This template should be used to prepare a regular paper or special issue paper
This template should be used to prepare a regular paper or special issue paper that an author wishes to submit to ETRI Journal. This is the ETRI Journal style guide. This document states the author rights and responsibilities and must be read carefully by any author intending to submit material to ETRI Journal. The submitting author must follow all instructions stated herein. Any submission that fails to comply with the rules stated herein will not be considered for publication. To submit an article, the author must complete the online submission process through the ETRI Journal website at http://etrij.etri.re.kr. Keywords: ETRI Journal, manuscript, author, responsibility. I. Author Rights and Responsibilities 1. Original Work Only original work should be submitted to ETRI Journal. Any manuscript submitted to ETRI Journal that has been published before, contains copyrighted material, or has been submitted for publication elsewhere will be rejected, with the exception of said article appearing in abstract form or in an elementary form in conference proceedings. If the work submitted to ETRI Journal has appeared or will appear in conference proceedings, this fact must be divulged at the time of submission, the reference information must be included in the list of works cited, and the manuscript must be distinctly different from and a substantial expansion of the article published in the conference proceedings. Both the text and the figures must deliver novel ideas and data, and any reiteration of or reference to previously published information must be specifically pointed out by the author at the time of submission. An experienced peer reviewer will confirm whether the overlap supports or compromises the significance of the work. A manuscript previously published in another language is not regarded as an original contribution. 2. Copyright The author must submit an ETRI Journal copyright form, which transfers the copyright to ETRI Journal and warrants that the article is an original work of the author and does not infringe the copyright of any other ETRI Journal, Volume x, Number y, Date First Author et al. 1 Style Guide and Information for ETRI Journal Authors ETRI Journal Editorial Office 교 정: 초벌편집 파 일: 김수영(12- 21) parties. Before publication, the author should submit a scanned file of the form with his or her signature on it or mail a hard copy to the editorial office. 3. Ethical and Legal Issues Plagiarism, fabrication, falsification, and double submission are unacceptable. The author is responsible for acknowledging sources appropriately. ETRI assumes that material submitted to ETRI Journal is properly available for general dissemination to the readership of ETRI Journal. It is the responsibility of the author, not ETRI or ETRI Journal, to determine whether disclosure of the submitted material requires the prior consent of other parties and, if so, to obtain it. CrossCheck is a multi-publisher initiative to screen published and submitted content for originality. ETRI Journal uses the iThenticate software to detect instances of overlapping and reproduced text in submitted manuscripts. To find out more about CrossCheck, visit http://www.crossref.org/crosscheck.html. 4. Content Statements and opinions given in the articles published in ETRI Journal are the expressions of the contributors. Responsibility for the content of a published paper rests upon the author, not ETRI or ETRI Journal. 5. Authorship Every contributor should be listed as an author and no one but the contributors should be listed as authors. All correspondence will be sent to the corresponding author by e-mail. II. Manuscript Preparation 1. Research Areas Covered in ETRI Journal Papers to be considered for publication in ETRI Journal should be original papers of broad significance and long-range interest in the following fields. Basic and Micro-electronics Research Network and Internet Technology Radio and Broadcasting Technology Mobile Telecommunication Computer and Software Technology Information Technology Strategy Information Security Papers should be written to be accessible to nonspecialists as well as experts in the fields discussed. 2. Choice of Word Processor The manuscript must be prepared using Microsoft (MS) Word. The manuscript, including figures and tables, must be written in the journal’s two-column format, using this template. Do not use other templates. Follow all formatting rules for sections, subsections, symbols, equations, references, and so on. Most formatting codes are removed and replaced during the pagination process; therefore, input the material as simply as possible and do not embed special formatting in the text, such as field codes. 3. Length of Manuscript The length of an article is limited to 10 pages in the two-column format of ETRI Journal, excluding author biographies. The article should concisely present the background of the topic, the purpose of the investigation, the details of the investigation, the results, and the conclusions. Any redundant information should be removed prior to submitting the final version of the manuscript. The font size, character scale, and character spacing should not be manipulated to fit the page limit. 4. Abstract The abstract should succinctly state the focus of the article, how the research is conducted, the principal results, and the significance of the results, in the present tense, not the past tense. The abstract should only contain the most critical information of the paper. The abstract of a regular paper or special issue paper is limited to 1,200 characters, including spaces. The font size of the abstract should be 10 points. 5. Consecutive Numbering of Parts All manuscript pages, footnotes, equations, and 2 First Author et al. ETRI Journal, Volume x, Number y, Date references should be labeled in consecutive numerical order. Figures and tables should be cited in the text in numerical order. 6. Sections A regular or special issue paper generally consists of the title, author affiliation footnote (including any financial support acknowledgement), abstract, introduction, body, conclusion, and reference list. A regular or special issue paper may also include appendices, a glossary of symbols, and an acknowledgment of non-financial support. The author name(s) and author affiliation footnote must not appear when submitting or during review to maintain anonymity between reviewers and authors. Heading titles should be written in headline style. In headline style, the first letter of each word is capitalized, except in the case of a preposition or conjunction; the first and last words are capitalized regardless of part of speech, unless the word or symbol only exists in lowercase form. Articles (a, an, the) are not used in the headings. Roman numerals (I., II., III., and so on) should be used to number the main sections, and Arabic numerals (1., 2., 3., and so on) should be used to number the subsections. Italicized capital letters (A., B., C., and so on) should be used for tertiary headings, and italicized lowercase letters (a., b., c., and so on) should be used for fourth-level headings. A period (.) must follow each identifier. The font sizes of the headings are as follows: 11.5 points for main section heading (font color: blue [RGB = 0, 40, 255]); 10.5 points for subsection heading; 10 points for tertiary heading; 10 points for fourth-level heading. 7. Mathematical Notations A. Numbering Equations should be numbered consecutively using Arabic numbers enclosed in parentheses, as follows: R = (a × b)/c (1) BALTOTAL = 2M + 9y – 3x (2) The equation number in parentheses should be flush with the right margin. Equations can be made more compact by using the solidus (/), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. Parentheses should be used to avoid ambiguities in denominators. If an equation is part of a sentence, it should be punctuated accordingly. The symbols used in an equation must be defined before or immediately after the equation appears. In the text, only the number should be used, for example, “(1),” not “Eq. (1)” or “equation (1),” except when opening a sentence with the number, in which case it should appear as “Equation (1).” B. Symbols To avoid errors in editing and typesetting, authors should clearly identify subscripts, Greek letters, and other symbols. It is especially important to distinguish clearly between the following terms. • Capital and lowercase letters when used as symbols. • Zero and the letter “O.” • The lowercase letter “1,” the numeral one, and the prime sign. • The letter “k” and κ (kappa), “u” and μ (mu), “v” and ν (nu), “n” and η (eta). • The multiplication sign is “×,” not “x,” and the subtraction sign is “–,” not “-.” All variables must be italicized in the paper. It is the author’s responsibility to ensure that symbols are properly presented in the text, in equations, in figures, and in tables. The formatting must be consistent throughout. 8. Figures, Figure Captions, Tables, and Table Headings Figures and their captions and tables and their headings must be included with the text of the paper. Figures and tables must appear in the sections in which they are first mentioned and should be placed near the text that refers to them. Figures and tables should be numbered in order using Arabic numerals. Separate aspects of a figure must be labeled using “(a),” “(b),” “(c),” and so on uploads/s3/ etri-journal-author-guide.pdf
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- Publié le Dec 11, 2022
- Catégorie Creative Arts / Ar...
- Langue French
- Taille du fichier 0.2114MB