Submission for Special Issues
Submission of an Article IJBMS prefers to publish original articles written specifically for the journal, as opposed to papers prepared for presentation or publication elsewhere. The journal occasionally accepts previously published articles if they are judged to be of particular value and have had only limited distribution.
The preferred form of submission is as a word document, as an email attachment. For very large files where email transmission is difficult, consult the editors to know how the submission could be made conveniently for both parties. Electronic submission allows a quick response as to the general suitability of papers for the journal, and editorial suggestions can be provided as to how papers may be revised to improve suitability.
IJBMS reserves the right to edit all copy as deemed appropriate for length and the overall style of the journal. The Editors will attempt to maintain the style and point of view of the author(s). Wherever possible, the author(s) will be consulted with respect to major changes. The authors require submitting their manuscripts along with the 'copyright transfer form' (downloadable from this link http://www.safaworld.biz/ijbms). A plagiarism-prevention declaration form also must be submitted which is available at http://www.safaworld.biz/ijbms/submission.htm. They are available in Doc format. No fax will be accepted for copy right transfer and plagiarism-prevention declaration form. Sending both forms through email does not require to be signed necessarily but a digital signature is appreciated. The forms must be sent from corresponding author’s email address which must be maintained until the paper is published, if accepted.
Every corresponding author of a manuscript must subscribe the corresponding email address to the group email list maintained by the publisher. The email subscription process is available at this link: http://safaworld.biz/Member's%20page.htm. Please take note that the journal publisher will not use this email address for any purpose other than publication relevant activities. This website has been developed to support the authors of the journal as well as the fellow researchers, marketing or such activities are not within the agenda of the publisher (Society for Alliance, Fidelity and Advancement-SAFA). It is convenient for the journal management committee to have all the authors on the same list for secure, reliable, effective and more efficient communication.
It is to be noted that the journal makes its decision based on an index which is called Standardized Acceptance Factor Average (SAFATM). The SAFATM is an index that is calculated based on the double-blind peer-review comments and assigned weights. Authors must remember that the SAFATM concerns even the overall formatting as well as required referencing style. A manuscript needs more than 0.5 scores to be accepted for publication. If the review version of a manuscript is not properly prepared in terms of citation, reference, overall format and structure, the SAFATM will become lower which may leads to a decision of rejection. The authors are advised to prepare their manuscript up to the requirement by the journal. If anyone is not able to understand the style guide of the journal, they are requested to consult the respective editor of the special issue explaining the question. Online Edition First According to our new system, an accepted and complete manuscript will be published online first. The corresponding author will be notified once their paper appears on the journal website. The published articles will be available on Ebscohost/ProQuest/INFORMIT website for easy download.
Format Requirement
Manuscripts should preferably be on A4 paper, in Times Roman 12 point font,
single spacing. Shorter contributions are welcome.
The first page of an article
should include title and a brief abstract
or summary (150 words).
The 2nd page should provide author's(s) details (full
name, title and contact address (including telephone, fax and e-mail).
The following page should start with the title followed by author's line (name,
affiliation) and a brief abstract not more than 150 words. Corresponding author's
name should be
mentioned clearly. Subsequent pages should be numbered sequentially.
Manuscript Length A research paper or review paper may have maximum 12000 words whereas a case study or short communication should be limited to 8000 words. The word count of a research or methodological note should not exceed 6000 words. A book review should be limited to 1500 words. The journal always appreciate short papers but without sacrificing necessary methodological description. Each letter must not exceed a world count of 500 words.
Illustrative Materials
Authors are encouraged to provide supporting illustrative material with
manuscripts. Tables, graphs, maps and drawings should not be separated from the body
of the text. For the
presentation of quantitative data, graphs are preferred to tables
because they contain more information and are easier
to edit and reproduce. Authors
should provide precise data for the possible re-elaboration of graphs, which
should be sent in electronic form. The program in which any graphs or maps are
submitted should be indicated.
Style Articles should be written in plain, concise language and in a style that is accessible and interesting to professionals in general, and not only to specialists in the topic concerned. Jargon should be avoided and technical terms that may be unfamiliar to readers should be defined the first time they appear. Footnotes should be avoided as far as possible. Abbreviations and acronyms should be defined the first time they are used. In order to learn about writing journal article and understand the style of scientific writing you can visit http://www.safaworld.biz/sciwri/index.htm.
Measurement All measurements should be given in the metric system. When monetary data are mentioned, a conversion to US dollars should be included, based on the current rate at the time the article is submitted.
