How AI detection works
AI detection tools do not identify AI by recognizing "AI words" or phrases. They analyze statistical and structural properties of the text — specifically, how predictable it is and how variable its structure is. Two core signals drive most detection:
Perplexity — predictability of word choices
AI language models generate statistically probable sequences. Human writers make more surprising choices. Low perplexity (very predictable text) is a strong AI signal. RewriteKit measures this across your entire submission.
Burstiness — variation in sentence structure
Human writing naturally oscillates: short sentences followed by longer ones, simple phrases next to complex clauses. AI output tends to be uniformly structured, which is detectable even when individual sentences seem natural.
Understanding your detection score
The detector returns a score from 0 to 100 and a label (Low / Medium / High). Here is how to interpret your result:
Minimal AI patterns detected. Text is likely to pass most detection tools. Natural variation is present throughout.
Moderate AI patterns present. Stricter tools may flag this text. Consider rewriting the highlighted sentences.
Strong AI patterns throughout. Most detection tools will flag this. Structural rewriting is recommended.
If your text scores Medium or High, RewriteKit's humanizer rewrites it to target the specific patterns that raised your score.
What happens after detection?
Detection is the diagnostic step. Once you know which sentences are problematic, you can take targeted action. RewriteKit highlights suspicious sentences directly in the result — so you can either edit them manually or pass the entire text to the AI humanizer for automated restructuring.
For texts that need to pass the toughest detectors, the recommended workflow is: detect → humanize → detect again. One or two passes typically brings a High-scoring text into the Low range. If you need to target a specific detector like GPTZero or Turnitin, visit our bypass AI detector guide.
AI Detector vs Plagiarism Checker
Students and writers often confuse these tools — they look similar but catch completely different problems. Here is how they compare:
| Feature | AI Detector | Plagiarism Checker |
|---|---|---|
| What it finds | AI-generated patterns | Copied text from sources |
| Method | Perplexity + burstiness analysis | Text matching against databases |
| False positives | Formal or highly structured writing | Paraphrased content, common phrases |
| Best for | Reviewing AI-assisted drafts | Checking originality before submission |
| Fix with | AI Humanizer (structural rewrite) | Manual rewriting or citation |
| Free option | ✓ RewriteKit AI Detector | Varies by platform |
For most academic and professional contexts, you need both. Run a plagiarism check to confirm originality, then run the AI detector to confirm the writing patterns are sufficiently human. If your AI detector score is high, use RewriteKit's humanizer to reduce it before submission.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate is the AI detector?
RewriteKit's detector analyzes structural patterns, perplexity, and burstiness — the same signals used by major detection tools. It is reliable for identifying clear AI patterns but should be used as a guide, not an absolute verdict. No detector is 100% accurate.
What score is considered safe from detection?
Scores below 30 are generally considered low-risk. Scores between 30–60 are medium — text may be flagged by stricter tools. Scores above 60 suggest strong AI patterns and are likely to be flagged. These thresholds vary by platform.
Can human-written text be falsely flagged as AI?
Yes. Formal or highly structured writing — legal documents, academic abstracts, technical reports — can score surprisingly high because of their predictable structure. Low perplexity alone does not mean AI wrote it.
What should I do if my text scores high?
Use RewriteKit's humanizer to restructure the text. The humanizer targets the exact patterns the detector flags — uniform sentence length, overused transitions, and low burstiness — and rewrites them to reduce your score.
Which AI writing tools does it detect?
The detector identifies the structural fingerprints common to output from ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Copilot, and other large language models. It does not identify the specific model — only the presence of AI patterns.
Does it work for languages other than English?
Yes. Detection works across 40+ languages. English produces the most reliable results due to the volume of training data, but Korean, Japanese, Spanish, and other supported languages all produce meaningful scores.