Paper Title (SciencePG-Paper-Title) - Science Publishing Group

[Pages:3]Journal Title

2021; X(X): XX-XX

doi: 10.11648/j.XXXX.2021XXXX.XX ISSN: XXXX - XXXX (Print); ISSN: XXXX - XXXX (Online)

Paper Title

Author's Full Name1, *, Author's Full Name1, 2

1Department/Faculty, University, City, Country 2Department, Institute/Organization, City, Country

Email address:

email1@ (author name1), email2@ (author name2) *Corresponding author

To cite this article:

Author's Name. Paper Title. International Journal of XXXXXX. Vol. x, No. x, 2021, pp. x-x. doi: 10.11648/j.xxx.xxxxxxxx.xx.

Received: MM DD, 2021; Accepted: MM DD, 2021; Published: MM DD, 2021

Abstract: An abstract is a short summary of your research paper, usually about a paragraph (200-400 words) long. A

well-written abstract can let readers get the essence of your paper, prepare readers to follow the detailed information, analyses, and arguments in your full paper, and help readers remember the key points.

Keywords: Keyword1, Keyword2 ... Keyword8

1. Introduction

This template, created in MS Word 2000/2007/2010 and saved as Word 97-2000 & 6.0/95 ? RTF for the PC, provides authors with most of the formatting specifications needed for preparing electronic versions of their papers. All standard paper components have been specified for three reasons: (1) ease of use when formatting individual papers, (2) automatic compliance to electronic requirements that facilitate the concurrent or later production of electronic products, and (3) conformity of style throughout a journal publication. Margins, column widths, line spacing, and type styles are built-in; examples of the type styles are provided throughout this document. Some components, such as multi-leveled equations, graphics, and tables are not prescribed, although the various table text styles are provided. The formatter will need to create these components, incorporating the applicable criteria that follow.

2. Custom Title (SciencePG-Level1-Multiple-line)

2.1. SciencePG-Level2

First, confirm that you have the correct template for your paper size. This template has been tailored for output on the A4 paper size.

2.2. SciencePG-Level2

The template is used to format your paper and style the text. All margins, column widths, line spaces, and text fonts are prescribed; please do not alter them. You may note peculiarities. For example, the head margin in this template measures proportionately more than is customary. This measurement and others are deliberate, using specifications that anticipate your paper as one part of the entire publication, and not as an independent document. Please do not revise any of the current designations.

2.2.1. SciencePG-Level3 Before you begin to format your paper, first write and save

the content as a separate text file. Keep your text and graphic files separate until after the text has been formatted and styled. Do not use hard tabs, and limit use of hard returns to only one return at the end of a paragraph. Do not add any kind of pagination anywhere in the paper. Do not number text heads-the template will do that for you.

2.2.2. Abbreviations (SciencePG-Level3) Define abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are

used in the text, even after they have been defined in the abstract. Abbreviations such as IEEE, SI, MKS, CGS, sc, dc, and rms do not have to be defined. Do not use abbreviations in the title or heads unless they are unavoidable.

Comment [A1]: 1) The article should be written in English. 2) An article should be between 6 and 25 pages, and exceed 2000 words. 3) The article should be composed of title, author(s), affiliation(s), email(s), abstract, keywords, introduction, main body, conclusion, and references.

Comment [A2]: 1) The title should be at least 7 words but no more than 25 words. 2) The title should be a declarative phrase without punctuation at the end of it.

Comment [A3]: 1) Please clearly indicate the full name of each author. 2) There should be no professional title/ranks before the author's name.

Comment [A4]: The affiliation of the author should only include Department/Faculty, University/Institute/Organization, City, Country or Company, City, Country.

Comment [A5]: Please write the corresponding author's name after each email address.

Comment [A6]: The number of words in the Abstract should be at least 200 words but no more than 400 words. The contents of Abstract should be structured in one paragraph without formulas, pictures and in-text citations.

Comment [A7]: The keywords should include at least 3 words/phrases but no more than 8.

Comment [A8]: 1) The headings or subheadings should be numbered in order as the given style. 2) Each headings or subheadings should not exceed 3 lines. 3) There should be at least 2 subheadings but no more than 10 subheadings under one heading. For example, there should be at least two subheadings (such as 2.2.1 and 2.2.2) under the heading 2.2.

2

Author Name et al.: Paper title

2.2.3. Equations (SciencePG-Level3) The equations are an exception to the prescribed

specifications of this template. You will need to determine whether or not your equation should be typed using either the Times New Roman or the Symbol font (please no other font). To create multileveled equations, it may be necessary to treat the equation as a graphic and insert it into the text after your paper is styled.

