Author Guideline

The submitted manuscript for publication in the International Journal for Research in Emerging Science and Technology (IJREST) should be original research work that high academic merit and should be contributed solely to the International Journal for Research in Emerging Science and Technology  (IJREST), not previously published and not under consideration for publication in the other publisher elsewhere and free from plagiarism. The manuscript that does not meet those requirements will be automatically rejected.
The submission that involves a multi-author manuscript implies the consent of all the authors who participated. All the submitted manuscripts to the International Journal for Research in Emerging Science and Technology will be peer-reviewed by at least two independent reviewers.

  • Submission Criteria

    The Manuscript submitted for publication in theInternational Journal for Research in Emerging Science and Technology should be appropriate with the following criteria:

    • The Manuscript must be written in good English language.
    • The Manuscript must be within the scope of the journal.
    • The Manuscript must be original, have not been published elsewhere, and will not be submitted to any journal during the review process.
    • The Manuscript must be following the journal instructions and have the correct style before being considered for reviewing process.
  • Preparing Manuscript File

    • International Journal for Research in Emerging Science and Technology accepts the manuscript in the form of a Research article and review article.
    • The manuscript must be prepared using word processing software, e.g. Microsoft Word, Open Office, Libre Office, etc., with document format .doc, or .docx.
  • Manuscript Structure

    • Title
      • The title of the manuscript must be concise and informative.
    • Author Names and Affiliation

      • Make sure that the author name clearly indicates the given name and family name of each author. Present the author's affiliation below the author's name. Add a number in a superscript letter after the author name and before the appropriate address. Provide the full postal address of each affiliation, including the name of the author's country and email address. Clearly provide who will handle correspondence at all stages of refereeing and publication and after publication.

    • Abstract

      • The abstract must be concise, factual and should state the purpose of the research, the used methods, the principal results, and the main conclusion briefly. Due to the abstract is occasionally presented separately from the full article, it should be able to stand alone and should not contain references. The use of non-standard or uncommon abbreviations should be avoided, but if necessary, they must be defined as mentioned in the abstract body.

    • Keywords

      • The keyword should be provided immediately after the abstract. It provides a maximum of 4 to 6 words, which is the keyword of the whole article. These keywords will be used for indexing purposes.

    • The Main Manuscript Content

      • Introduction
      • Experimental Section
      • Results and Discussion
      • Conclusion
      • The main body of the manuscript should be provided as follows:
    • Acknowledgement

      • Acknowledgement should be provided in a separate section at the end of the manuscript before the references. It should not include on the title page, as a footnote, or otherwise. It also should contain a list of those individuals or institutions that provide help during the research.

    • References

      • Make sure that all the cited references are listed in the reference section, and all the reference lists must be cited in the article body.
  • Manuscript Content

    • Section and subsection of the manuscript should be prepared in clearly defined and numbered sections. Sections should be numbered 1 (then 2, 3, ...), subsections should be numbered 1.1 (then 1.1.1, 1.1.2, ....), etc. Abstract, acknowledgment, and reference is not included in section numbering.

    • Section and Subsection

    • Figure and Artwork

      • Figure and artwork should be prepared in an acceptable format (JPEG, JPG, PNG, EPS, PDF, or MS Office files and with high enough resolution. Make sure that each figure and artwork should be numbered consecutively in accordance with their appearance in the text. Ensure that each figure or artwork has a caption that comprises a brief title and a description of the figure or artwork. Keep the text in the figures or artworks themselves to a minimum, but explain all symbols and abbreviations used.

    • Tables

      • The table should be provided as editable text and not as images. Tables could be placed in the next relevant text in the manuscript, or in the separate pages(s) at the end. Tables should be numbered consecutively in accordance with their appearance in the text, and place any table notes below the table body. The use of vertical rules and shading in the table shell should be avoided.

    • Math Formulae's

      • The math formulae provided in the text should be prepared as editable text and not as images.

    • Reference

      • To finish citing sources, a numbered list of references must be provided at the end of the paper. The list is comprised of the sequential enumerated citations, with details,
        beginning with [1], and is not alphabetical.

      • Page Format
        • Place references flush left
        • Single-space entries, double-space between.
        • Place number of entry at left margin, enclose in brackets.
        • Indent text of entries.

        Book in print

        [1] D. Sarunyagate, Ed., Lasers. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1996.

        Chapter in book

        [2] G. O. Young, "Synthetic structure of industrial plastics," in Plastics, 2nd ed., vol. 3, J. Peters, Ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964, pp. 15-64.

        eBook

        [3] L. Bass, P. Clements, and R. Kazman, Software Architecture in Practice, 2nd ed. Reading, MA: Addison Wesley, 2003. [E-book] Available: Safari e-book.

        Journal article

        [4] G. Liu, K. Y. Lee, and H. F. Jordan, "TDM and TWDM de Bruijn networks and shufflenets for optical communications," IEEE Trans. Comp., vol. 46, pp. 695-701, June 1997.

        eJournal (from database)

        [5] H. Ayasso and A. Mohammad-Djafari, "Joint NDT Image Restoration and Segmentation Using Gauss–Markov–Potts Prior Models and Variational Bayesian Computation," IEEE Transactions on Image Processing, vol. 19, no. 9, pp. 2265-77, 2010. [Online]. Available: IEEE Xplore, http://www.ieee.org. [Accessed Sept. 10, 2010]. 

        eJournal (from internet)

        [6] A. Altun, “Understanding hypertext in the context of reading on the web: Language learners’ experience,” Current Issues in Education, vol. 6, no. 12, July, 2005. [Online serial]. Available: http://cie.ed.asu.edu/volume6/number12/. [Accessed Dec. 2, 2007].

        Conference paper

        [7] L. Liu and H. Miao, "A specification based approach to testing polymorphic attributes," in Formal Methods and Software Engineering: Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Formal Engineering Methods, ICFEM 2004, Seattle, WA, USA, November 8-12, 2004, J. Davies, W. Schulte, M. Barnett, Eds. Berlin: Springer, 2004. pp. 306-19.

        Conference proceedings

        [8] T. J. van Weert and R. K. Munro, Eds., Informatics and the Digital Society: Social, ethical and cognitive issues: IFIP TC3/WG3.1&3.2 Open Conference on Social, Ethical and Cognitive Issues of Informatics and ICT, July 22-26, 2002, Dortmund, Germany. Boston: Kluwer Academic, 2003.

        Newspaper article (from database)

        [9] J. Riley, "Call for new look at skilled migrants," The Australian, p. 35, May 31, 2005. [Online]. Available: Factiva, http://global.factiva.com. [Accessed May 31, 2005].

        Technical report

        [10] K. E. Elliott and C.M. Greene, "A local adaptive protocol," Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, France, Tech. Rep. 916-1010-BB, 1997.

        Patent

        [11] J. P. Wilkinson, “Nonlinear resonant circuit devices,” U.S. Patent 3 624 125, Jul. 16, 1990.

        Standard

        [12] IEEE Criteria for Class IE Electric Systems, IEEE Standard 308, 1969.

        Thesis/Dissertation

        [1] J. O. Williams, “Narrow-band analyzer,” Ph.D. dissertation, Dept. Elect. Eng., Harvard Univ., Cambridge, MA, 1993.

    • Citation Format
      • Each reference number should be enclosed in square brackets on the same line as the text, before any punctuation, with a space before the bracket.

        Examples “. . .end of the line for my research [13].”

        “The theory was first put forward in 1987 [1].”

        “Scholtz [2] has argued. . . .” “For example, see [7].”

        “Several recent studies [3, 4, 15, 22] have suggested that. . . .”

        Note: Authors and dates do not have to be written out after the first reference; use the bracketed number. Also, it is not necessary to write “in reference [2].”Just write “in [2].”

        The preferred method to cite more than one source at a time is to list each reference in its own brackets, then separate with a comma or dash:

        [1], [3], [5]

        [1] – [5]

      • Need help for formatting references and citations click here
  • Manuscript Submission

    • Manuscript submission in this journal proceeds totally online, and the author will be guided step-wise by the journal system (OJS) through uploading the manuscript file. The manuscript submitted should be in Word document format that can be edited for the double-blind peer-review purpose. For submission, click here

    • Before submission, authors should create a user account if they are first-time users. Please click here