Guide For Authors (2) - 2 PDF
Guide For Authors (2) - 2 PDF
Guide For Authors (2) - 2 PDF
Would you, or any of your associates, be interested in submitting an article for our journal?
(NB. Please read the Submission Guidelines of the journal for further details below)
E-mail: [email protected]
Authors are advised to read the guidelines below before submitting their manuscripts.
The authors must note that submitting manuscripts to the journal means that
o Author (s) confirm that the articles are original;
o There’s no conflicts of interest or any plagiarism issues*;
o The article is not being considered elsewhere, or has not been published
before;
o A submission to JSID is taken by the journal to mean that (if there is/are
co-author (s)) the entire listed author (s) has agreed at all of the contents
and that all author (s) are aware that the paper was submitted.
__________________
* Plagiarism is when an author attempts to pass off someone else’s work as his or her own.
Duplicate publication, sometimes called self-plagiarism, occurs when an author reuses
substantial parts of his or her own published work without providing the appropriate
references. Such manuscripts would not be considered for publication. If a case of plagiarism
comes to light after a paper is published in JSID, the editorial board will conduct a
preliminary investigation. If plagiarism is found, the board will contact the author’s institute
and funding agencies. A determination of misconduct will lead the board to run a statement to
note the plagiarism and to provide a referee to the plagiarized material.
File format Manuscript files can be in the following formats: DOC, DOCX, RTF or PDF.
Microsoft Word documents should not be locked or protected.
LaTeX manuscripts must be submitted as PDFs. Read the LaTeX guidelines.
Length Manuscripts shall not exceed 5000 words.
Font Use a standard font size and any standard font, except for the font named
“Symbol”. To add symbols to the manuscript, use the Insert → Symbol function
in your word processor or paste in the appropriate Unicode character.
Layout and Manuscript text should be double-spaced.
spacing Do not format text in multiple columns.
Page and line Include page numbers and line numbers in the manuscript file. Use continuous
numbers line numbers (do not restart the numbering on each page).
Footnotes Footnotes are not permitted. If your manuscript contains footnotes, move the
information into the main text or the reference list, depending on the content.
Language Manuscripts must be submitted in English.
You may submit translations of the manuscript or abstract as supporting
information.
Abbreviations Define abbreviations upon first appearance in the text.
Do not use non-standard abbreviations unless they appear at least three times in
the text.
Keep abbreviations to a minimum.
In-text citation The parenthetical style of referencing is used by the journal. In the text a
reference should be quoted by the author’s name (without initials) and year of
publication.
Reference style WSU journal uses “Vancouver” style.
See reference formatting examples and additional instructions below.
Equations We recommend using MathType for display and inline equations, as it will
provide the most reliable outcome. If this is not possible, Equation Editor or
Microsoft's Insert→Equation function is acceptable.
Avoid using MathType, Equation Editor, or the Insert→Equation function to
insert single variables (e.g., “a² + b² = c²”), Greek or other symbols (e.g., β, Δ, or ′
[prime]), or mathematical operators (e.g., x, ≥, or ±) in running text. Wherever
possible, insert single symbols as normal text with the correct Unicode (hex)
values.
Do not use MathType, Equation Editor, or the Insert→Equation function for only
a portion of an equation. Rather, ensure that the entire equation is included.
Equations should not contain a mix of different equation tools. Avoid
“hybrid” inline or display equations, in which part is text and part is MathType,
or part is MathType and part is Equation Editor.
The manuscripts should be organized as follows. Instructions for each element appear below:
Title
Authors and affiliations
Abstract
Keywords/phrases
Introduction
Material and Methods
Results/Findings
Discussion
Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author’s contributions
References
Supporting information Captions
Uniformity in format facilitates the experience of readers and users of the journal.
Other elements
Figure captions are inserted immediately after the first paragraph in which the figure
is cited. Figure files are uploaded separately.
Tables are inserted immediately after the first paragraph in which they are cited.
Supporting information files are uploaded separately.
Title
Titles should be written in sentence case (only the first word of the text, proper nouns, and
genus names are capitalized). Avoid specialist abbreviations if possible. For clinical trials,
systematic reviews, or meta-analyses, the subtitle should include the study design.
Author list
Authorship requirements
All authors must meet the criteria for authorship. Those who contributed to the work but do
not meet the criteria for authorship can be mentioned in the Acknowledgments.
If an author has multiple affiliations, enter all affiliations on the title page only. In the
submission system, enter only the preferred or primary affiliation. Author affiliations will be
listed in the typeset PDF article in the same order that authors are listed in the submission.
Author names will be published exactly as they appear in the manuscript file. Please double-
check the information carefully to make sure it is correct.
