Upload your manuscript in .doc/.docx/.pdf file format to evaluate it against 4 technical compliance and language quality checks hand-picked by the journal editor.
FREE REPORT
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Get FREE submission readiness report
In under 2 minutes, get a FREE submission readiness assessment on your process manuscript. The assessment includes results for all technical and language checks performed.
EDITED FILE
OPTIONAL
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Download the edited file for a one-time fee
For just $29, get your edited manuscript with recommendations for language and technical compliance applied in tracks and comments. This price includes unlimited rechecks of your manuscript for a duration of 30 days
Preflight at work
How Preflight gets you ready to submit?
The editors at Digestive Surgery conducted a thorough review of Preflight's AI and have configured a suite of language and technical checks that they believe can help authors determine whether their manuscript is ready for submission to their journal.
4 Language Checks
Checks for language quality including grammar, readability, writing mechanics, academic vocabulary, etc.
Language Checks
Parameters (4)
AI-powered report
Detailed free report summarizing findings of the 4 checks to help you get ready for submission.
Downloadable edited file
Download an edited version of your manuscript, with free unlimited rechecks, for a one-time fee.
Submission readiness checklist
What checks did the editors choose for
Digestive Surgery
?
Why should you trust Paperpal Preflight?
Secure & encrypted
We adhere to the highest standards of data security. Uploaded manuscripts are stored on an encrypted server and are automatically deleted after 90 days. Learn more about our data security measures
Trusted by 800+ journals
Preflight is used by more than 110,000 authors submitting to more than 800 journals across academic disciplines and spanning the portfolio of top global publishers.
Fewer desk rejections for manuscripts using Preflight The use of a Preflight tool to assist authors in identifying language errors and missing manuscript elements prior to submission was associated with a decrease in initial manuscript rejections.