In this tutorial I'm going to show you how to export CINAHL search results to EndNote— a popular desktop citation management application. CINAHL supports the direct export of references to EndNote. This works great if you have the EndNote program installed on the same machine on which you're doing your CINAHL searches. So again, these are the search results we got from the search we did in the previous tutorials. What I'm going to do here is to export these references to EndNote. Again, before I can do anything to these references, I have to put them into a folder. So I'm just going to click here to put these in 'My Folder'. I can click on the 'Folder View'... ...and here they are. Now what I can do here, is to select them in 'Folder View'... I can select them one by one, or I can click here to select them all. Then I can click on this 'Export' icon... You can see that it supports direct export to EndNote, ProCite, and Reference Manager. So I'm going to pick this first option... I will leave the references in the folder, so that I can go back to them for other demos later. Now I am going to click 'Save'. Now, what's going to happen next depends on the browser and the operating system you use. At least this is true at this time when this video is produced. With Internet Explorer, on the Windows system, if you have EndNote installed on the same machine, it will automatically launch... Prompting you to choose a library to put these references. I'll just pick this one... ...and voilà! My references have been imported into EndNote. If you use the Firefox browser, you will be presented with two options— First, you can let Firefox launch EndNote to import these directly. So I'll choose 'Open With'... 'Export Helper' is fine. It will automatically launch EndNote for me. Or I can simply manually choose 'EndNote' from the list when I click 'Other'. Now EndNote will launch, and I can choose the library and import my references. If for some reason that doesn't work, you can also save these references in a text file in Firefox to be imported into EndNote later. This would be especially useful if EndNote is not installed on the same machine. You can then bring the saved file to a machine where EndNote is installed, and import them there. So you can see that it'll be saved in 'RIS' format, which is a generic citation exchange format. And the file name is going to be 'delivery' in this case. I'll just click 'Okay'... and the file will be saved to wherever you set Firefox to save downloads. By default, it's going to be your desktop. Now I can bring this file to a computer where EndNote is installed... launch EndNote... choose a library... go to 'File'... 'Import'... browse to my file 'delivery'... use 'RIS' as my import option... ...and click 'Import'. And you can see that my references have been imported into EndNote. For those of you who use the Firefox add-on 'Zotero' to manage bookmarks and citations, please note that at this time direct export to EndNote does not work in Firefox when Zotero is enabled. Instead, your references will be saved to Zotero, like this— Of course if you do use Zotero to manage your citations, this will be perfect. But if you don't, make sure you disable Zotero in Firefox before you do the direct export to EndNote. So you can go to 'Tools'... 'Add-ons'... find Zotero... ...and disable it. If you are on a Macintosh system, and if you use Firefox, things will be similar to what happens on a Windows machine. I can choose 'EndNote' to open the file, and import it. Or I can save it in a text file, and use EndNote to import it later. If you use the Safari browser on a Mac your only option is to save it as a text file and import it later in EndNote, as Safari normally does not give you the option of launching EndNote. That's all I have for this tutorial. I'll see you next time.