Corresponding author
Provide, at minimum, one contribution for each author in the submission system. This can
include the role of the author in conception of the study, design of the study, data collection,
data analysis, and write up of the manuscript.
Contributions will be published with the final article, and they should accurately reflect
contributions to the work. The author who submits the manuscript is responsible for
completing this information at submission’s phase, and the editorial board members expect
that all authors will have reviewed, discussed, and agreed to their individual contributions
ahead of this time.
Cover letter
If the study addresses an issue t outside the journal detailed scope, it must be first sent for a
pre-submission inquiry by indicating why the manuscript is considered in a special manner
in the journal.
Title page
The title, authors, and affiliations should all be included on a title page as the first page of the
manuscript file.
Abstract
The Abstract comes after the title page in the manuscript file. The abstract text is also entered
in a separate field in the submission system. The Abstract succinctly introduces the paper. It
should not exceed 250 words. It should mention the techniques used without going into
methodological detail and summarize the most important results with important numerical
results given. The Abstract is conceptually divided into the following three sections with
these headings: Background (includes objective of the study), Methodology, Principal
Findings, and Conclusions. Do not include any citations in the Abstract. Avoid specialist
abbreviations.
Introduction
The Introduction should put the focus of the manuscript into a broader context. As you
compose the Introduction, think of readers who are not experts in this field. Include a brief
review of the key literature. If there are relevant controversies or disagreements in the field,
they should be mentioned so that a non-expert reader can delve into these issues further. The
Introduction should conclude with a brief statement of the overall aim of the experiments and
a comment about whether that aim was achieved.
This section should provide enough detail for reproduction of the findings. Protocols for new
methods should be included, but well-established protocols may simply be referenced.
Detailed methodology or supporting information relevant to the methodology can be
published on our web site.
This section should also include a section with descriptions of any statistical methods
employed:
Describe statistical methods with enough detail to enable a knowledgeable reader with access
to the original data to judge its appropriateness for the study and to verify the reported results.
When possible, quantify findings and present them with appropriate indicators of
measurement error or uncertainty (such as confidence intervals). Avoid relying solely on
statistical hypothesis testing, such as P values, which fail to convey important information
about effect size and precision of estimates. References for the design of the study and
statistical methods should be to standard works when possible (with pages stated). Define
statistical terms, abbreviations, and most symbols. Specify the statistical software package(s)
and versions used. Distinguish pre-specified from exploratory analyses, including subgroup
analyses.
Submit detailed protocols for newer or less established methods. Well-established protocols
may simply be referenced. Protocol documents for clinical trials, observational studies, and
other non-laboratory investigations may be uploaded as supporting information.
Results/Findings
The Results/Findings section should include all relevant positive and negative findings. The
section may be divided into subsections, each with a concise subheading. The Results’
section should be written in past tense.
JSID requires authors to make all data underlying the findings described in their manuscript
fully available without restriction, with rare exception. Large data sets, including raw data,
may be deposited in an appropriate public repository. For smaller data sets and certain data
types, authors may provide their data within supporting information files accompanying the
manuscript. Authors should take care to maximize the accessibility and reusability of the data
by selecting a file format from which data can be efficiently extracted (for example, spread
sheets or flat files should be provided rather than PDFs when providing tabulated data).
Authors that present statistical data in the Results’ section should do the following:
Give numeric results not only as derivatives (for example, percentages) but also as the
absolute numbers from which the derivatives were calculated, and specify the statistical
significance attached to them, if any. Restrict tables and figures to those needed to explain the
argument of the paper and to assess supporting data. Use graphs as an alternative to tables
with many entries; do not duplicate data in graphs and tables. Avoid nontechnical uses of
technical terms in statistics, such as “random” (which implies a randomizing device),
“normal,” “significant,” “correlations,” and “sample”.
Discussion
The Discussion should be concise and tightly argued. It should start with a brief summary of
the main findings. It should include paragraphs on the generalizability, clinical relevance,
strengths, and limitations of the study.
The following points may be wished to be discussed:
How do the conclusions affect the existing knowledge in the field?
How can future research build on these observations and what are the key
experiments that must be done?
The main conclusions of the study may be presented in a short conclusions section, which
may stand alone or form a subsection of a discussion
Acknowledgments
Those who have contributed to the work but did not meet the journal authorship’s criteria
should be listed in the Acknowledgments with a description of the contributions they have
made. Authors are responsible for ensuring that anyone named in the Acknowledgments
agrees to be named.
JSID publicly acknowledge the indispensable efforts of our editors and reviewers on an
annual basis. To ensure equitable recognition and avoid any appearance of partiality, editors
or peer reviewers; named or unnamed are not included in the acknowledgments. Funding
sources are also not included in the Acknowledgments or anywhere else in the manuscript
file. Funding information should only be entered in the financial disclosure section of the
submission system.
