonte.
O que esta skill faz
Esta skill cria revisões de literatura e panoramas de pesquisa com fontes identificadas. Ela usa Firecrawl Research como caminho principal para descobrir papers e encontrar trabalhos relacionados, recorrendo à busca e extração geral para outras publicações técnicas.
Quando usar
- Criar uma revisão de literatura
- Resumir papers sobre um tema
- Mapear uma área de pesquisa
- Encontrar trabalhos relacionados a um paper
- Sintetizar whitepapers e relatórios técnicos
Como usar
- Defina o tema, o número desejado de fontes e eventuais restrições
- Configure FIRECRAWL_API_KEY
- Comece pela busca semântica de papers
- Expanda resultados relevantes com trabalhos relacionados
- Verifique o conteúdo e cite as fontes usadas
O que revisar antes de instalar
- Requer FIRECRAWL_API_KEY
- Resultados de busca precisam de verificação no conteúdo
- Cobertura depende das fontes encontradas
- Restrições de data ou veículo devem ser informadas
SKILL.md
---
name: firecrawl-research-papers
description: Find and synthesize research papers, whitepapers, PDFs, technical reports, and academic sources with Firecrawl Research, using semantic paper search, related-paper expansion, and in-body verification. Use when the user wants a literature review, paper summary, research landscape, or sourced synthesis from PDFs and scholarly/industry publications.
license: ISC
metadata:
author: firecrawl
version: "0.1.0"
homepage: https://www.firecrawl.dev
source: https://github.com/firecrawl/firecrawl-workflows
inputs:
- name: FIRECRAWL_API_KEY
description: Firecrawl API key for hosted Firecrawl Research, CLI, MCP, or equivalent tool requests.
required: true
---
# Firecrawl Research Papers
Use this to create a sourced literature review.
## Onboarding Interview
Infer the topic, source constraints, target count, and output format from context. If the topic is clear, proceed immediately.
Ask at most 1-3 concise questions only if blocked, such as the topic, target paper count, or required venue/date/method constraints.
## Firecrawl Collection Plan
Use Firecrawl Research through the CLI, MCP, or equivalent Firecrawl tool
surface as the primary path for paper discovery and verification. Fall back to
general Firecrawl search and scrape for whitepapers, technical reports,
research blogs, leaderboards, or facts outside the paper corpus.
Core tools:
- MCP: `firecrawl_research_search_papers(query, k?)`
CLI: `firecrawl research search-papers <query> [--k <number>]`
Semantic search over paper abstracts. Start here for most paper-finding
queries, and retry with alternate framing when results are thin or too
narrow.
- MCP: `firecrawl_research_related_papers(seed_ids, intent, mode?, k?)`
CLI: `firecrawl research related-papers <seedIds...> --intent <intent> [--mode <similar|citers|references>] [--k <number>]`
Expand from strong seed papers into similar work, citing papers, or
references. Use this to find the relevant paper family, not just the first
matching result.
- MCP: `firecrawl_research_inspect_paper(id)`
CLI: `firecrawl research inspect-paper <id>`
Fetch canonical metadata for a candidate paper: title, abstract, authors,
categories, source ids, and dates.
- MCP: `firecrawl_research_read_paper(id, question)`
CLI: `firecrawl research read-paper <id> --question <question>`
Verify a specific claim or constraint inside one paper, such as method,
reported score, benchmark, affiliation, comparison, or limitation.
- MCP: `firecrawl_search(query)` / `firecrawl_scrape(url)`
CLI: `firecrawl search <query>` / `firecrawl scrape <url>`
Use for web-only context: benchmark leaderboards, rankings, reports,
whitepapers, research blogs, and source pages outside the paper index.
Match the approach to the query:
- Single named paper: run one paper search, then inspect or read the paper if
metadata or body verification is needed.
- Paper by description, method, or topic family: search for strong anchors,
then expand with related papers and keep close neighbors.
- Enumeration queries, such as papers that do a task or benchmark a method:
search multiple framings, expand several strong anchors, and re-seed from
newly found relevant papers.
- Papers that use or exhibit a property: start from the defining paper or
strongest anchor, expand via similar, citers, or references, and use
read-paper to verify the property.
- Superlatives and leaderboards: use general web search or scrape to find the
ranking, then map top entries back to papers with paper search.
- Author, organization, venue, date, or methodology constraints: verify with
inspect-paper metadata or read-paper before keeping a candidate.
Target source types:
- academic papers from arXiv, university sites, ACM/IEEE pages where accessible
- industry reports and whitepapers
- company research blogs
- technical articles and conference summaries
Principles:
- When in doubt, include the relevant paper family rather than only the single
best result.
- Use related-paper expansion to avoid stopping at one strong hit.
- Use read-paper to verify load-bearing constraints, not to summarize every
candidate.
- Drop only clearly off-topic papers.
## Parallel Work
If appropriate, use sub-agents or equivalent parallel task runners:
- Academic Papers researcher
- Industry Reports researcher
- Technical Articles researcher
- Synthesis and citation reviewer
## Final Deliverable
```markdown
# Literature Review: [Topic]
## Abstract
[2-3 paragraph summary]
## Key Papers
[Title, authors, source URL, key findings, methodology, relevance]
## Themes And Consensus
[What sources agree on]
## Open Questions And Debates
[Disagreements and unresolved questions]
## Emerging Trends
[Recent developments]
## Sources
[Organized by paper/report/article]
## Rerun Inputs
workflow: firecrawl-research-papers
topic: [topic]
target_count: [number]
output: [markdown/brief]
```
## Quality Bar
- Every major claim should trace to a source.
- Note inaccessible or failed PDFs.
- Distinguish peer-reviewed work from blogs and vendor reports.