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HOW TO WRITE SCIENTIFIC PAPER IN
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Workshop Penulisan Artikel Ilmiah di Jurnal Internasional
IAIN Walisongo, Semarang, 12-13 Juni 2013
Disampaikan oleh:
I. Istadi
Department of Chemical Engineering, Diponegoro University
09/06/2013
1
Tentang Presenter (Istadi)
• Nama : Dr. Istadi, ST., MT.
• Jabatan : - Staf Ahli Pembantu Rektor IV Undip;
- Kabid Pengembangan Website UPT Puskom Undip
• Alamat : Jurusan Teknik Kimia, Fakultas Teknik, Universitas Diponegoro
• Email : istadi@undip.ac.id
• Website : http://tekim.undip.ac.id/staf/istadi
• Pengalaman Editorial:
– Editor-in-Chief Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering and Catalysis
(SCOPUS, h-index=2) (http://ejournal.undip.ac.id/index.php/bcrec)
– International Journal Reviewer di: Elsevier (27), Wiley (3), Springer (7),
Taylor & Francis (2), American Chemical Society (2)
• SCOPUS ID : 6506850769
• SCOPUS h-index : 8
• Total Publication in Scopus : 17 articles
• Total Citations in scopus : 173 citations
• Total Citation in Google Scholar : 240 citations
Outline of Presentation
• Scientific Publications of Indonesia in
Internationa Journal
• Why do we have to Publish ?
• Practical Tips Before Scientific writting?
• What Makes a Good Manuscript?
• How to Write Manuscript (IMRAD)
09/06/2013
2
PERBANDINGAN JUMLAH PUBLIKASI TERINDEKS DI SCOPUS
Sumber: SCIMAGO Journal Ranking (http://www.scimagojr.com)
Profil 142 Universitas di Indonesia di SCOPUS
09/06/2013
3
Parameter QS WORLD, QS ASIAN, &
QS STARS University Ranking
Jumlah Paper di
SCOPUS
Efek Publikasi
Internasional
(Iklan)
SCOPUS Indexed Indonesian journals per Juni 2013
• Indonesia : 13+2
–ITB : 4; UGM: 3 ; Undip: 1 ; UI: 1 ; UAD : 1 (Compendex) ; Assosiasi : 5
09/06/2013
4
WHY PUBLISH IN AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL ?
• Scientists publish to share with the Scientific
Community something that advances, not repeats,
knowledge and understanding in a certain fields
• To present new, original results or methods
• To rationalize published results
• To present a review of the field or to summarize a
particular topic
WHAT NOT TO PUBLISH
• Reports of no scientific interest
• Out of date work
• Duplications of previously published work
• Incorrect/unacceptable conclusions
•  You need a GOOD manuscript to present
your contributions to the scientific community
09/06/2013
5
WHAT MAKES A GOOD MANUSCRIPT?
• Contains a clear, useful, and exciting scientific
message
• Flows in a logical manner that the reader can
follow
• Is formatted to best showcase the material ?
• Is written in a style that transmits the
message clearly ?
WHAT TYPES OF MANUSCRIPT?
• Original Research Articles: the most important papers. Often
substantial and significant completed pieces of research.
• Letters / Rapid Communications / Short Communications: quick
and early communication of significant and original advances.
Much shorter than full articles (check limitations).
• Review Papers / Perspectives: summarize recent developments
on a specific topic. Highlight important previously reported
points. Not the place to introduce new information. Often
invited.
 Self‐evaluate your work. Is it sufficient for a full article? Or are
your results so thrilling that they should be shown as soon as
possible?
 Ask your supervisor and your colleagues for advice on
manuscript type. Sometimes outsiders can see things more
clearly than you.
09/06/2013
6
Questions to Answer Before You Write
Think about WHY you want to publish your work.
• Is it new and interesting?
• Is it a current hot topic?
• Have you provided solutions to some difficult
problems?
• Are you ready to publish at this point?
If all answers are “yes”, then start preparations
for your manuscript
PUBLICATION PROCESS AT A GLANCE
09/06/2013
7
General Structure of a Full Article
• Title
• Authors and Affiliation
• Abstract
• Keywords
• Main text (IMRAD)
– Introduction: what question was asked in the research?
– Methods (and Materials): how was it studied?
– Results: what was discovered?
– Discussion : what do the findings mean?
– Conclusions
• Acknowledgements
• References
• Supplementary material
Sequence of Writting Manuscript
Write the manuscript in the following group order:
• Figures and tables
• Methods, Results and Discussion
• Conclusions and Introduction
• Abstract and Title
• Each section has a definite purpose.
09/06/2013
8
Write a TITLE
• This is your opportunity to attract the reader’s
attention.
– Remember: readers are the potential authors who will cite
your article
• Identify the main issue of the paper
• Begin with the subject of the paper
• Should be accurate, unambiguous, specific, and
complete
• Do not contain infrequently-used abbreviations
• Discuss with your co‐authors
Write ABSTRACT
• Should stand alone
• Consider it the advertisement of your article : Should
tell the prospective reader what you did and highlight the key
findings.
• Avoid using technical jargon and uncommon
abbreviations.
• You must be accurate, brief, clear and specific: Use
words which reflect the precise meaning
• Should be precise and honest
• Cites no references
• Follow word limitations (50‐300 words)
09/06/2013
9
Write KEYWORDS
• These are the labels of your manuscript and critical
to correct indexing and searching.
– Shouldn’t be too broad or too narrow (think Google …)
• Use only those abbreviations that are firmly
established in the field. e.g. DNA
• Check the Guide for Authors
– Number, label, definition, thesaurus, range, and other
special requests
• Check the guideline of keywords separator, i.e.
Semicolon (;) or comma (,): usually semicolon 
related with search engine
Write INTRODUCTION
• Introduce the main scientific
publications on which your work is
based
• Provide sufficient background
information to help readers evaluate
your work  General background
(review articles Cited)
• Editors hate references irrelevant to
the work, or in appropriate
judgments on your own
achievements
• Convince readers that your work is
necessary.: Use words or phrases
like “however”, “remain unclear”,
etc., to address your opinions and
work
• Your chance to convince
readers of the importance of
your work.
• Describe the problem:
– Are there any existing
solutions?
– Which is the best?
– What are their main
limitations?
– And what do you hope to
achieve?
• Provide a perspective
consistent with the nature of
the journal.
09/06/2013
10
Write METHODS (& MATERIALS) Section
• Details, details, details ‐ a knowledgeable reader
should be able to reproduce the experiment.
• However, use references and Supplementary
Materials for previously published procedures.
– Do not repeat the details of established methods.
– A general summary with reference is sufficient.
• Reviewers will criticize incomplete or incorrect
descriptions.
– and may even recommend rejection
Methods: How did you study the problem?
The basic principle: to provide sufficient information so that a
knowledgeable reader can reproduce the experiment, or the
derivation.
• Empirical papers:
– material studied, area descriptions
– methods, techniques, theories applied
• Case study papers:
– application of existing methods, theory or tools
– special settings in this piece of work
• Methodology papers:
– materials and detailed procedure of a novel experimentation
– scheme, flow, and performance analysis of a new algorithm
• Theory papers:
– principles, concepts, and models
– major framework and derivation
09/06/2013
11
Methods: The Words and More
• Should be written in past tense
• In some journals, may include subheads
(which can help readers)
• May include tables and figures—for example:
– Flowcharts
– Diagrams of apparatus
– Tables of experimental conditions
The Results Section
• The core of the paper
• Often includes tables, figures, or both
• Should summarize findings rather than
providing data in great detail
• Should present results but not comment on
them
• (Note: Some journals combine the Results and
the Discussion.)
09/06/2013
12
The following should be included in RESULTS
• Main findings listed in association with the methods
• Highlighted differences between your results and
the previous publications (especially in case study
papers)
• Results of statistical analysis
• Results of performance analysis (especially in the
methodology, or algorithm papers)
• A set of principal equations or theorems supporting
the assumptions after a long chain of inferences
(especially in the theory papers)
Write RESULTS
• Only representative results, essential for the
Discussion, should be presented.
• Show data of secondary importance in
Supplementary Materials.
• Do not “hide” data in the hope of saving it for a later
paper: You may lose evidence to support your conclusion.
• Use sub‐headings to keep results of the same type
together: Easier to review and read.
• Tell a clear and easy‐to‐understand story
09/06/2013
13
Appearance Counts in Results
• Un‐crowded plots: 3 or 4 data sets per figure; well‐selected
scales; appropriate axis label size; symbols clear to read and
data sets easy to discriminate.
• Each photograph must have a scale marker of professional
quality on one corner.
• Use color ONLY when necessary. If different line styles can
clarify the meaning, never use colors or other thrilling effects.
• Color needs to be visible and distinguishable when printed
out in black & white.
• Do NOT ‘selectively adjust’ any image to enhance
visualization of results.
• The captions of figures and tables should contain sufficient
information to make the figures self explanatory.
• Do not include long boring tables
Verb Tense for the Results Section:
Past Tense
Examples:
– A total of 417 of the customers replied.
– _____ increased, but _____ decreased.
– The average temperature was _____.
– Three of the dogs died.
– This difference was not statistically significant.
09/06/2013
14
Mentioning Tables and Figures:
Some Writing Advice
• In citing tables and figures, emphasize the
finding, not the table or figure.
– Not so good: Table 3 shows that researchers who
attended the workshop published twice as many
papers per year.
– Better: Researchers who attended the workshop
published twice as many papers per year (Table 3).
SHOULD BE
09/06/2013
15
Figures: A Few Suggestions
• Use figures (graphs, diagrams, maps,
photographs, etc) only if they will help convey
your information.
• Avoid including too much information in one
figure.
• Make sure any lettering will be large enough
once published.
• Follow the journal’s instructions.
09/06/2013
16
DISCUSSION – What the results mean
• It is the most important section of your article. Here you get the
chance to SELL your data
• Make the Discussion corresponding to the Results.: But do not
reiterate the results  What?
• Often should begin with a brief summary of the main findings
• Check for the following:
– How do your results relate to the original question or objectives outlined
in the Introduction section?
– Do you provide interpretation scientifically for each of your results
presented? Why?
– Are your results consistent with what other investigators have reported?
Or are there any differences? What else?
– Can you reach your conclusion smoothly after your discussion?
– Are there any limitations? Any suggestion to next works?
• You need to compare the published results with yours: Do NOT
ignore work in disagreement with yours –confront it and
convince the reader that you are correct or better
09/06/2013
17
In Summary: Results and Discussion
• In Results and Discussion section should
include:
– What ?  describe the result findings
– Why ?  please justify why the findings trend
scientifically (connected with theory and philosophy)
– What else?  compare your findings with other
researchers (about the trend and scientific reasons) and
Possible reasons for similarities and differences
– Any limitations?  limitation of your findings, next
research
Discussion: Scientific Language ‐Tenses
• Present tense for known facts and hypotheses:
– “The average life of a honey bee is 6 weeks”
• Past tense for experiments you have conducted:
– “All the honey bees were maintained in an environment
with a consistent temperature of 23 degrees centigrade…”
• Past tense when you describe the results of an
experiment:
– “The average life span of bees in our contained
environment was 8 weeks…”
09/06/2013
18
Write CONCLUSIONS
• Should answer the objectives of research
• Tells how your work advances the field from the
present state of knowledge
• Without clear Conclusions, reviewers and readers
will find it difficult to judge the work, and whether or
not it merits publication in the journal.
• Do NOT repeat the Abstract, or just list
experimental results: Trivial statements of your results
are unacceptable in this section.
• Provide a clear scientific justification for your work,
and indicate possible applications and extensions:
You should also suggest future experiments and/or point out
those that are underway.
Example of Good Conclusions
09/06/2013
19
Acknowledgements
• Recognize those who helped in the research
(you want them to help again, don’t you?)
• Include individuals who have assisted you in
your study:
– Advisors
– Financial supporters
– Proofreaders
– Typists
– Suppliers who may have given materials
References
• Cite the main scientific publications on which your
work is based. Cite only items that you have read
• Do not inflate the manuscript with too many
references – it doesn’t make it a better manuscript
• Avoid excessive self‐citations
• Avoid excessive citations of publications from the
same region
• Check each reference against the original source
(authors name, volume, issue, year, DOI Number)
• Carefully follow the journal’s instructions to authors.
• Use other articles in the same journal as models
09/06/2013
20
Placement of Citations
• Ambiguous:
– This disease has been reported in humans, dogs, rabbits,
and squirrels (Tuda and Gastel, 1997; Xie and Lozano,
2008; Flores, 2002).
– This disease has been reported in humans, dogs, rabbits,
and squirrels.1,4,7
• Clear:
– This disease has been reported in humans (Tuda and
Gastel, 1997), dogs (Xie and Lozano, 2008), and rabbits and
squirrels (Flores, 2002).
– This disease has been reported in humans,1 dogs,4 rabbits,7
and squirrels.7
Typing Citation & References
• Use tools available in Microsoft Word
(References  Insert Citation  Choose Style
of References: APA, MLA, Harvard, etc. 
Insert Bibliography)
• Use Mendeley Plugin (References  Insert
Mendeley Citation  Choose Style of
References  Insert Bibliography)
09/06/2013
21
Any Questions ?
• istadi@undip.ac.id

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How to write_scientific_paper

  • 1. HOW TO WRITE SCIENTIFIC PAPER IN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Workshop Penulisan Artikel Ilmiah di Jurnal Internasional IAIN Walisongo, Semarang, 12-13 Juni 2013 Disampaikan oleh: I. Istadi Department of Chemical Engineering, Diponegoro University
  • 2. 09/06/2013 1 Tentang Presenter (Istadi) • Nama : Dr. Istadi, ST., MT. • Jabatan : - Staf Ahli Pembantu Rektor IV Undip; - Kabid Pengembangan Website UPT Puskom Undip • Alamat : Jurusan Teknik Kimia, Fakultas Teknik, Universitas Diponegoro • Email : istadi@undip.ac.id • Website : http://tekim.undip.ac.id/staf/istadi • Pengalaman Editorial: – Editor-in-Chief Bulletin of Chemical Reaction Engineering and Catalysis (SCOPUS, h-index=2) (http://ejournal.undip.ac.id/index.php/bcrec) – International Journal Reviewer di: Elsevier (27), Wiley (3), Springer (7), Taylor & Francis (2), American Chemical Society (2) • SCOPUS ID : 6506850769 • SCOPUS h-index : 8 • Total Publication in Scopus : 17 articles • Total Citations in scopus : 173 citations • Total Citation in Google Scholar : 240 citations Outline of Presentation • Scientific Publications of Indonesia in Internationa Journal • Why do we have to Publish ? • Practical Tips Before Scientific writting? • What Makes a Good Manuscript? • How to Write Manuscript (IMRAD)
  • 3. 09/06/2013 2 PERBANDINGAN JUMLAH PUBLIKASI TERINDEKS DI SCOPUS Sumber: SCIMAGO Journal Ranking (http://www.scimagojr.com) Profil 142 Universitas di Indonesia di SCOPUS
  • 4. 09/06/2013 3 Parameter QS WORLD, QS ASIAN, & QS STARS University Ranking Jumlah Paper di SCOPUS Efek Publikasi Internasional (Iklan) SCOPUS Indexed Indonesian journals per Juni 2013 • Indonesia : 13+2 –ITB : 4; UGM: 3 ; Undip: 1 ; UI: 1 ; UAD : 1 (Compendex) ; Assosiasi : 5
  • 5. 09/06/2013 4 WHY PUBLISH IN AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL ? • Scientists publish to share with the Scientific Community something that advances, not repeats, knowledge and understanding in a certain fields • To present new, original results or methods • To rationalize published results • To present a review of the field or to summarize a particular topic WHAT NOT TO PUBLISH • Reports of no scientific interest • Out of date work • Duplications of previously published work • Incorrect/unacceptable conclusions •  You need a GOOD manuscript to present your contributions to the scientific community
  • 6. 09/06/2013 5 WHAT MAKES A GOOD MANUSCRIPT? • Contains a clear, useful, and exciting scientific message • Flows in a logical manner that the reader can follow • Is formatted to best showcase the material ? • Is written in a style that transmits the message clearly ? WHAT TYPES OF MANUSCRIPT? • Original Research Articles: the most important papers. Often substantial and significant completed pieces of research. • Letters / Rapid Communications / Short Communications: quick and early communication of significant and original advances. Much shorter than full articles (check limitations). • Review Papers / Perspectives: summarize recent developments on a specific topic. Highlight important previously reported points. Not the place to introduce new information. Often invited.  Self‐evaluate your work. Is it sufficient for a full article? Or are your results so thrilling that they should be shown as soon as possible?  Ask your supervisor and your colleagues for advice on manuscript type. Sometimes outsiders can see things more clearly than you.
  • 7. 09/06/2013 6 Questions to Answer Before You Write Think about WHY you want to publish your work. • Is it new and interesting? • Is it a current hot topic? • Have you provided solutions to some difficult problems? • Are you ready to publish at this point? If all answers are “yes”, then start preparations for your manuscript PUBLICATION PROCESS AT A GLANCE
  • 8. 09/06/2013 7 General Structure of a Full Article • Title • Authors and Affiliation • Abstract • Keywords • Main text (IMRAD) – Introduction: what question was asked in the research? – Methods (and Materials): how was it studied? – Results: what was discovered? – Discussion : what do the findings mean? – Conclusions • Acknowledgements • References • Supplementary material Sequence of Writting Manuscript Write the manuscript in the following group order: • Figures and tables • Methods, Results and Discussion • Conclusions and Introduction • Abstract and Title • Each section has a definite purpose.
  • 9. 09/06/2013 8 Write a TITLE • This is your opportunity to attract the reader’s attention. – Remember: readers are the potential authors who will cite your article • Identify the main issue of the paper • Begin with the subject of the paper • Should be accurate, unambiguous, specific, and complete • Do not contain infrequently-used abbreviations • Discuss with your co‐authors Write ABSTRACT • Should stand alone • Consider it the advertisement of your article : Should tell the prospective reader what you did and highlight the key findings. • Avoid using technical jargon and uncommon abbreviations. • You must be accurate, brief, clear and specific: Use words which reflect the precise meaning • Should be precise and honest • Cites no references • Follow word limitations (50‐300 words)
  • 10. 09/06/2013 9 Write KEYWORDS • These are the labels of your manuscript and critical to correct indexing and searching. – Shouldn’t be too broad or too narrow (think Google …) • Use only those abbreviations that are firmly established in the field. e.g. DNA • Check the Guide for Authors – Number, label, definition, thesaurus, range, and other special requests • Check the guideline of keywords separator, i.e. Semicolon (;) or comma (,): usually semicolon  related with search engine Write INTRODUCTION • Introduce the main scientific publications on which your work is based • Provide sufficient background information to help readers evaluate your work  General background (review articles Cited) • Editors hate references irrelevant to the work, or in appropriate judgments on your own achievements • Convince readers that your work is necessary.: Use words or phrases like “however”, “remain unclear”, etc., to address your opinions and work • Your chance to convince readers of the importance of your work. • Describe the problem: – Are there any existing solutions? – Which is the best? – What are their main limitations? – And what do you hope to achieve? • Provide a perspective consistent with the nature of the journal.
  • 11. 09/06/2013 10 Write METHODS (& MATERIALS) Section • Details, details, details ‐ a knowledgeable reader should be able to reproduce the experiment. • However, use references and Supplementary Materials for previously published procedures. – Do not repeat the details of established methods. – A general summary with reference is sufficient. • Reviewers will criticize incomplete or incorrect descriptions. – and may even recommend rejection Methods: How did you study the problem? The basic principle: to provide sufficient information so that a knowledgeable reader can reproduce the experiment, or the derivation. • Empirical papers: – material studied, area descriptions – methods, techniques, theories applied • Case study papers: – application of existing methods, theory or tools – special settings in this piece of work • Methodology papers: – materials and detailed procedure of a novel experimentation – scheme, flow, and performance analysis of a new algorithm • Theory papers: – principles, concepts, and models – major framework and derivation
  • 12. 09/06/2013 11 Methods: The Words and More • Should be written in past tense • In some journals, may include subheads (which can help readers) • May include tables and figures—for example: – Flowcharts – Diagrams of apparatus – Tables of experimental conditions The Results Section • The core of the paper • Often includes tables, figures, or both • Should summarize findings rather than providing data in great detail • Should present results but not comment on them • (Note: Some journals combine the Results and the Discussion.)
  • 13. 09/06/2013 12 The following should be included in RESULTS • Main findings listed in association with the methods • Highlighted differences between your results and the previous publications (especially in case study papers) • Results of statistical analysis • Results of performance analysis (especially in the methodology, or algorithm papers) • A set of principal equations or theorems supporting the assumptions after a long chain of inferences (especially in the theory papers) Write RESULTS • Only representative results, essential for the Discussion, should be presented. • Show data of secondary importance in Supplementary Materials. • Do not “hide” data in the hope of saving it for a later paper: You may lose evidence to support your conclusion. • Use sub‐headings to keep results of the same type together: Easier to review and read. • Tell a clear and easy‐to‐understand story
  • 14. 09/06/2013 13 Appearance Counts in Results • Un‐crowded plots: 3 or 4 data sets per figure; well‐selected scales; appropriate axis label size; symbols clear to read and data sets easy to discriminate. • Each photograph must have a scale marker of professional quality on one corner. • Use color ONLY when necessary. If different line styles can clarify the meaning, never use colors or other thrilling effects. • Color needs to be visible and distinguishable when printed out in black & white. • Do NOT ‘selectively adjust’ any image to enhance visualization of results. • The captions of figures and tables should contain sufficient information to make the figures self explanatory. • Do not include long boring tables Verb Tense for the Results Section: Past Tense Examples: – A total of 417 of the customers replied. – _____ increased, but _____ decreased. – The average temperature was _____. – Three of the dogs died. – This difference was not statistically significant.