Equation numbers, within parentheses, are to position flush right, as in (1), using a right tab stop. To make your equations more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. Italicize Roman symbols for quantities and variables, but not Greek symbols. Use a long dash rather than a hyphen for a minus sign. Punctuate equations with commas or periods when they are part of a sentence, as in

X+Y=Z

(1)

X1-Y2=R*

(2)

Note that the equation is centered using a center tab stop. Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before or immediately following the equation. Use (1), not Eq. (1) or equation (1), except at the beginning of a sentence: Equation (1) is . . .

3. SciencePG-Level1

3.1. Figure (SciencePG-Level2)

Figure is as follows: Place figures and tables at the top and bottom of columns. Avoid placing them in the middle of columns. Large figures and tables may span across both columns. Figure captions should be below the figures; table heads should appear above the tables. Insert figures and tables after they are cited in the text. Use the Figure 1, even at the beginning of a sentence.

Figure 1. The caption of the figure.

If the square-shaped pixel size in our images was 8 ? 8 screen-pixels, this amounted to about 21 pixels per face quantization (an equivalent of about 10.5 cycles/face). With

this level of image detail, all three basic varieties of configural information (hange of spatial quantization between 11 pixels/face and 6 pixels/face levels altogether indicate that this ERP- component is especially sensitive to the first-order configural cues. Some other works have supported both of these ideas.

(a)

(b)

(c)

Figure 2. There are three figures illustrated here.

3.2. Table (SciencePG-Level2)

Table is as follows: Use words rather than symbols or abbreviations when writing Figure axis labels to avoid confusing the reader. As an example, write the quantity Magnetization, or Magnetization, M, not just M.

Table 1. Table information

Column1 Row1* Row2 Row3 Row4 Row5 Row6 Row7

Column2 Row1 Row2 Row3 Row4 Row5 Row6 Row7

* The example for this table.

3.3. In-text citations (SciencePG-Level2)

The template will number citations consecutively within brackets [1]. The sentence punctuation follows the bracket [2]. Refer simply to the reference number, as in [3]--do not use Ref. [3] or reference [3] except at the beginning of a sentence: Reference [3] was the first . . .

Number footnotes separately in superscripts. Place the actual footnote at the bottom of the column in which it was cited. Do not put footnotes in the reference list. Use letters for table footnotes.

Unless there are six authors or more give all authors' names; do not use et al.. Papers that have not been published, even if they have been submitted for publication, should be cited as unpublished [4-8]. Papers that have been accepted for publication should be cited as in press [9-12]. Capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for proper nouns and element symbols.

For papers published in translation journals, please give the English citation first, followed by the original foreign-language citation [13-15].

Comment [Admin9]: 1) The formula should be editable with no image format. 2) The superscript and subscript should be clearly shown in a formula. 3) The formula should be numbered in order with Arabic numerals in parentheses after each formula.

Comment [A11]: 1) Table captions should be clear and be put above the table. 2) All tables should be editable with no image format. 3) Tables should be numbered with Arabic numerals in the unified style, such as Table 1, Table 2, Table 3... 4) The corresponding meaning of the symbol in the table should be given below the table.

Comment [A12]: 1) The in-text citations should be written in the unified form, such as [1], [2], [3] and so on. For example, [1] should be written in a normal text form instead of in superscript [1]. 2) If there are two or more sources cited in the same sentence or paragraph, please enclose all the citations in one bracket, such as [2, 3], [6-8] and [4, 9-12].

Comment [Admin10]: 1) Figures should be numbered in order with clear captions. 2) The captions should be editable and be written below the figures. 3) Figures should be numbered just with Arabic numerals in the unified style, such as Figure 1, Figure 2, Figure 3...

The issue name 2021; X(X): XX-XX

3

4. Conclusion

After the text edit has been completed, the paper is ready for the template. Duplicate the template file by using the Save As command, and use the naming convention prescribed by your conference for the name of your paper. In this newly created file, highlight all of the contents and import your prepared text file. You are now ready to style your paper; use the scroll down window on the left of the MS Word Formatting toolbar.

Acknowledgements

You as the author are free to decide whether to include acknowledgments or not. Usually, the acknowledgments section includes the names of people who in some way contributed to the work, but do not fit the criteria to be listed as the authors. This section of your manuscript can also include information about funding sources.

