Author Guidelines
How to submit your manuscript?
All manuscripts should be submitted online at each journal website that the author selects.
General Guidelines
- Use the journal guide of authors as a template and guideline for preparing your papers.
- Ensure that each new paragraph is clearly indicated. Present tables and figure legends on separate pages at the end of the manuscript.
- Number all pages consecutively. Manuscripts should also be spellchecked by the facility available in most good word-processing packages.
- Extensive use of italics and emboldening within the text should be avoided.
- Papers should be clear, precise and logical and should not normally exceed 4,000 words.
About Abstract and Keyword
- The Abstract should be informative and completely self-explanatory, provide a clear statement of the problem, the proposed approach or solution, and point out major findings and conclusions.
- The Abstract should be 100 to 200 words in length. The abstract should be written in the past tense.
- The keyword list provides the opportunity to add keywords, used by the indexing and abstracting services, in addition to those already present in the title.
- Judicious use of keywords may increase the ease with which interested parties can locate our article.
About Bodytext
- The Introduction should provide a clear background, a clear statement of the problem, the relevant literature on the subject, the proposed approach or solution, and the new value of research which it is innovation. It should be understandable to colleagues from a broad range of scientific disciplines.
- Explaining research chronologically, including research design and research procedure. The description of the course of research should be supported by references, so the explanation can be accepted scientifically.
- In the results and discussion section the results should be explained and at the same time a comprehensive discussion is given.
- A good conclusion should provide a statement that what is expected, as stated in the “Introduction” section can ultimately result in the “Results and Discussion” section, so there is compatibility. Moreover, it can also be added the prospect of the development of research results and application prospects of further studies into the next (based on the results and discussion).
About Figures and Tables
Tables and Figures are presented at the center.
About Citations and References
The author must provide at least 25 references. Use of tools such as EndNote, Mendeley, or Zotero for reference management and formatting, and choose IEEE style. Each citation should be written in the order of appearance in the text in square brackets. References should be cited in text by numbering system (in IEEE style), [1], [2], [3] and so on. Only references cited in text should be listed at the end of the paper. For example, the first citation [1], the second citation [2], and the third and fourth citations [3], [4]. When citing multiple sources at once, the preferred method is to list each number separately, in its own brackets, using a comma or dash between numbers, such as: [1], [3], [5]. It is not necessary to mention an author’s name, pages used, or date of publication in the in-text citation. Instead, refer to the source with a number in a square bracket, e.g. [9], that will then correspond to the full citation in your reference list. Examples of in-text citations:
- This theory was first put forward in 1970 [9].
- Sutikno [10] has argued that…
- Several recent studies [7], [9], [11]-[15] have suggested that….
- …end of the line for my research [16].