What punctuation rules does Rev use?
Rev follows standard American English punctuation. Use the Oxford comma (serial comma) in lists. Use em dashes (—) for abrupt interruptions or speaker cut-offs. Use ellipses (...) for trailing off. End all sentences with appropriate terminal punctuation. Do not use commas to separate independent clauses (comma splices).
Does Rev use contractions?
Yes. Rev keeps contractions as spoken. If the speaker says "don't", transcribe "don't" — not "do not". If the speaker explicitly says both words separately ("do not"), transcribe them as two words. Always transcribe what was actually spoken.
How does Rev handle crosstalk between speakers?
When two speakers talk simultaneously and you can make out both, transcribe them separately with [crosstalk] notation. Example: [Speaker 1]: [crosstalk] — I was trying to say the same thing. If neither speaker is audible during the overlap, use [crosstalk] alone.
Are false starts included in Rev transcripts?
No — Rev uses clean verbatim, so false starts are generally removed. If the speaker says "I — I think we should", transcribe "I think we should". However, if a false start meaningfully changes the speech (e.g., "I was going to say — actually, forget it"), consider whether the start is contextually important.
How should I handle non-verbal sounds in Rev transcripts?
Include non-verbal sounds only when they are relevant to the context: [laughs], [sighs], [applause]. Use lowercase in square brackets. Do not transcribe minor background noises, keyboard clicks, or paper shuffling unless specifically requested by the client.