References

[1] Alimehmeti, I. (2021). Efficacy and Safety of AZD1222, BNT162b2 and mRNA-1273 vaccines against SARS-CoV-2. Albanian Journal Of Trauma And Emergency Surgery, 5(1), 791-796. doi: 10.32391/ajtes.v5i1.178

[2] Bos, F., & Ruijs, A. (2021). Quantifying the Non-Use Value of Biodiversity in Cost?Benefit Analysis: The Dutch Biodiversity Points. Journal Of Benefit-Cost Analysis, 12(2), 287-312. doi: 10.1017/bca.2020.27

[3] Bryant, A., Lawrie, T., & Fordham, E. (2021). Ivermectin for

Prevention and Treatment of COVID-19 Infection: A

Systematic Review, Meta-analysis, and Trial Sequential

Analysis to Inform Clinical Guidelines. American Journal of

Therapeutics, 28, e434?e460, July 2021. American Journal Of

Therapeutics,

28(5),

e573-e576.

doi:

10.1097/mjt.0000000000001442

[4] CZucman, N., Uhel, F., Descamps, D., Roux, D., & Ricard, J. (2021). Severe Reinfection With South African Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) Variant 501Y.V2. Clinical Infectious Diseases. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciab129

[5] Drupp, M., & H?nsel, M. (2021). Relative Prices and Climate Policy: How the Scarcity of Nonmarket Goods Drives Policy Evaluation. American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 13(1), 168-201. doi: 10.1257/pol.20180760

[6] Hariyanto, T., Halim, D., Rosalind, J., Gunawan, C., & Kurniawan, A. (2021). Ivermectin and outcomes from Covid - 19 pneumonia: A systematic review and meta - analysis of randomized clinical trial studies. Reviews In Medical Virology. doi: 10.1002/rmv.2265

[7] Hill, A., Garratt, A., Levi, J., Falconer, J., Ellis, L., & McCann, K. et al. (2021). Meta-analysis of randomized trials of ivermectin to treat SARS-CoV-2 infection. Open Forum Infectious Diseases. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofab358

[8] Klompas, M. (2021). Understanding Breakthrough Infections Following mRNA SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination. JAMA. doi: 10.1001/jama.2021.19063

[9] Kory, P., Meduri, G., Varon, J., Iglesias, J., & Marik, P. (2021). Review of the Emerging Evidence Demonstrating the Efficacy of Ivermectin in the Prophylaxis and Treatment of COVID-19. American Journal Of Therapeutics, 28(3), e299-e318. doi: 10.1097/mjt.0000000000001377

[10] Kow, C., Merchant, H., Mustafa, Z., & Hasan, S. (2021). The association between the use of ivermectin and mortality in patients with COVID-19: a meta-analysis. Pharmacological Reports, 73(5), 1473-1479. doi: 10.1007/s43440-021-00245-z

[11] Marciniak, S., Farrell, J., Rostron, A., Smith, I., Openshaw, P., & Baillie, J. et al. (2021). COVID-19 pneumothorax in the UK: a prospective observational study using the ISARIC WHO clinical characterisation protocol. European Respiratory Journal, 58(3), 2100929. doi: 10.1183/13993003.00929-2021

[12] Mukarram, M. (2021). Ivermectin Use Associated with Reduced Duration of Covid-19 Febrile Illness in a Community Setting. International Journal Of Clinical Studies And Medical Case Reports, 13(4). doi: 10.46998/ijcmcr.2021.13.000320

[13] Okumu, N., Demirt?rk, N., ?etinkaya, R., G?ner, R., Avci, ., & Orhan, S. et al. (2021). Evaluation of the effectiveness and safety of adding ivermectin to treatment in severe COVID-19 patients. BMC Infectious Diseases, 21(1). doi: 10.1186/s12879-021-06104-9

[14] Yeh, H. (2021). The Potential Declining Efficacy of the ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 Vaccine (AZD1222) on Inoculators With Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Drug (NSAID) Intake. Clinical Infectious Diseases. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciab516

[15] Zaidi, A., & Dehgani-Mobaraki, P. (2021). RETRACTED ARTICLE: The mechanisms of action of Ivermectin against SARS-CoV-2: An evidence-based clinical review article. The Journal Of Antibiotics. doi: 10.1038/s41429-021-00430-5

Comment [A13]:

1) This part is to list all the literature that has been cited in the article, including journal articles, books, web pages, etc. Taking the journal article as an example, the reference should include the author's name, the published year, the paper title, the journal name, the volume and the issue, the pages. 2) Please list at least 15 references. 3) The reference should be numbered in the unified form, such as [1], [2], [3]...

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