Equation (Formulae)
Tables
Proofs When a manuscript is received by the journal, it is considered to be in its final form. As the index concerns all aspects including submission criteria, it is wise to avoid the practice of submitting draft version for examining the chance of acceptance. Proofs are not being regarded as 'drafts'. One set of proofs in PDF format will be sent to the corresponding author, to be checked for typesetting/ editing. No changes in, or additions to, the accepted (and subsequently edited) manuscript will be allowed at this stage. Proofreading is solely author’s responsibility. The Publisher reserves the right to proceed with publication if corrections are not communicated. Corrections need to be returned within 3 working days of receipt of the proofs. Should there be no corrections, please confirm this. IJBMS will do everything possible to get the article corrected and published as quickly and accurately as possible. In order to do this we need assistance from authors. When authors receive the (PDF) proof of an article for correction, it is important to ensure that all corrections are sent back to the publisher in one communication. Subsequent corrections will not be possible, so author must ensure that the first sending is complete. Note that this does not mean you have any less time to make your corrections just that only one set of corrections will be accepted.
References [Note: When we calculate the index 'SAFATM (Standardized Acceptance Factor Average)' the reviewers' comments on the entire format as well as reference section are considered. The SAFA can be lower due to low score in these two criteria. Please be aware of your format and reference section. The SAFA is important because the journal makes its decision based on this index which appears on the top right corner of the cover page of a published article. Usually if an article shows the SAFATM more than 0.5 and closed to 1 indicates high quality according to reviewer's opinion.] Articles should be accompanied by appropriate references. The name of the author(s) and date of publication should be indicated at appropriate points in the text (e.g. Franklin and Forman, 1987; Viana et al., 1996), with the full reference given in a separate list at the end of the article. Please do not forget to mention the name of the city of publishing and publisher. The following issues should be considered during citation and in the reference section: a. A tendency and a desire to cite one’s own previous or current work is understandable. However, excessive use of self-citations causes some problems such as revealing authors identity which may minimize the effectiveness of double blind peer review. Thus, try to avoid much self-citation. b. If a few citations are made for a section or statement, arrange them alphabetically. If the citations are from same author, arrange them in ascending order by year. Do not use ampersand in anywhere of the text. Also note that two or more works by the same author (or by an identical group of authors) published in the same year are distinguished by “a,” “b,” etc., added after the year. c. Citations to the source of a direct quotation must give a page number or numbers; these follow the date of publication and are separated from it by a colon. Paraphrasing needs also page number as quotation. Example:
In the reference section, the source of quotation must be referenced properly by providing details. Do not forget to mention the name of publishing authority and city. d. If a study has two authors, give both names every time the work is cited in the text (Raman and Albert, 2005). e. A citation with more than two authors should provide all authors name during first time citation in the article. Next time for the same citation use the family name of the first author with “et al.” Example:
f. For more than six authors, use the “et al.” even from the first citation. g. Referring a software follows exactly the style of referring a book with city and publisher.
Brown, M.W. (1982).
This is the title of a book
(2nd ed.). City: Publisher.
Chin, Y. (1988).
This is the title of a part of a book.
In A.R. Finley, S.R. Taft and M.N.
Piper (Eds.), this is the book title. (pp. 25-37). City: Publisher.
Clark, B.W. (1988).
This is the title of a paper appearing in a published proceeding.
In A. B.
Cook (Ed.), Proceedings of the 100th Annual Meeting of the Society of
Experimental Results (pp. 49-78). City: Publisher.
Fourney, T.T. and Heller, R.N.
(January, 1991).
This is the title of an
unpublished paper presented at a meeting. Paper presented at the 103rd
annual meeting of the Society of Experimental Results, City of Meeting, Country.
Goff, A.M. (1987).
This is the title of a journal article.
Journal of Experimental Results,
1(3): 1-22.
Green, M. (1988, January).
This is the title of a magazine article. Magazine of Today, pp. 6-12.
Johnson, R.S. (1989, October 1).
This is the title of a newspaper article. The Daily News, pp. 1,6-8.
Jones, M.J. and Smith, A.R. (1990).
This is the title of a report (Report No. 90- 1428). City: Publisher.
Miller, G.M. (1988).
This is the title of a master’s thesis. Unpublished master’s thesis,
Name of the university, City, Country.
Simmons, M.T. (1987).
This is the title of a doctoral dissertation (Doctoral dissertation, Name
of the university, 1986). Dissertation Abstracts International, 47, 1202.
Burke, T.E. and Lemon, S.D. (1995).
Title of the article or information. Available from :www.fao.org/waicent/fOrestiflfo/burke/m-ain.htm
[Accessed 25 August 2004]. Sample of Reference Section
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