Language Editing ServiceJournal of Endocrinology and Hormones
Clear, precise language helps reviewers focus on endocrine science rather than formatting issues. JEH encourages authors to use language editing when needed.
Purpose of Language Editing
Language editing improves readability, grammar, and flow without altering scientific content. It is especially helpful for complex endocrine data, clinical terminology, and statistical reporting.
What Editing Covers
Editing focuses on clarity, consistency, and professional scientific tone. It does not guarantee acceptance, but it helps reviewers assess the science more efficiently.
- Grammar and sentence structure
- Terminology consistency and abbreviations
- Formatting of tables, figures, and references
- Clarity of methods and results descriptions
When to Use Editing
If English is not your first language or your manuscript includes complex endocrine datasets, consider editing before submission. This can reduce revision time and reviewer confusion.
Research Visibility and Trust
Endocrine Expertise
Peer review is guided by clinicians and scientists who understand hormone biology and metabolic disease.
Open Access Reach
Published articles are freely accessible to researchers, clinicians, and policy teams worldwide.
Metadata Quality
Structured metadata supports discovery, citation tracking, and persistent research records.
Ethics First
Clear policies on consent, data integrity, and conflicts protect patient focused research.
Need Language Support?
Contact the editorial office for recommendations or guidance before submitting your manuscript.
Email: [email protected] | Endocrine editorial guidance available
Scientific Accuracy
Editors focus on language clarity, not content changes. Authors remain responsible for data accuracy and interpretation.
Reviewer Experience
Clear writing helps reviewers assess methods, results, and clinical relevance without ambiguity. This improves review efficiency and can shorten revision cycles.
Common Language Challenges
Endocrinology manuscripts often include dense terminology, multi variable analyses, and clinical abbreviations. Editing helps ensure terms are defined and consistent.
Scope of Editing
Language editing addresses grammar, flow, and readability. It does not change scientific conclusions or study design. Authors should review all edits before submission.
When Editing Helps Most
Editing is recommended for manuscripts with complex endocrine pathways, multi center trials, or detailed methodology sections. Clarity in these sections improves peer review.
Turnaround Planning
Schedule editing before submission to avoid delays in peer review. Early preparation helps align submission timelines with grant or clinical reporting needs.
Terminology Consistency
Editors help ensure consistent use of hormone names, abbreviations, and units throughout the manuscript. Consistency improves reader comprehension and reduces revision requests.
Tables and Figures
Editing can improve figure legends and table notes so that endocrine data is clear at first read. Clear legends reduce reviewer follow up questions.
Author Responsibility
Language editing is optional and does not replace scientific review. Authors remain responsible for accuracy, data integrity, and final approval of edits before submission. Editing does not guarantee acceptance or influence editorial decisions. Review the final text to ensure compliance. Confirm numerical values and hormone names remain correct. Check abbreviations and units in tables and figures before submission and final checks.