AUTHOR GUIDELINES
Author
Guidelines for Preparation of
Manuscript
Please strive for a
professionally prepared
manuscript of high technical and
scientific quality. Many
reviewers are overwhelmed with
review requests. Our experience
is that they are more likely to
agree to review a well prepared
manuscript.
Articles should be submitted in
the following order: Title,
Abstract, Introduction,
Materials and Methods, Results,
Discussion, Acknowledgements,
References.
Font
style Times New Roman - Space
1.5 - Font 12
Please number the headings in
your manuscript as follows:
It should be arranged into the
following sections:
(1) Title page, (2) Abstract and
Key words, (3) Introduction, (4)
Materials and Methods, (5)
Results & Discussion, (6)
Conclusion, (7) Acknowledgement
(8) References, (9) Tables and
(10) Figures.
(For the units of
measurement, the use of the
International System of Units
(SI) is recommended)
Title page:
It should contain, name of
author(s) and an(*) asterisk
placed after the name of the
corresponding author, address (es)
of the institution(s) at which
the work was performed, each
author's affiliation and a
footnote including the complete
mailing address, telephone
number, e-mail address for the
corresponding author.
Abstract: It
should give the brief idea of
Research Work and should not
exceed more than 200 -300 words.
Keywords: It
should have 6-8 keywords related
to the work.
Introduction: It should
provide sufficient background
information for the reader to
understand and evaluate the
results of the present study
without referring to previous
publications on the same topic.
Materials and methods:
All important material used
along with their source shall be
mentioned. The main methods used
shall be briefly described,
citing references. New methods
or substantially modified
methods may be described in
sufficient detail.
Results and Discussion:
Results should be described as
concisely as possible in one of
the following ways: text,
table(s), or figure(s). Avoid
extensive use of graphs to
present data that might be more
concisely or more
comprehensively presented in the
figures or tables. The
reproducibility and statistical
significance of measurements,
material or biological data,
must be included where relevant.
The discussion should provide an
interpretation of the results
and their significance with
regard to previously published
work. There should not be any
significant repetition of the
experimental procedures or
reiteration of the introduction.
Conclusion: A short,
paragraph summarizing the most
important findings of the
research is required.
Acknowledgments:
The source of any financial
support, gifts, technical
assistance and advice received
for the work being published
must be indicated in the
Acknowledgments section.
Structure
Drawing Preferences: [As according to the ACS
style sheet]
Please make sure that artwork
files are in an acceptable
format (TIFF, EPS or MS Office
files) and with the correct
resolution.
For color reproduction in print,
you will receive information
regarding the costs from IJOER
after receipt of your accepted
article. Please indicate your
preference for color in print or
on the Web only.
References
should be numbered and listed on
a separate sheet. Indicate
references by number(s) in
square brackets in line with the
text. The actual authors can be
referred to, but the reference
number(s) must always be given.
Example: "... as demonstrated
[3,6]. Barnaby and Jones [8]
obtained a different result."
List: Number the references
(numbers in square brackets) in
the list in the order in which
they appear in the text.
Examples:
Reference to a journal
publication:
[1] Kishore M, Janardhan
Medikondu, Bhaskar MV, et al.
The art of writing a scientific
article. Int.J.Engg.Res.online,
2013, 1:12-15.
Reference to a book:
[2] Strunk Jr W, White EB. The
Elements of Style. third ed.,
Macmillan, New York, 1979.
Reference to a chapter in an
edited book:
[3] Mettam GR, Adams LB. How to
prepare an electronic version of
your article. in: Jones BS,
Smith RZ. (Eds.), Introduction
to the Electronic Age,
E-Publishing Inc., New York,
1999, pp281-304.
Review Articles:
Review articles should be about
15 pages and contain up-to-date
information providing
comprehensive coverage of
relevant literature. Review
articles should preferably be
written by scientists who have
in-depth knowledge of the topic.
All format requirements are
similar to those applicable to
Research papers. Review Articles
need not be divided into
sections such as Materials and
methods, and Results and
discussion, but should
definitely have an Abstract
and Introduction.
Full Length Research Papers:
These papers should describe in
detail original and important
stages of work in the fields
covered by the IJOER.
Short Communications:
These should describe complete
and original research work whose
length and/or importance do not
justify a full-length paper. The
format Is the same as that for a
full-length Research Paper. The
approximate length should be 10
pages of 1.5-spaced type-script,
including Tables and Figures,
Keywords are essential.
Copyright:
Upon acceptance of an article,
authors will be asked to
transfer copyright (for more
information on copyright, This
transfer will ensure the widest
possible dissemination of
information. A letter will be
sent to the corresponding author
confirming receipt of the
manuscript. A form facilitating
transfer of copyright will be
provided.
Author's
rights:
As an author you (or your
employer or institution) may do
the following :
- Make copies (print or
electronic) of the article for
your own personal use, including
for your own classroom teaching
use.
- Make copies and distribute
such copies (including through
e-mail) of the article to
research colleagues, for the
personal use by such colleagues
(but not commercially or
systematically, e.g. via an
e-mail list or list server).
- Post a pre-print version of
the article on Internet websites
including pre-print servers, and
to retain indefinitely such
version on such servers or
sites.
- Post a revised personal
version of the final text of the
article (to reflect changes made
in the peer review and editing
process) on your personal or
institutional website or server,
with a link to the journal
homepage (on
http://www.ijoer.in).
- Present the article at a
meeting or conference and to
distribute copies of the article
to the delegates attending such
a meeting.
- For your employer, if the
article is a 'work for hire',
made within the scope of your
employment, your employer may
use all or part of the
information in the article for
other intra-company use (e.g.
training).
- Retain patent and trademark
rights and rights to any
processes or procedure described
in the article.
- Include the article in full or
in part in a thesis or
dissertation (provided that this
is not to be published
commercially).
- Use the article or any part
thereof in a printed compilation
of your works, such as collected
writings or lecture notes
(subsequent to publication of
your article in the journal).
- Prepare other derivative
works, to extend the article
into book-length form, or to
otherwise re-use portions or
excerpts in other works, with
full acknowledgement of its
original publication in the
journal.
Proofs:
Corrections should be clearly identified and
returned to the
editorial office within 5
working days of receipt to
editorijoer@gmail.com
Reprints and journal copies:
Electronic proofs will be
sent (e-mail attachment) to the
corresponding author as a PDF
file. Page proofs are
considered to be the final
version of the manuscript. With
the exception of typographical
or minor clerical errors, no
changes will be made in the
manuscript at the proof stage.
Because IJOER will be published
freely online to attract a wide
audience), authors will have
free electronic access to the
full text (in both HTML and PDF)
of the article. Authors can
freely download the PDF file
from which they can print
unlimited copies of their
articles; if reprints are
requested contact
editorijoer@gmail.com