Submissions

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Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
  • This manuscript was not previously published nor were sent for consideration to other editors of journals (or in the comments to the editor following data necessary explanations).

  • File of manuscript is a document in format Microsoft Word.

  • The text conforms to the style and bibliography set out in the Guidelines for Authors section "About".

Author Guidelines

Articles are sent to the Editorial Board of the journal in duplicate in Ukrainian, Russian or English with a covering letter from the organization, internal review and expert assessment. The electronic version of an article is e-mailed to the Editorial Board (yuriev1908publisher@gmail.com) or to the executive secretary (nvasko1964@gmail.com). Experimental articles can be up to eight pages, reviews - up to 15 pages of printed text, including illustrations and bibliography. The last page of the second copy must be signed by authors, for students, post-graduate students and external PhD students - by the research advisor.

Article Structure:

UDC.

ARTICLE TITLE (up to 10 words in three languages).

Author (surname and initials in three languages).

Names of institutions where authors work, affiliation country (in three languages).

Abstract in the language of the article up to 50 words, extended abstracts in Russian (Ukrainian) and English (100-250 words).

KEY WORDS (up to 10 words in three languages).

INTRODUCTION

The Introduction should give a fairly good description of the problem and subject of this article so that researchers even beyond this domain area could understand the article.

Analysis of published data and RESEARCH OBJECTIVES SETTING

This section provides a literature review, which should cover unsolved by other scientists parts of the problem investigated by authors, give reasons and explain necessity for this study. Purpose and objectives of authors’ research follow from the analysis of literature sources. In this section, authors should mention not only publications that corroborate their results, but also those that contradict them, if any. Publications highlighting scientific novelty of the problem discussed in the article are recommended to be cited.

STUDY PURPOSE AND OBJECTIVES

In this section, authors should clearly state the study purpose (which is revealed by analyzing published data as unresolved by other scientists parts of the problem) and the study objectives, solution of which, by authors’ judgment, is required to achieve the study purpose.

STUDY MATERIAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PART

From the Study Material it should be clear how all results were obtained. Therefore, the study system (methods, techniques, etc.), which was used by authors, should be clearly described. Methods used for data analysis should be substantiated (based on statistics). If authors used a published technique they should cite it and summarize the procedures in the text.

If this section contains a lot of information it should be divided into subsections according to the logic of the study.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

In this section, authors should summarize their study results. If any experiments were conducted authors should describe what occurred as a result of these experiments. Results can be presented as graphs, tables, diagrams and pictures and should include a descriptive part reflecting authors’ interpretation of results. In addition, in this section authors could offer, where the results can be used in practice.

If an article investigates a preparation or a procedure restrictions and warnings should be indicated to inform scientists of possible risks in case of repetition of the experiment.

CONCLUSIONS

In this section, authors should compare their results with other studies, briefly describe limitations of the study, and specify drawbacks of the study. They should describe how the study results may be useful in this domain area, how the results can be used by researchers from other subject areas, and how the results may be useful to the general public. They should also describe how their results integrate results of previous studies.

If the results obtained are preliminary it is necessary to describe what further research can be done or suggested.

At the end authors should specify again the main general conclusions of this work.

Important! Conclusions should reflect specific results obtained by authors and in the process of solving each of the study objectives set by them.

REFERENCE LIST processed according to State Standard 7.1: 2006 and REFERENCE LIST processed according to the CBE/CSE requirements, C-S variant (in order of appearance in the text).

In References in Ukrainian, Russian or other sources cited in Cyrillic, authors’ names, journal title, and publishing house should be spelled in transliteration, article (book) title should be translated into English.

The text should be typed in MS Word for Windows (version 95 and higher), Times New Roman 12 point font, single-spaced, A4 page (21.0 cm × 29.7 cm); left and right margins - ** ** cm, top and bottom margins -  **** cm.. Graphs and diagrams should be constructed in MS Word (Word Graf) or presented as a picture or a photo in TIFF, PCX, JPEG formats.

Postal address and email for correspondence, contact phone numbers are enclosed in a separate file.

References in the text are indicated by the ordinal number of a source [in square brackets]; the list of sources is given in order of appearance in the text. Each reference should be explained and analyzed separately, especially if they are cited in the section "Analysis of Published Data", i.e. references to several sources simultaneously, in the form [1 6], are not advisable by referees.

 

CSE Style Guide

(Council of Science Editors, formerly called the CBE Council of Biology Editors).

Note: the CSE style describes three options for references; use the style which is commonly used in your discipline:

Citation-Sequence (C-S) system which uses numbers within the text to refer to the end references which are listed in the order they are referred to in the text. Subsequent citations to the same document use the same number as its initial citation.

Citation-Name (C-N) system which uses numbers within the text to refer to the end references which are listed alphabetically by author and then by title.

Name-Year (N-Y) system which uses the surname of the author and the year of publication to refer to the end references which are then listed alphabetically by author and then by year.

 

General Principles for Formatting End References

In the C-S and C-N systems, the general sequence of information in a reference is author name, title, and additional items (including year of publication).

When there are 2-10 authors, all should be named; if more than 10 authors, list the first 10 followed by “and others”.

Note: throughout CSE style, no commas are used to offset the author's last name from his or her initials, no space separates the first and middle initial, and periods do not, in general, follow initials.

Note: in CSE style, titles of periodicals (newspapers, journals, magazines) are capitalized as they normally are; book titles and article titles have only the first word of the title (and of any subtitles), as well as proper nouns, capitalized. Obvious exceptions are capitalized abbreviations and symbols (e.g., HIV-1, DDAVP, pH).

