How we’ll edit and proofread your document
Our experienced editors are available 24/7/365 to rigorously review and comprehensively improve your writing.
Microsoft Word’s Track Changes
We use Word’s Track Changes feature to highlight our amendments. We have alternative options for other formats, including PDF and Overleaf/LaTeX.
Improved style and appropriate register
We improve your style, diction and tone to ensure that your document is written in the appropriate register.
I’ve changed “needn’t occur” to “is unnecessary” to enhance the formality of the text. In general, contractions (needn’t, can’t, won’t, etc.) should be avoided in academic writing.
Dr Smith, PhD
Perfect clarity and structure
We’ll correct or query awkward phrasing and ambiguity to ensure that your writing is clearly expressed and easy to understand.
I would recommend being more specific here; do the physiological properties of FES systems create a challenging control problem or do they have to solve or address a challenging control problem?
Dr Smith, PhD
Grammar, punctuation and readability
We fix errors related to grammar, punctuation and readability.
When a system, theory, model, or procedure is named after two or more entities, the nouns are conventionally joined using an en dash. The same rule applies whenever the elements of a compound are considered equivalent, so the phrases “parent–child relationship”, “cost–benefit analysis”, etc., use an en dash rather than a hyphen.
Dr Smith, PhD
General feedback and advice
We provide feedback and advice on the composition of the writing, both within the document and in the Editor’s Summary Report (for documents over 3,000 words).
To make sure an abbreviation is consistently applied throughout the document, a useful tip is to search for the term using Control F (Command F on a Mac).
Dr Smith, PhD
Humanizing AI-written text
We address the problems with tone, wordiness and bias that characterize AI-generated text. Our team focuses on enhancing the readability and relatability of your content, paying close attention to the subtle cues that make your text feel genuinely human.
LLMs often write in an overly formal and convoluted way. I’ve toned down both the diction and the wordiness here to help this email sound more natural.
Dr Smith, PhD