Compatible with every major AI agent and IDE
What is the Stanford Semantic Scholar MCP Server?
Connect to the Semantic Scholar Academic Graph API and unlock the world's largest free academic knowledge graph.
What you can do
- Paper Search — Full-text search across 200M+ papers with filters for year, field of study, venue, and open access
- Citation Analysis — Navigate forward citations (who cited this?) and backward references (what did this cite?)
- Author Profiles — Search and retrieve author metrics including h-index, paper count, and citation count
- Batch Operations — Retrieve multiple papers or authors in a single request for efficient analysis
- AI Recommendations — Get machine learning-powered paper recommendations from single or multiple seed papers
- Venue Filtering — Search within specific conferences (NeurIPS, ICML, CVPR) or journals (Nature, Science, Cell)
- Field Filtering — Search within specific fields: Computer Science, Medicine, Biology, Physics, and 20+ more
How it works
- Subscribe to this server
- No API key required — the API is fully public
- Start searching papers from Claude, Cursor, or any MCP-compatible client
Who is this for?
- Researchers — conduct literature reviews, find related work, discover citation chains
- PhD Students — navigate the academic graph to position your research
- Data Scientists — build publication analytics and bibliometric analyses
- R&D Teams — monitor the latest publications in your domain
Built-in capabilities (16)
Returns names, affiliations, paper counts, citation counts, and h-indices. Useful for comparing researchers or building collaboration network analyses. Retrieve multiple author profiles in a single request
Accepts S2 IDs, DOIs, ArXiv IDs, or PubMed IDs. Useful for comparing papers, building reading lists, or analyzing a set of related works. Retrieve multiple papers in a single request
Each call returns a batch of results plus a continuation token. Pass the token in subsequent calls to get the next batch. Ideal for systematic literature reviews and meta-analyses. Bulk search for large result sets with token pagination
Returns name, affiliations, homepage, external IDs (DBLP, ORCID), total paper count, citation count, and h-index. The definitive tool for understanding a researcher's academic impact. Get author profile with h-index, citations, and metrics
Returns papers with titles, years, venues, citation counts, open access status, and fields of study. Essential for reviewing a researcher's body of work or finding specific publications by a known author. Get all papers by a specific author
The algorithm finds papers similar to the positive set but dissimilar to the negative set. Ideal for focused literature discovery. Get recommendations from multiple seed papers with positive/negative signals
Accepts multiple ID formats: Semantic Scholar ID (e.g. "649def34f8be52c8b66281af98ae884c09aef38b"), DOI (e.g. "10.1038/s41586-021-03819-2"), ArXiv ID (e.g. "arXiv:2106.09685"), PubMed ID (e.g. "PMID:34845388"), or ACL ID (e.g. "ACL:W12-3903"). Returns title, abstract, authors, venue, year, citation counts, open access PDF URL, and publication metadata. Get full paper details by ID, DOI, ArXiv ID, or PubMed ID
Useful for identifying research leaders and collaboration networks. Get authors of a specific paper with h-index and metrics
This is essential for understanding a paper's impact, finding follow-up work, and tracing how an idea has evolved. Returns citing paper metadata including titles, venues, years, and citation counts. Get papers that cite a given paper
Essential for literature reviews, understanding the intellectual lineage of a work, and finding foundational papers in a research area. Get papers referenced by a given paper
The algorithm analyzes citation patterns, co-citation networks, and content similarity to find the most relevant papers you should read next. This is the AI-native way to discover related literature. Get AI-powered paper recommendations from a seed paper
Uses fuzzy matching to handle slight variations. Returns the best matching paper with a match score. Ideal when you have a paper title from a reference list or bibliography and need to find its full metadata. Find an exact paper match from a title string
Returns author profiles with affiliations, paper counts, citation counts, and h-index. Use this to find researchers in a specific field, discover top contributors, or find collaborators. Search authors by name across the academic graph
Supported fields: Computer Science, Medicine, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics, Engineering, Environmental Science, Economics, Business, Political Science, Sociology, Psychology, Art, History, Geography, Philosophy, Materials Science, Geology, Linguistics, Education, Agricultural and Food Sciences, Law. Search papers filtered by field of study
Use venue names like "Nature", "Science", "NeurIPS", "ICML", "CVPR", "ACL", "EMNLP", "The Lancet", "JAMA", "Cell", "Physical Review Letters". Essential for tracking publications in specific top-tier venues. Search papers filtered by conference or journal
Returns titles, venues, years, citation counts, open access status, fields of study, and authors. Supports filtering by year range (e.g. "2020-2024"), fields of study (e.g. "Computer Science"), venue (e.g. "Nature"), and open access availability. Search across 200M+ academic papers by keyword
Why Claude Code?
