Detecting duplicates in only one folder / project
One issue I come across is that if I am doing more than one systematic review the duplicates are detected across folders however I only wish to find duplicates within one project. It would be great if this was an option and if it already is please can someone tell me how?! Or other tricks to get around this issue?!
Thank you.
Thank you.
Only thing I can think of is tagging items belonging to a given project in addition to placing them in collections.
I don't think we'd build in a collection specific "detect duplicates" but with Duplicates available in searches, you could create that as a saved search.
Note, btw., that collections are not folders, which would seem quite relevant for your situation: https://www.zotero.org/support/collections_and_tags#the_zotero_collections_model
Merging a duplicate will keep it in all collections.
As adamsmith wrote above. Collections are not like folders or directories. Collections are similar to iTunes playlists. Just as a single song can be in several different playlists; a single item in your Zotero can be in several collections (without the item having a duplicate in your library database). You don't want duplicates in your library because you don't want to insert the same item as a citation from more than one of a duplicate record in your Zotero database. Using the Zotero duplicate utility to merge duplicates seems like the best idea. Following that strategy, you can still have the items in each database's collection; however the item in each collection will be the same Zotero record instead of different (duplicated) records of the same item that you downloaded from different bibliographic databases.
I use this process to compare the relevant contents of different databases for a given topic. How much do the contents overlap? How much is lost by searching only one or two databases? Are there key items in a database that otherwise omits other key items? Etc. This is essential information when conducting a systematic review on a multidisciplinary topic.