Author Guidelines Reviewers Peer Review Policy Publication Ethics Open Access Statement Article Processing Charges Plagiarism Policy
Author Guidelines
I. HOW TO SUBMIT MANUSCRIPTS
Authors are requested to submit their manuscripts by using the OJS online submission system available at https://heca-analitika.com/jeml/login. This site will guide authors through the submission process. The editorial office will acknowledge receipt of the manuscript. In case of difficulty, please contact the editorial office (editor_hjas@heca-analitika.com). Editors will decide, within two weeks, whether to further process the paper for the refereeing stage. When submitting a manuscript, the corresponding author must confirm the following in writing:
- All authors listed have read and approved the material being submitted.
- The text and findings reported therein are wholly the work of the authors and those acknowledged.
The manuscript submitted or the data contained therein has not been published or accepted for publication in any other journal and is not under consideration for publication elsewhere.
Revisions
Papers may be returned to authors for revision. Authors will be given some times after receipt of the reviewers' comments to revise their papers. Revisions must be submitted within due date that editor assign through the online submission system. A paper will be automatically rejected if the revision is not submitted within the due date.
Resubmissions
Papers may be rejected, but authors are allowed to resubmit them, provided that significant improvements have been made. Resubmissions will be treated as new submissions.
II. ACCEPTED FILE FORMAT
Authors must use the Microsoft Word template to prepare their manuscript. Using the template file will substantially shorten the time to complete copy-editing and publication of accepted manuscripts. The total amount of data for all files must not exceed 100 MB. If this is a problem, please contact the Editorial Office email editor.
Manuscripts prepared in Microsoft Word must be converted into a single file before submission. When preparing manuscripts in Microsoft Word, select the target journal you want to submit below heca Publication template file must be used. Please insert your graphics (schemes, figures, etc.) in the main text after the paragraph of its first citation.
III. STRUCTURE OF MANUSCRIPTS
Title page
The organization shown below should be followed (in the order given):
- Title of the paper
- Author name(s)
- Author affiliation(s)
- Address(es) of the institution(s) at which the work was performed
- Name, postal and e-mail addresses, and phone and fax numbers of the corresponding author to whom the revision or galley proofs of the paper are to be sent.
The title should be brief and should not exceed 25 words. The affiliation address for each author should be indicated by superscript Arabic numbers (1, 2, 3, etc.)
Abstract
Articles must include an abstract of 250 words or fewer. The abstract should not repeat the information already present in the title. The abstract should be written in English.
Keywords
Immediately after the abstract, provide a maximum of 7 keywords written in alphabetical order. Please avoid general terms, multiple concepts (avoid, for example, and or of), and abbreviations. Only abbreviations firmly established in the field are eligible.
Introduction
The Introduction presents the purpose of the studies reported and their relationship to earlier work in the field. It should not be an extensive review of the literature. Use only those references required to provide the most salient background to allow the readers to understand and evaluate the purpose and results of the present study without referring to previous publications on the topic.
Materials and Methods
The Materials and Methods sections should be brief, but they should include sufficient technical information to allow the experiments to be repeated by a qualified reader. Only new methods should be described in detail. Cite previously published procedures in References.
Results
The Results section should include the rationale or design of the experiments as well as the results of the experiments. Results can be presented in figures, tables, and text. Reserve extensive discussion of the results for the Discussion section.
Discussion
The Discussion section should be an interpretation of the results rather than a repetition of the Results section. The Results and Discussion sections may be combined into one section when substantial redundancy cannot be avoided if they are put into two separate sections or when a long discussion is not warranted.
Conclusions
Four basic steps to take in writing a conclusion: Summarize your research, spell out your contribution, state the limitation of your study, and suggest potential areas of further research, or what did the researcher discover? Collect and summarize the most important results & their implications, the status of the problem should be briefly reviewed before the new findings are presented.
Acknowledgments
Place Acknowledgments, including information on the source of any financial support received for the work being published.
Conflicts of Interest
Authors must identify and declare any personal circumstances or interest that may be perceived as influencing the representation or interpretation of reported research results. If there is no conflict of interest, please state "The authors declare no conflict of interest." Any role of the funding sponsors in the choice of research project; design of the study; in the collection, analyses or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to publish the results must be declared in this section. If there is no role, please state “The sponsors had no role in the design, execution, interpretation, or writing of the study”.
Data Availability Statement
In this section, please provide details regarding where data supporting reported results can be found, including links to publicly archived datasets analyzed or generated during the study. Please refer to suggested Data Availability Statements in section “Data Availability Statement” before References Section. You might choose to exclude this statement if the study did not report any data.