  • 15. 09/06/2013 14 Mentioning Tables and Figures: Some Writing Advice • In citing tables and figures, emphasize the finding, not the table or figure. – Not so good: Table 3 shows that researchers who attended the workshop published twice as many papers per year. – Better: Researchers who attended the workshop published twice as many papers per year (Table 3). SHOULD BE
  • 16. 09/06/2013 15 Figures: A Few Suggestions • Use figures (graphs, diagrams, maps, photographs, etc) only if they will help convey your information. • Avoid including too much information in one figure. • Make sure any lettering will be large enough once published. • Follow the journal’s instructions.
  • 17. 09/06/2013 16 DISCUSSION – What the results mean • It is the most important section of your article. Here you get the chance to SELL your data • Make the Discussion corresponding to the Results.: But do not reiterate the results  What? • Often should begin with a brief summary of the main findings • Check for the following: – How do your results relate to the original question or objectives outlined in the Introduction section? – Do you provide interpretation scientifically for each of your results presented? Why? – Are your results consistent with what other investigators have reported? Or are there any differences? What else? – Can you reach your conclusion smoothly after your discussion? – Are there any limitations? Any suggestion to next works? • You need to compare the published results with yours: Do NOT ignore work in disagreement with yours –confront it and convince the reader that you are correct or better
  • 18. 09/06/2013 17 In Summary: Results and Discussion • In Results and Discussion section should include: – What ?  describe the result findings – Why ?  please justify why the findings trend scientifically (connected with theory and philosophy) – What else?  compare your findings with other researchers (about the trend and scientific reasons) and Possible reasons for similarities and differences – Any limitations?  limitation of your findings, next research Discussion: Scientific Language ‐Tenses • Present tense for known facts and hypotheses: – “The average life of a honey bee is 6 weeks” • Past tense for experiments you have conducted: – “All the honey bees were maintained in an environment with a consistent temperature of 23 degrees centigrade…” • Past tense when you describe the results of an experiment: – “The average life span of bees in our contained environment was 8 weeks…”
  • 19. 09/06/2013 18 Write CONCLUSIONS • Should answer the objectives of research • Tells how your work advances the field from the present state of knowledge • Without clear Conclusions, reviewers and readers will find it difficult to judge the work, and whether or not it merits publication in the journal. • Do NOT repeat the Abstract, or just list experimental results: Trivial statements of your results are unacceptable in this section. • Provide a clear scientific justification for your work, and indicate possible applications and extensions: You should also suggest future experiments and/or point out those that are underway. Example of Good Conclusions
  • 20. 09/06/2013 19 Acknowledgements • Recognize those who helped in the research (you want them to help again, don’t you?) • Include individuals who have assisted you in your study: – Advisors – Financial supporters – Proofreaders – Typists – Suppliers who may have given materials References • Cite the main scientific publications on which your work is based. Cite only items that you have read • Do not inflate the manuscript with too many references – it doesn’t make it a better manuscript • Avoid excessive self‐citations • Avoid excessive citations of publications from the same region • Check each reference against the original source (authors name, volume, issue, year, DOI Number) • Carefully follow the journal’s instructions to authors. • Use other articles in the same journal as models
  • 21. 09/06/2013 20 Placement of Citations • Ambiguous: – This disease has been reported in humans, dogs, rabbits, and squirrels (Tuda and Gastel, 1997; Xie and Lozano, 2008; Flores, 2002). – This disease has been reported in humans, dogs, rabbits, and squirrels.1,4,7 • Clear: – This disease has been reported in humans (Tuda and Gastel, 1997), dogs (Xie and Lozano, 2008), and rabbits and squirrels (Flores, 2002). – This disease has been reported in humans,1 dogs,4 rabbits,7 and squirrels.7 Typing Citation & References • Use tools available in Microsoft Word (References  Insert Citation  Choose Style of References: APA, MLA, Harvard, etc.  Insert Bibliography) • Use Mendeley Plugin (References  Insert Mendeley Citation  Choose Style of References  Insert Bibliography)
  • 22. 09/06/2013 21 Any Questions ? • istadi@undip.ac.id