/scholarly

Retrieve author and publication information from Google Scholar in a friendly, Pythonic way

Primary LanguagePythonThe UnlicenseUnlicense

scholarly

scholarly is a module that allows you to retrieve author and publication information from Google Scholar in a friendly, Pythonic way.

Usage

Because scholarly does not use an official API, no key is required. Simply:

import scholarly

print(next(scholarly.search_author('Steven A. Cholewiak')))

Methods

  • search_author -- Search for an author by name and return a generator of Author objects.
>>> search_query = scholarly.search_author('Marty Banks, Berkeley')
>>> print(next(search_query))
{'_filled': False,
 'affiliation': 'Professor of Vision Science, UC Berkeley',
 'citedby': 17758,
 'email': '@berkeley.edu',
 'id': 'Smr99uEAAAAJ',
 'interests': ['vision science', 'psychology', 'human factors', 'neuroscience'],
 'name': 'Martin Banks',
 'url_picture': 'https://scholar.google.com/citations?view_op=medium_photo&user=Smr99uEAAAAJ'}
  • search_keyword -- Search by keyword and return a generator of Author objects.
>>> search_query = scholarly.search_keyword('Haptics')
>>> print(next(search_query))
{'_filled': False,
 'affiliation': 'Stanford University',
 'citedby': 31731,
 'email': '@cs.stanford.edu',
 'id': '4arkOLcAAAAJ',
 'interests': ['Robotics', 'Haptics', 'Human Motion Understanding'],
 'name': 'Oussama Khatib',
 'url_picture': 'https://scholar.google.com/citations?view_op=medium_photo&user=4arkOLcAAAAJ'}
  • search_pubs_query -- Search for articles/publications and return generator of Publication objects.
>>> search_query = scholarly.search_pubs_query('Perception of physical stability and center of mass of 3D objects')
>>> print(next(search_query))
{'_filled': False,
 'bib': {'abstract': 'Humans can judge from vision alone whether an object is '
                     'physically stable or not. Such judgments allow observers '
                     'to predict the physical behavior of objects, and hence '
                     'to guide their motor actions. We investigated the visual '
                     'estimation of physical stability of 3-D objects (shown '
                     'in stereoscopically viewed rendered scenes) and how it '
                     'relates to visual estimates of their center of mass '
                     '(COM). In Experiment 1, observers viewed an object near '
                     'the edge of a table and adjusted its tilt to the '
                     'perceived critical angle, ie, the tilt angle at which '
                     'the object …',
         'author': 'SA Cholewiak and RW Fleming and M Singh',
         'eprint': 'http://jov.arvojournals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2213254',
         'title': 'Perception of physical stability and center of mass of 3-D '
                  'objects',
         'url': 'http://jov.arvojournals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2213254'},
 'citedby': 14,
 'id_scholarcitedby': '15736880631888070187',
 'source': 'scholar',
 'url_scholarbib': 'https://scholar.googleusercontent.com/scholar.bib?q=info:K8ZpoI6hZNoJ:scholar.google.com/&output=citation&scisig=AAGBfm0AAAAAXGSbUf67ybEFA3NEyJzRusXRbR441api&scisf=4&ct=citation&cd=0&hl=en'}

Example

Here's a quick example demonstrating how to retrieve an author's profile then retrieve the titles of the papers that cite his most popular (cited) paper.

# Retrieve the author's data, fill-in, and print
search_query = scholarly.search_author('Steven A Cholewiak')
author = next(search_query).fill()
print(author)

# Print the titles of the author's publications
print([pub.bib['title'] for pub in author.publications])

# Take a closer look at the first publication
pub = author.publications[0].fill()
print(pub)

# Which papers cited that publication?
print([citation.bib['title'] for citation in pub.get_citedby()])

Using a proxy

Just run scholarly.use_proxy(). Parameters are an http and an https proxy. *Note: this is a completely optional - opt-in feature'

    >>> # default values are shown below
    >>> proxies = {'http' : 'socks5://127.0.0.1:9050', 'https': 'socks5://127.0.0.1:9050'}
    >>> scholarly.use_proxy(**proxies)
    >>> # If proxy is correctly set up, the following runs through it
    >>> scholarly.search_author('Steven A Cholewiak')
    >>>

Installation

Use pip to install from pypi:

pip install scholarly

or pip to install from github:

pip install git+https://github.com/OrganicIrradiation/scholarly.git

or clone the package using git:

git clone https://github.com/OrganicIrradiation/scholarly.git

Requirements

Requires arrow, Beautiful Soup, bibtexparser, and requests[security]. Also pysocks for using a proxy.

License

The original code that this project was forked from was released by Bello Chalmers under a WTFPL license. In keeping with this mentality, all code is released under the Unlicense.