: Datasets or code provided alongside a paper for peer review or reproducibility in fields like computer science or engineering.

Knowing where you found the link or the general topic (e.g., AI, physics, medical) would help in identifying the specific paper. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more

: Look for any associated .bib or .xml files that might list the paper's title and authors.

: Most "paper" archives include the final document as a PDF within the compressed folder.

The filename is not a standard convention for a published academic paper, which typically uses titles, authors, or DOIs. It likely refers to a compressed archive containing a specific dataset, source code, or a draft associated with a project or a niche publication .

: Files uploaded to platforms like arXiv (often as source files for LaTeX), GitHub , or institutional repositories where numeric IDs are assigned to uploads.

: A specific document from a library or government database (e.g., a technical report or patent) that was downloaded and renamed by a user or an automated system. Potential Identifiers