Smarter study tools, built for med school success
Check if your medical school provides access to trusted AI-powered study tools from Elsevier.
Elsevier’s enhanced study tools are powered by responsible AI — searching only Elsevier curated content, not the open web. Search, learn, and revise with resources you can trust.
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AI enhanced tools to help you study smarter
StudyFinder AI
AI enhancement to ClinicalKey Student designed to help you find what you need faster
Learn more →Osmosis AI
Conversational study companion designed to help you make sense of the most complex topics
Learn more →ClinicalKey AI
Clinical reference tool designed to answer clinical questions at the point of care
Learn more →“As a result of using StudyFinder AI, my study approach shifted from fragmented reading across different sources to a more integrated, structured workflow: review core anatomy → visualise in 3D → test with questions → reinforce with clinical correlations. It made anatomy more intuitive and much more efficient to learn.”
“The most impressive thing about this study tool is how it supports itself with real references from ClinicalKey, Osmosis, and Complete Anatomy. There was not one moment where I doubted its sources, StudyFinder AI utilises sources that are completely trustworthy, so you don’t even have to worry about source hallucinations.”
“Osmosis AI has been a great tool during my recent exam session. My favorite part is that it doesn’t just give me an answer, it actually tells me in which video I can find the information. So I’m not only getting a quick response to my question, but I’m also able to see the bigger picture and understand the wider context. That’s really important for me because I don’t just want to memorize things, I truly want to understand the concept.”
“As a 5th-year medical student, Osmosis AI has significantly streamlined the way I study and review complex topics. What I find most helpful is how it breaks down dense material into clear, clinically relevant explanations that connect basic science to patient scenarios. I use it primarily when reviewing for exams and preparing for USMLE-style questions; especially to clarify weak areas after doing practice questions.”


