International Conference

AUTHOR’S GUIDELINES

We do not have strict formatting requirements, but all manuscripts must contain the essential elements needed to convey the content in clearly defined sections: Title, Abstract, Keywords, Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion and/or Conclusions, References, Figures and Tables with Captions, and any Supplementary Material required.

SUBMISSION CHECKLIST
  • Full author names: First name(s), Surname(s)
  • Author affiliations: department, institution, city, state, country
  • Corresponding author: name, email address
  • The abstract does not exceed 300 words
  • 3–6 keywords (optional)
  • The manuscript file contains all essential sections: Article Title, Abstract, Keywords, 
Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, References, Figure 
Captions, Tables.
  • Ensure tables and figures are mentioned in the text, e.g ‘As shown in Table 1 and Fig. 2’
  • All references mentioned in the references list should be mentioned in the text, and 
vice versa. Use reference manager such as EndNote, Mendeley, Zotero, etc.
  • All necessary declarations (acknowledgments, conflict of interests, supporting 
grants, presentations) have been made
  • All manuscript and supplementary material files have been uploaded
  • The preferred electronic format for text is Microsoft Word.

REFERENCES

Authors are responsible for ensuring that the information in each reference is accurate. All references must be numbered sequentially and all references mentioned in the references list are cited in the text, and vice versa. Citations of references in text should be identified using numbers in square brackets (e.g., “as discussed by Walker [4]”; or “as explained in [3, 8]”). Use reference manager such as EndNote, Mendeley, Zotero, etc.

UNITS OF MEASUREMENT

Units of measurement should be presented using System International (SI) units.

PROOFS

Authors will receive the typeset page proofs for final approval. Authors should either approve or return the proofs with any corrections within 3-4 days of receipt.

LANGUAGE ACCURACY

Journals emphasizes on the linguistic accuracy of every manuscript published. Articles must be in English and they must be competently written and argued in clear and concise grammatical English. Contributors are strongly advised to have the manuscript checked by a colleague with ample experience in writing English manuscripts or a competent English language editor.

Author(s) should provide a certificate confirming that their manuscripts have been adequately edited. A proof from a recognised editing service should be submitted together with the cover letter at the time of submitting a manuscript to Committe. All editing costs must be borne by the author(s). This step, taken by authors before submission, will greatly facilitate reviewing, and thus publication if the content is acceptable.

Template for preparing manuscript for international meeting of public health ¬ 16pt, bold

 

Abdi A Youandi1 *, Tita Haryanti2 ¬ 14pt

 

1Gatoel Hospital, Mojokerto, East Java, Indonesia ¬ 12pt

2Post Graduate of Hospital Management, Medical Faculty, Universitas Brawijaya, Malang, Indonesia ¬ 12pt

The Abstract is written in 12 pt Times New Roman in English with word limitation not exceed 300 words. The abstract should be clear, concise, and descriptive. This abstract should provide a brief introduction to the problem, objective of paper, followed by a statement regarding the methodology and a brief summary of results. The abstract should end with a comment on the significance of the results or a brief conclusion.

Keywords: Maximum of 6 keywords separated by coma (,) ¬ 12pt, Times New Roman bold

Corresponding Author: Abdi A Youandi, E-mail: aayouandi@gmail.com

 

1. Introduction ¬ 12pt, Times New Roman bold

To use this template, please just Save As this MS Word file to your document, then copy and paste your document here. In Introduction, Authors should state the objectives of the work at the end of introduction section. Before the objective, Authors should provide an adequate background, and very short literature survey in order to record the existing solutions/method, to show which is the best of previous researches, to show the main limitation of the previous researches, to show what do you hope to achieve (to solve the limitation), and to show the scientific merit or novelties of the paper. Avoid a detailed literature survey or a summary of the results. Give in the end of Introduction.

For example: Nowadays, investigating materials for photovoltaic converters is one of the important areas of research in the surface physics. One of such materials is thin films of barium disilicide [1]. Different groups of authors are studying the optimal conditions for the formation BaSi2 on Si [2-4].

2. Methods ¬ 12pt, Times New Roman bold

Methods include the design, population, sample, data sources, techniques/instruments of data collection and data analysis procedures. Methods already published should be indicated by a reference: only relevant modifications should be described. Do not repeat the details of established methods.

3. Results ¬ 12pt, Times New Roman bold

Results should be clear and concise. The results should summarize (scientific) findings rather than providing data in great detail. Please highlight differences between your results or findings and the previous publications by other researchers. The discussion should explore the significance of the results of the work, not repeat them. A combined Results and Discussion section is often appropriate. Avoid extensive citations and discussion of published literature. In discussion, 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. Often should begin with a brief summary of the main scientific findings (not experimental results). The following components should be covered in discussion: How do your results relate to the original question or objectives outlined in the Introduction section (what)? Do you provide interpretation scientifically for each of your results or findings presented (why)? Are your results consistent with what other investigators have reported (what else)? Or are there any differences?