Claude Code registers Stanford Semantic Scholar as an MCP server in a single terminal command. Once connected, Claude Code discovers all 16 tools at runtime and can call them headlessly. ideal for CI/CD pipelines, cron jobs, and automated workflows where Stanford Semantic Scholar data drives decisions without human intervention.
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Single-command setup:
claude mcp addregisters the server instantly. no config files to edit or applications to restart - —
Terminal-native workflow means MCP tools integrate seamlessly into shell scripts, CI/CD pipelines, and automated DevOps tasks
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Claude Code runs headlessly, enabling unattended batch processing using Stanford Semantic Scholar tools in cron jobs or deployment scripts
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Built by the same team that created the MCP protocol, ensuring first-class compatibility and the fastest adoption of new protocol features
Stanford Semantic Scholar in Claude Code
Stanford Semantic Scholar and 4,000+ other MCP servers. One platform. One governance layer.
Teams that connect Stanford Semantic Scholar to Claude Code through Vinkius don't need to source, host, or maintain individual MCP servers. Every tool call runs inside a hardened runtime with credential isolation, DLP, and a signed audit chain.
Raw MCP | Vinkius | |
|---|---|---|
| Server catalog | Find and host yourself | 4,000+ managed |
| Infrastructure | Self-hosted | Sandboxed V8 isolates |
| Credential handling | Plaintext in config | Vault + runtime injection |
| Data loss prevention | None | Configurable DLP policies |
| Kill switch | None | Global instant shutdown |
| Financial circuit breakers | None | Per-server limits + alerts |
| Audit trail | None | Ed25519 signed logs |
| SIEM log streaming | None | Splunk, Datadog, Webhook |
| Honeytokens | None | Canary alerts on leak |
| Custom domains | Not applicable | DNS challenge verified |
| GDPR compliance | Manual effort | Automated purge + export |
Why teams choose Vinkius for Stanford Semantic Scholar in Claude Code
The Stanford Semantic Scholar MCP Server runs on Vinkius-managed infrastructure inside AWS — a purpose-built runtime with per-request V8 isolates, Ed25519 signed audit chains, and sub-40ms cold starts. All 16 tools execute in hardened sandboxes optimized for native MCP execution.
Your AI agents in Claude Code only access the data you authorize, with DLP that blocks sensitive information from ever reaching the model, kill switch for instant shutdown, and up to 60% token savings. Enterprise-grade infrastructure, zero maintenance.

* Every MCP server runs on Vinkius-managed infrastructure inside AWS - a purpose-built runtime with per-request V8 isolates, Ed25519 signed audit chains, and sub-40ms cold starts optimized for native MCP execution. See our infrastructure
How Vinkius secures
Stanford Semantic Scholar for Claude Code
Every tool call from Claude Code to the Stanford Semantic Scholar MCP Server is protected by DLP redaction, cryptographic audit chains, V8 sandbox isolation, kill switch, and financial circuit breakers.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need an API key?
No. The Semantic Scholar API is fully public. An optional free API key increases rate limits from 1 to 10 requests per second.
What paper ID formats are supported?
Semantic Scholar accepts multiple ID formats: its own S2 Paper ID, DOI (e.g. "10.1038/..."), ArXiv ID (e.g. "arXiv:2106.09685"), PubMed ID (e.g. "PMID:34845388"), and ACL Anthology ID. This makes it easy to look up any paper regardless of where you found the reference.
How do the AI recommendations work?
The recommendation engine uses machine learning to analyze citation patterns, co-citation networks, and content similarity. You can provide one seed paper for basic recommendations, or multiple positive and negative seed papers for advanced filtering. This is the most sophisticated way to discover related literature.
How do I add an MCP server to Claude Code?
Run claude mcp add <name> --transport http "<url>" in your terminal. Claude Code registers the server and discovers all tools immediately.
Can Claude Code run MCP tools in headless mode?
Yes. Claude Code supports non-interactive execution, making it ideal for scripts, cron jobs, and CI/CD pipelines that need MCP tool access.
How do I list all connected MCP servers?
Run claude mcp in your terminal to see all registered servers and their status, or type /mcp inside an active Claude Code session.
Command not found: claude
Ensure Claude Code is installed globally: npm install -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code
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