Author’s contributions
The contributions or roles of authors in conception of the study, design of the study, data
collection, data analysis and write up of the manuscript are specified.
References
Any and all available works can be cited in the reference list. Acceptable sources include:
Published or accepted manuscripts
Manuscripts on preprint servers, providing the manuscript has a citable DOI or arXiv
URL.
Do not cite the following sources in the reference list:
Unavailable and unpublished work, including manuscripts that have been submitted
but not yet accepted (e.g., “unpublished work,” “data not shown”). Instead, include
those data as supplementary material or deposit the data in a publicly available
database.
References are listed at the end of the manuscript and numbered in the order that they appear
in the text. In the text, cite the reference number in square brackets (e.g., “We used the
techniques developed by our colleagues [19] to analyze the data”). WSU journal uses the
numbered citation (citation-sequence) method and first six authors, et al.
Do not include citations in abstracts.
Make sure the parts of the manuscript are in the correct order before ordering the citations.
Formatting references
Because all references will be linked electronically as much as possible to the papers they
cite, proper formatting of the references is crucial.
Table 5 Format of references
Source Format
Published articles Hou WR, Hou YL, Wu GF, Song Y, Su XL, Sun B, et al. 2011. cDNA, genomic
sequence cloning and overexpression of ribosomal protein gene L9 (rpL9) of the
giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca). Genet Mol Res.; 10: 1576-1588.
Devaraju P, Gulati R, Antony PT, Mithun CB, Negi VS. 2014. Susceptibility to
SLE in South Indian Tamils may be influenced by genetic selection pressure on
TLR2 and TLR9 genes. Mol Immunol. 2014 Nov 22. pii: S0161-
5890(14)00313-7. doi: 10.1016/j.molimm..11.005.
Deposited Krick T, Shub DA, Verstraete N, Ferreiro DU, Alonso LG, Shub M, et al. 1991.
articles (preprints, Amino acid metabolism conflicts with protein diversity;. Preprint. Available
e-prints, or arXiv) from: arXiv: 1403.3301v1. Cited 17 March 2014.
Published media Fountain H. For Already Vulnerable Penguins, Study Finds Climate Change Is
(print or online Another Danger. The New York Times. 29 Jan 2014. Available from:
newspapers and http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/30/science/earth/climate-change-taking-toll-
magazine on-penguins-study-finds.html Cited 17 March 2014.
articles)
New media Allen L. Announcing PLOS Blogs. 2010 Sep 1 [cited 17 March 2014]. In:
(blogs, web sites, PLOS Blogs [Internet]. San Francisco: PLOS 2006 - . [about 2 screens].
or other written Available from: http://blogs.plos.org/plos/2010/09/announcing-plos-blogs/.
works)
Masters' theses or Wells A. 1999. Exploring the development of the independent, electronic,
doctoral scholarly journal. M.Sc. Thesis, The University of Sheffield. Available from:
dissertations http://cumincad.scix.net/cgi-bin/works/Show?2e09
Databases and Roberts SB. QPX Genome Browser Feature Tracks; 2013 [cited 2013 Oct 5].
repositories Database: figshare [Internet]. Available from:
(Figshare, arXiv) http://figshare.com/articles/QPX_Genome_Browser_Feature_Tracks/701214
Multimedia Hitchcock A, producer and director. Rear Window [Film]; 1954. Los Angeles:
(videos, movies, MGM.
or TV shows)
Supporting Information
Authors can submit essential supporting files and multimedia files along with their
manuscripts. All supporting information will be subject to peer review. All file types can be
submitted, but files must be smaller than 10 MB in size.
Authors may use almost any description as the item name for a supporting information file as
long as it contains an “S” and number. For example: “S1 Appendix” and “S2 Appendix,” “S1
Table” and “S2 Table,” and so forth.
Supporting information files are published exactly as provided, and are not copyedited.
Supporting information captions
List supporting information captions at the end of the manuscript file. Do not submit captions
in a separate file.
The file number and name are required in a caption, and we highly recommend including a
one-line title as well. You may also include a legend in your caption, but it is not required.
Example caption
S1 Text. Title is strongly recommended. Legend is optional.
Cite tables in ascending numeric order upon first appearance in the manuscript file.
Place each table in your manuscript file directly after the paragraph in which it is first cited
(read order). Do not submit your tables in separate files.
Tables require a label (e.g., “Table 1”) and brief descriptive title to be placed above the table.
Place legends, footnotes, and other text below the table.
1.3. Summary of submission requirements
The manuscript submitted to JSID shall include the following:
Manuscript Title
Author names, affiliations, academic degree and contact address (E-mail, telephone,
country) (indicating corresponding author)
Covering letter
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods