๐ Abstract Tool
Summarize your abstract into one sentence, or extract the four key sections โ Objective, Methodology, Results and Conclusion.
One-line summary
Get the entire abstract compressed into one clear, informative sentence.
Section extractor
Pull out Objective, Methodology, Results and Conclusion from any abstract.
Always free
No sign up, no word limits. Process as many abstracts as you need.
Writing a research abstract: IMRaD structure and best practices
The abstract is the most-read part of any paper โ indexed by databases, visible in search results, and often the only freely available section behind a paywall. A structured abstract follows IMRaD: Background (why this matters), Objective (what you studied), Methods (how), Results (what you found, with key numbers), Conclusion (what it means). Most journals require 150โ300 words.
What to include and what to leave out
Include: study design, population or sample type, primary outcome with key statistics, and main conclusion. Exclude: extensive background, references (most journals prohibit them in abstracts), speculation beyond your data, and unexplained abbreviations. Every major finding that appears in the abstract must appear in the results section โ the abstract cannot introduce results not in the paper.
Writing for search discoverability
PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar index your abstract. Include the exact terms researchers in your field would type into a search engine. If your paper is about microplastics in marine sediment, those words should appear explicitly โ not paraphrased as "anthropogenic polymer particles in oceanic substrates".