Supported inputs
PDF, DOCX/text, URLs, OCRed scans, copy/paste
Works with multi‑column academic PDFs, plain text, and OCR output.
Free AI tool for researchers
Turn full manuscripts, preprints, or internal reports into concise abstracts tailored to journals, conferences, grant reviewers, or non‑technical readers. Choose structure, word limits, and tone to match submission requirements.
Supported inputs
PDF, DOCX/text, URLs, OCRed scans, copy/paste
Works with multi‑column academic PDFs, plain text, and OCR output.
Output formats
Plain text, paragraph, bullets
Export-ready formats for submissions, posters, and executive briefs.
Tone presets
Academic, lay, executive, press
Prebuilt tones reduce revision time for different audiences.
Save time, keep accuracy
Writing a clear, submission-ready abstract is often the final bottleneck before submission. This generator is designed to reduce drafting time while preserving the paper’s core claims, numeric results, and citations. It provides structure control, tone presets, and export options commonly required by journals and conferences.
From manuscript to abstract in minutes
Provide the document text (upload PDF, paste the manuscript, or give a public URL). Pick a prompt template or enter custom instructions that define structure, word limits, and audience. Review the generated draft, request iterative edits, and export in the format you need.
Copy, paste, and run
Below are concrete prompt clusters tuned for common academic workflows. Each prompt instructs the generator to preserve technical terms and numeric values when they appear in the source.
Produces a four‑heading abstract suitable for journals that request Background, Methods, Results, Conclusion.
Condenses the central contribution for conference submissions with strict word limits.
Explains the real-world impact without jargon for press offices or stakeholder briefings.
3–5 bullets that capture novelty, method, main result, and applications for quick skimming.
Keeps in-text citations and exact numeric results as written in the source material.
Fits into submission pipelines
The generator accepts a range of inputs and produces outputs formatted for common workflows. Use page selection when working with long PDFs, request reviewer bullets for submission forms, or export a plain-text abstract to paste into a submission portal.
Keep drafts under control
For sensitive or unpublished work, prefer copying and pasting the exact sections you want summarized, or use local-only upload options where available. Avoid pasting confidential datasets; redact sensitive identifiers before summarization. Review the service’s privacy policy or contact the team for enterprise privacy options.
Built for academic and applied teams
Designed for researchers, PhD students, grant writers, editors, technical writers, and communications teams that need concise, accurate abstracts quickly.
Machine-generated abstracts can capture structure and key claims but are not a substitute for author verification. Validate by: 1) Cross-checking any quoted numbers, p-values, or confidence intervals against the source; 2) Confirming that in-text citations appear exactly as written; 3) Ensuring that any technical term usage matches the paper’s intended meaning. Use the iterative revision prompt to tighten phrasing or emphasize specific sections before submission.
Yes—when those values appear verbatim in the source text, the provided prompts include instructions to retain numeric results, in-text citations, and named entities exactly as written. Always verify preserved numbers and citations in the final draft before submitting.
Supported inputs include multi-column PDFs (including preprints), plain text or copied DOCX content, public URLs (journal pages, arXiv), and OCRed text from scanned documents. For long files, select pages or paste the specific sections you want summarized to improve focus.
Use the built-in prompt templates and length parameters to set exact word ranges and headings. Choose tone presets—academic, lay, executive, or press—or add a line in your prompt specifying audience and formality. Example: add ‘Write for a conference reviewer, 50–75 words, emphasize results’ to the prompt.
The generator provides privacy-forward input options such as local uploads and copy/paste. For sensitive or unpublished research, redact identifiers or use local processing options where available. Consult the service privacy policy or contact the team for details about retention and enterprise privacy settings before uploading confidential material.
Yes—you can request specific headings (e.g., Background, Methods, Results, Conclusion) and exact length ranges. Use the structured abstract prompt and include any required headings in your instruction to ensure the output matches journal guidelines.
For confidential content, avoid pasting full raw datasets or sensitive identifiers. Instead: 1) paste only the manuscript sections needed for the abstract; 2) mask or anonymize sensitive identifiers; or 3) use a local-only processing option if available. When in doubt, perform summarization on a secured environment or wait until appropriate approvals are in place.
Common workflows: 1) Generate multiple candidate abstracts (structured and short); 2) Select and iterate using reviewer-focused prompts; 3) Export as plain text for submission forms or as bullets for reviewer checklists; 4) Paste into the submission portal and run a final manual edit for venue-specific phrasing and compliance with word limits.
Yes—you can request translations or bilingual outputs. Use a prompt like ‘Translate the abstract into [language] and keep technical terms in English’ to preserve domain-specific terminology while adapting tone and grammar for the target readership.
Human revision is recommended when: the abstract will accompany sensitive or high-stakes submissions (grants, flagship journals), the paper contains nuanced claims requiring subject-matter expertise, or when exact wording of claims and citations must match a formal style guide. Use AI to accelerate drafting and produce tight candidates, then perform a final author review.