For example: According to the optical reflection spectra in the visible range (Figs. 1-3), barium disilicide thin films formed on samples #1 (800°C) and #2 (850°C), and the spectrum of the sample #3 (900°C) does not differ from the spectrum of clean silicon. Diffusion spectra of samples indirectly indicate a greater roughness of sample #2, than those of #1 and #3 ones. Analysis of IR spectra of samples #1 and #2 (Figs. 4-5) revealed the formation of a thin film on a substrate of barium disilicide: positions of the peaks corresponded to the peaks defined previously in another study [5]. Absorption peaks for the sample #2 are bigger that indicates that larger quantities of BaSi2 were formed in the film.

4. Conclucions ¬ 12pt, Times New Roman bold

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. 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.

Acknowledgement

Individuals and entities that have provided essential support such as research grants and fellowships and other sources of funding should be acknowledged. Contributions that do not involve researching (clerical assistance or personal acknowledgements) should not appear in acknowledgements.

Ethical approval

For those who use biological subjects such as human and animal are encourage to put the number of  ethical approval from the Ethical Research Committee provided.

Competing interst

Author (s) should declare that they have no competing interest

 

References ¬ 12pt, Times New Roman bold

Author are responsible for ensuring that the information in each reference is accurate. All references must be numbered sequentlly and all references mentioned in the references list are cited in the text, and vice versa. Citations of references in the text should be identified using numbers in square brackets (e.g “as discussed by Walker [4]”) References should be prepared using Vancouver styles. Use reference manager such as EndNote, Mendeley, Zotero, etc. Ensure that the references are strictly in the journal’s prescribed style, failing which your article will not be accepted for peer-review. Use at least 80% of relevant and related references from recent publication journals.

Example reference style

  1. Migas DB, Shaposhnicov VL, Borisenko VE: Isostructural BaSi2, BaGe2 and SrGe2: electronic and optical properties. Phis. Stat. Sol. B. 2007; 244, 7: 2611-2618.
  2. Pokhrel A, Samad L, Meng F, Jin S: Synthesis and characterization of barium silicide (BaSi2) nanowire arrays for potential solar applications. Nanoscale 2015; 7(41):17450-6.
  3. Suemasu T: Exploring the possibility of semiconducting BaSi2 for thin-film solar cell applications. Jap. J. Appl. Phys. 2015; 54: 07JA01.
  4. Nakagawa Y, Hara KO, Suemasu T, Usami N: Fabrication of single-phase polycrystalline BaSi2 thin films on silicon substrates by vacuum evaporation for solar cell applications. Jap. J. Appl. Phys. 2015; 54: 08KC03.
  5. Fomin DV, Dubov VL, Galkin KN, Goroshko DL, Maslov AM, Galkin NG, Batalov RI, Shustov VA: Formation, structure and optical properties of nanocrystalline BaSi2 films on Si (111) substrate. Sol. St. Phen. 2016 (in press).

Tables

  • All tables should be prepared in a form consistent with recent issues of Pertanika and should be numbered consecutively with Roman numerals.  Explanatory material should be given in the table legends and footnotes.  Each table should be prepared on a new page, embedded in the manuscript. Tables should be formatted using ‘Table object’ function in your word processing program.

Example:

Table 1. Formatting table

Object

Font

Alignment

Space above

Space below

Title

12pt bold

centered

0pt

12pt

Author(s)

12pt bold

centered

12pt

12pt

Addresses

12pt italics

centered

0pt

0pt

Heading1

12pt bold

left

12pt

3pt

Heading2

12pt bold

left

6pt

3pt

Heading3

12pt bold italics

left

3pt

3pt

Body

12pt

justified

0pt

0pt

Bullet

12pt

justified

0pt

0pt

Table title

12pt

centered

12pt

6pt

Figure title

12pt

centered

3pt

6pt

Figures & photographs

Submit an original figure or photograph.  Line drawings must be clear, with high black and white contrast.  Each figure or photograph should be prepared on a new page, embedded in the manuscript for reviewing to keep the file of the manuscript under 5 MB. These should be numbered consecutively with Roman numerals.

Figures or photographs must also be submitted as TIFF, JPEG, or Excel files. For electronic figures, create your figures using applications that are capable of preparing high resolution TIFF files. In general, we require 300 dpi or higher resolution for coloured and half-tone artwork, and 1200 dpi or higher for line drawings are required.

Examples:

gambar

Figure 1. A sample chart