香港社會科學研究前沿 · Hong Kong Social Science Research
AI-Powered Research Communication

AI Research Rewrite

Transforming Academic Research for Diverse Audiences

Social science research is typically published as academic papers with specialized language and considerable length, making it difficult for the general public and policymakers to engage with. This tool uses AI to automatically rewrite research reports into different styles, helping scholars amplify their research impact.

1Submit a research report or detailed abstract
2Select a target rewrite style
3AI generates the rewritten version

How It Works

Policy Brief

Focused on policy implications and recommendations, suitable for government agencies and decision-makers

Public Science

Accessible language with real-world examples, designed for the general public

Media Release

News-style writing highlighting key findings and social significance, ready for media distribution

Sample Rewrites

One research abstract, three different rewrite styles

Original Abstract

A longitudinal survey of 1,200 social science graduates across eight Hong Kong universities found that within five years of graduation, approximately 34% of respondents were employed in fields unrelated to their major. Key contributing factors included low industry compensation (42%), limited job opportunities (31%), and unclear career pathways (27%). The study recommends strengthening university-industry partnerships, expanding internship opportunities, and enhancing career counseling services.

Policy Brief

Focused on policy implications and recommendations, suitable for government agencies and decision-makers

Establish a dedicated Social Science Talent Development Fund, promote university-industry internship partnerships, and integrate career counseling into required undergraduate curricula. Priority should be given to addressing compensation gaps and employment mismatches to enhance the labour market competitiveness of social science graduates.

Public Science

Accessible language with real-world examples, designed for the general public

What happens after studying social science in Hong Kong? A study tracking 1,200 graduates found that over a third ended up in jobs unrelated to their degree — not by choice, but because relevant roles pay poorly and are scarce. Researchers say stronger internships and career guidance at university could help turn this around.

Media Release

News-style writing highlighting key findings and social significance, ready for media distribution

Hong Kong's social science graduates face a significant employment mismatch challenge, a new study reveals. Over one-third work in fields unrelated to their training, with low industry pay and limited opportunities cited as primary causes. Scholars are calling for targeted interventions including a dedicated talent fund and reforms to career counseling systems.

Interactive Tool Coming Soon

We are building the real-time AI rewrite feature. Soon you will be able to submit research abstracts and instantly receive rewrites in multiple styles. Stay tuned.