Author Guidelines
TYPE OF MANUSCRIPT, received paper is an article that has not been published previously. A Manuscript can be a journal of research results, report, or review article. It is typed in ENGLISH.
DRAFT SECTION:
- Title of paper
- Author full name (no abbreviation, no title)
- Author Affiliation (institution where the author worked and correspondence address)
- Abstract and keywords
- Introduction
- Material and Method
- Result and Discussion
- Conclusion
- Author Contribution
- Funding (Optional)
- Acknowledgement (Optional)
- Ethic Statement (Optional)
- Conflict of Interest
- References
ETHICAL CODE OF RESEARCH, Research that used animal, human, and clinical testing should have had an ethical clearance certificate from an authorized institution.
FORMAT, Manuscript typed with Microsoft Word (doc.) program or in Rich Text Format (rtf) on A4 (21 cm x 29,5 cm) paper size in single line spacing. The margins should be 3 cm for the top, bottom, and left margins, and 2,5 cm for the right margins. The paper should be typed in Calibri font with size specifications as follows: Title in 14 point, Author's name in 11 point, author description, abstract and keywords in 9 point, contents in 10 point. Figure and table description typed in 8.5 point, reference in 10 point. Format of journal typed in single column.
TITLE
Title Typed in Bold, Capitalize each First Letter of Each Word, Except Conjunctive, Scientific name should not be Abbreviated (Calibri 14 Bold Center, should not exceed 12 words, except conjuctive).
Author's name typed in the full name, no title, affiliation address of the author. Give * symbol for correspondence address.
ABSTRACT AND KEYWORDS
Abstract contains the objectives of the research, method, result and discussion of the research which is compiled in one paragraph with essay format not enumerative. No citation in the abstract. Content is 200 words Maximum. Keywords typed after abstract, 5 words maximum
INTRODUCTION
All submitted manuscripts should contain original research which not previously published and not under consideration for publication elsewhere. Articles must be written in ENGLISH, and manuscripts may be submitted for consideration as research report articles, short reports or reviews.
The introduction explains the background of the problem, the study of literature and research purposes. Some initial introduction paragraphs explain the problem and background to these problems. The next few paragraphs explain the study of literature that contains recent knowledge development which is directly related to the issues. The last paragraph of the introductory section contains a description of the purposes of the study.
MATERIAL AND METHOD
This section describes the types of methods (qualitative, quantitative or mixed-method) with details of methods of data collection and data analysis. This section also describes the perspective that underlying the selection of a particular method.
Explain the data collection methods, i.e. surveys, observations or archive, accompanied by details of the use of such methods. This section also describes the population, sampling and sample selection methods.
The use of English language should follow proper grammar and terms. Name of organism shoul be followed by its full scientific name in the first mention, in italic. Author of the scientific name and the word of “var.” typed regular. Example: Stellaria saxatillis Buch. Ham. First abbreviation typed in colon after the abbreviated phrase.
The author must use the International Standard Unit (SI). Negative exponent used to show the denominator unit. Example: g l-1, instead of g/l. The unit is spaced after the numbers, except percentage [4]. Example: 25 g l-1, instead of 25gl-1; 35% instead of 35 %. Decimal typed in dot (not coma). All tables and figures should be mentioned in the text
RESULT AND DISCUSSION
This section contains the results of the analysis and interpretation or discussion of the results of the analysis. Describe a structured, detailed, complete and concise explanation, so that the reader can follow the flow of analysis and thinking of researchers. Part of the results study should be integrated with the results of the analysis and the results and discussion are not separated.
Table
The table should be submitted within the manuscript and in separate files of Microsoft Excel (xls.). Table whould not exceed 8 cm (one column) and 17 cm (two columns). The table should be embedded in different pages after references.
Tables should be numbered in sequence. Table title should be brief and clear above the table, with uppercase in initial sentence. Vertical lines should not be used. Footnote uses numbers with colon and superscripted. Symbol of (*) or (**) was used to show difference in confidence interval of 95 and 99%.
Figures
Figures should be in high resolution and well contrast in JPEG or PDF with the following conditions:
- Monochrome image (line art), figures of black and white diagram (solid/no shades of gray), resolution 1000-1200 dpi (dot per inch).
- Combination Halftone, combine figure and text (image containing text) and coloured graphic or in grayscale format. Resolution 600-900 dpi.
- Halftone, coloured figure or grayscale format without text. Resolution 300 dpi.
- Black and white figures should be in the grayscale mode, while coloured figures should be in RGB mode.
- Figure should not exceed the width of 8 cm (one column), 12.5 cm (1.5 columns) or 17 cm (two columns).
- Figures title typed clearly below the figure.
- Figure with pointing arrow should be grouped (grouping).
- Figures were recommended in black and white.
- Legend or figure description should be clear and complete. If compressed, the figure should be readable.
- Statistic graphics should be supplemented with data sources.
- If the figures come from the third party, it should have copyright transfer from the sources.
CONCLUSION
Conclusion of the study's findings are written in brief, concise and solid, without more additional new interpretation. This section can also be written on research novelty, advantages and disadvantages of the research, as well as recommendations for future research.
Author Contribution: This section describes the contribution role of each author in writing this paper. All Author have read and agreed to the writing of this manuscript.
Funding: This section describes the financial funding source for this study.
Acknowledgement: This section describes gratitude to those who have helped in this study.
Ethic Statement (Optional): If the study intervenes to animals or humans, you will need to mention the ethical clearance certificate number.
Conflict of Interest: There are no conflicts of interest.
REFERENCES
- Primary references include journal, patent, dissertation, thesis, paper in proceeding and textbook.
- Avoid self citation.
- Author should avoid reference in reference, popular book, and internet reference except journal and private ana state institution.
- The author was not allowed to use abstract as references.
- References should be published (book, research journal or proceeding). Unpublished references or not displayed data cannot be used as references.
- References are permitted to official UN language journals published in the last 10 years. Citation to Scopus indexed journals are preferred. References to Indonesian Journals that have DOI are allowed (maximum 10% of the total reference).
- References typed in numbering list (format number 1,2, 3,…), ordered sequentially as they appear in the text (system of Vancouveror author-number style).
- Citation in the manuscript typed only the references number (not the author and year), example: Obesity is an accumulation of fat in large quantities which would cause excessive body weight (overweight). Obesity is a risk factor of diabetic, hypertension dan atherosclerosis.
- Minimum 15 references from journal articles
EXAMPLE:
- Vander, A., J. Sherman., D. Luciano. 2001. Human Physiology: The Mecanisms of Body Function. McGraw-Hill Higher Education. New York. (Book)
- Shi, Z., M. Rifa’i, Y. Lee, K. Isobe, H. Suzuki. 2007. Importance of CD80/CD86-CD28 interaction in the recognation of target cells by CD8+CD122+regulatory T cells. Journal Immunology. 1:121-128. (Article in Journal)
- Syafi’i, M., Hakim, L., dan Yanuwiyadi, B. 2010. Potential Analysis of Indigenous Knowledge(IK) in Ngadas Village as Tourism Attraction. pp. 217-234. In: Widodo, Y. Noviantari (eds.) Proceed-ing Basic Science National Seminar 7 4. Universitas Brawijaya, Malang. (Article within conference proceeding)
- Dean, R.G. 1990. Freak waves: A possible explanation. p. 1-65. InTorum, A., O.T. Gudmestad (eds). Water wave kinetics. CRC Press. New York. (Chapter in a Book)