Reduce AI signatures
Humanizer rewrites AI-generated text through surgical edits while preserving the factual content.
Humanizer takes text that reads as AI-generated (too even, too hedged, telltale phrasing) and rewrites it through small targeted edits. It does not paraphrase the whole thing; it changes the specific features that flag AI output, while leaving the facts and the structure intact.
What you get
A revised version of each source. The output preserves:
- The structure (headings, sections, paragraph order).
- The factual claims.
- The technical vocabulary you used.
It changes:
- Sentence rhythm and length variety.
- Common AI tells ("delve into", "in conclusion", overly even cadence).
- Hedging language where the original was confident.
Run it
-
1
Build the dataset: documents or notes containing AI-generated prose.
-
2
Open the workflow runner and pick Humanizer.
-
3
Optionally add custom instructions ("preserve the second-person voice", "keep technical precision in the methodology section").
-
4
Click Run.
When Humanizer is the right tool
- You drafted with an AI and want the result to read more like your own writing.
- You're cleaning up content for publication where AI detection might flag the text.
- A team member used AI on a doc and you want light cleanup without rewriting it yourself.
When it isn't
- The text is wrong or missing content. Humanizer rewrites style, not substance; use Co-work on a note for that.
- You want a fundamentally different tone or audience. That's a rewrite, not a humanization; Co-work again.
- You need guaranteed bypass of any specific AI detector. Detectors evolve; no rewrite tool can promise that across all of them.
A note on AI detection
AI detectors are noisy and inconsistent. Humanizer reduces common AI signatures, but no tool can guarantee a piece will pass every detector. If detection-avoidance is the goal, treat Humanizer as one input among several (including writing in your own voice).
What's next
- Capture context with notes: Humanizer output is often saved as a note for further editing.
- Three ways to chat: Co-work for deeper rewrites.
- How credits work.