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The Research Monograph Series in Computing, Electrical & Communication Networks

Manuscript Submission Guidelines

Information for Contributors
Submissions

All submissions should be done through the online submission portal or mail to books@bohrpub.com. To begin the evaluation process, an Author must first submit a 5-to-15-page proposal, as is customary for book publishing. Although accepted Manuscript may depend on previously published scholarship (full disclosure to the editor is needed), they must be previously unpublished. Manuscripts should be between 27,000 and 32,000 words length, including citations. The number of figures will vary based on available space; graphics, raw data, and other appendices may be submitted to the journal's website and housed alongside the published Manuscript.

Proposals

A proposal must include the following elements: an explanation of the primary thesis and central arguments; a statement about the significance of the research; an overview of the methods to be used or that were used (please specify the stage of the research); a summary of the major premises and findings (if research has been completed); and a list of illustration ideas with sources for those illustrations. The proposal document should be uploaded as the “main document” and should be anonymized, such that author identification does not appear anywhere in the document or its properties. Authors should follow instructions for how to remove personal information in their particular version of Microsoft Word or other word processing program.

Abstract, Keywords, and Author Information

An abstract of no more than 500 words should be labelled and submitted as the "title page." The manuscript should include all author identify and contact information, institutional affiliation, and any funding sources. Authors should include 10 or less keywords that describe the submission's content. When using human subjects in the research, writers should disclose if they have obtained clearance for their research from an ethical committee or institutional review board, as well as the name of this entity. If ethical permission was not sought, or if an ethics committee granted an exemption for the research, authors should explain why. If no study has yet been conducted, authors should mention their intention to get permission and consent during the proposal stage.

Style

Spell out entire numbers from one to nine; however, utilise numerals when spelt numbers cluster in a phrase or paragraph. Instead of spelling out, use the percent sign.

Heading Styles

First-level headers are CAPS bold and justified to the left. Second-level headers are bold and justified to the left. Third-level headers are bold italicised and justified to the left. Fourth-level headers are italicised and justified to the left. Consider the following example:

LEVEL 1 HEADING
Level 2 Heading
Level 3 Heading

Level 4 Heading

Tables

When constructing tables, utilise the table feature in Word (or comparable software) or the "Insert Table" command. Do not use the same stuff in the text and tables. Tables and figures should be utilised only when they significantly help the reader, not just because computers make it easier to construct them.

Figures

All photographs, graphs, and other figures must be sent as individual files in JPG, TIFF, PDF or EPS format. In your Manuscript, please add a placement remark (e.g., "[Insert Figure 1]"). Photos must have a resolution of at least 300 dpi, while line art must have a quality of at least 800 dpi.

Reference Examples:
  1. Gitlin, T. (1985). Inside prime time.New York, NY: Pantheon Books.
  2. Dominick, J. R. (1974). Children’s viewing of crime shows and attitudes on law enforcement. Journalism Quarterly, 51(1), 5-12.
  3. Manoff, R. K. & Schudson, M. (Eds.) (1986). Reading the news. New York, NY: Pantheon Books.
  4. Sigal, L. V. (1986). Sources make the news. In R. K. Manoff & M. Schudson (Eds.), Reading the news (pp. 9-37). New York, NY: Pantheon Books.
  5. Kinzer, S. (1983, December 23). Nicaragua’s bitter harvest: War in coffee fields. New York Times, p. A2.