 

General Principles for Formatting In-Text References

In-text references should immediately follow the title, word, or phrase to which they are directly relevant, rather than appearing at the end of long clauses or sentences. In-text references should always precede punctuation marks.

No author: If the author of a work cannot be determined use the title.

No date: For online sources if the publication year cannot be determined use the year of access. For print sources use [date unknown].

 

Citing Books

Important Elements:

  • Author (last name and initials only for first & middle names)
  • Title (capitalize only the first word of title and subtitle, and proper nouns)
  • Place of publication
  • Publisher
  • Publication date
  • Number of pages

Source

Example Citation

Book by a single author

Sherman, C. The invisible Web : uncovering information sources search engines can't see. Medford, N.J.: CyberAge Books, Information Today; 2001. 439 p.

Book by two or more authors

Voet D, Voet JG. Biochemistry. New York: J Wiley; 1990. 1223 p.

Book with editors

Gilman AG, Rall TW, Nies AS, Taylor P, editors. The pharmacological basis of therapeutics. 8th ed. New York: Pergamon; 1990. 1811 p.

Chapter within a book

Kuret JA, Murad F. Adenohypophyseal hormones and related substances. In: Gilman AG, Rall TW, Nies AS, Taylor P, editors. The pharmacological basis of therapeutics. 8th ed. New York: Pergamon; 1990. p 1334-60.

Dissertation

Anders, A. Effects of large-scale climate on avian population dynamics across species' North American breeding distributions [dissertation]. [University Park, (PA)]: Pennsylvania State University; 2008.

 

Articles from Print Periodicals (journals, magazines and newspapers)

Important Elements:

  • Author (last name, initials only for first & middle names. List all names for up to 10 authors, if more than 10 list the first author and then “et al.” or “and others”)
  • Title of article (capitalize only the first word of title and subtitle, and proper nouns)
  • Title of publication abbreviated (if possible use ISO abbreviations used by PubMed)
  • Date of publication of article (year only for scholarly journals; year and month for magazines; year, month and day for daily or newspapers publications)
  • Volume and issue number
  • Page numbers of article
  •  

Source

Example Citation

Article in a scholarly journal

Cox J, Engstrom RT. Influence of the spatial pattern of conserved lands on the persistence of a large population of red-cockaded woodpeckers. Biol Conserv. 2001; 100(1): 137-150

Article in Conference Proceedings

Lee DJ, Bates D, Dromey C, Xu X, Antani S. An imaging system correlating lip shapes with tongue contact patterns for speech pathology research. In: Krol M, Mitra S, Lee DJ, editors. CBMS 2003. Proceedings of the 16th IEEE Symposium on Computer-Based Medical Systems; 2003 Jun 26027; New York. Los Alamitos (CA): IEEE Computer Society; c2003. P.307-313

Technical Report

Feller BA. Health characteristics of persons with chronic activity limitation, United States, 1979. Hyattsville (MD): National Center for Health Statistics (US); 1981. Report No.: VHS-SER-10/137. Available from: NTIS, Springfield, VA; PB88-228622

Article in a magazine (include volume # if given)

Losos JB. Evolution: A lizard's tale. Sci Am. 2001 Mar; 284(3): 64-69.

Article in a daily newspaper

Yoon CK. DNA clues improve outlook for red wolf. New York Times. 2000 Dec 26; Sect. F:10 (col. 1).

 

Internet Resources

In the CSE format, the basic rules for citing do not differ for internet items from what is required for print. Simply listing a URL is not sufficient; all the publication information should also be listed.

Online Articles and Books

Important Elements:

  • All of the publication information (see print information on previous tabs)
  • Add [Internet] after the article or book title.
  • Add [date cited] after date of publication
  • Add Available from: url after pages

Source

Example Citation

Online Article

Savage E, Ramsay M, White J, Beard S, Lawson H, Hunjan R, Brown D. Mumps outbreaks across England and Wales in 2004: observational study. BMJ [Internet]. 2005 [cited 2007 May 31]; 330(7500):1119-1120. Available from: http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/reprint/330/7500/1119 doi:10.1136/bmj.330.7500.119

Online Book

Griffiths AJF, Miller JH, Suzuki DT, Lewontin RC, Gelbart WM. Introduction to genetic analysis [Internet]. 7th ed. New York (NY): W. H. Freeman & Co.; c2000 [cited 2005 May 31]. Available from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bookshelf/br.fcgi?book=iga.

 

Websites

Important Elements:

  • Title of web site
  • Place of publication and publisher
  • Date of publication and date of last update (if relevant)
  • Date you accessed the information (date cited)
  • URL (Web address) of the site
  •  

Source

Example Citation

Homepage

APSnet: plant pathology online [Internet]. St Paul (MN): American Phytopathological Association: c1994-2005 [cited 2005 Jun 20]. Available from: http://www.apsnet.org/

Database

IMGT/HLA Sequence Database [Internet]. Release 2.9.0. Cambridge (England): European Bioinformatics Institute. 2003- [updated 2005 Jun 1; cited 2005 Jun 22]. Available from: http://www.cbi.ac.uk/imgt/hla/.

 

Interviews and Other Personal Communication

In CSE style, interviews and other forms of unpublished personal communication, such as e-mail, letters, or memos, are not included in the reference list. Cite interviews and personal communication in parentheses within the text of your paper.

 

If the reference has DOI, it should be indicated in the list of references for the most accurate identification.rial board

 

The Editorial Board reserves the right to reject articles that do not meet the subject of the collection, are not formalized according to the rules, contain outdated (5-7 years old) data or one-year results.

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