Guide for full paper ICAPFS 2018
Title, This Is a Template for Conference Full Paper
Authora,*, Authorb
a
Department ,Affiliation, Country
E-mail address: [email protected]
b
Department ,Affiliation, Country
E-mail address: [email protected]
Abstract
Abstracts of scientific papers are sometimes poorly written, often lack important information,
and occasionally convey a biased picture. This example provides detailed suggestions for
writing the background, methods, results, and conclusions sections.
Keywords: Abstract, preparing a manuscript, writing skills, Grammar
1. Background/ Objectives and Goals
This section should be the shortest part of the abstract and should very briefly outline the
following information:
What is already known about the subject, related to the paper in question? What is not known
about the subject and hence what the study intended to examine (or what the paper seeks to
present)
In most cases, the background can be framed in just 2–3 sentences, with each sentence
describing a different aspect of the information referred to above. The purpose of the
background, as the word itself indicates, is to provide the reader with a background to the
study, and hence to smoothly lead into a description of the methods employed in the
investigation.
2. Methods
The methods section is usually the second-longest section in the abstract. It should contain
enough information to enable the reader to understand what was done, and important
questions to which the methods section should provide brief answers.
3. Results
The results section is the most important part of the abstract and nothing should compromise
its range and quality. The results section should therefore be the longest part of the abstract
and should contain as much detail about the findings as the journal word count permits.
1
3.1 Formula and Equation
In this sample, the following equations are presented as illustration.
t 1
t
bT 1 bT 1
P (t )
,
b 1
(1)
where t = 0, . . . , T, and b is a number greater than 1.
It should noted that all easily confused characters and symbols, upper and lower case letters,
as well as block and italicized lettering should be noticed to the proceedings editor
3.2 Figures and Tables
Upon submission of an article, authors are supposed to include all figures and tables in the
Word file of the manuscript. Figures and tables should be placed in suitable spaces. All
figures should be cited in the paper in a consecutive order. Figures should be supplied in
either vector art formats (Illustrator, EPS, WMF, FreeHand, CorelDraw, PowerPoint, Excel,
etc.) or bitmap formats (Photoshop, TIFF, GIF, JPEG, etc.). Bitmap images should be of 300
dpi resolution at least unless the resolution is intentionally set to a lower level for scientific
reasons. If a bitmap image has labels, the image and labels should be embedded in separate
layers.
Tables should be cited consecutively in the text. Every table must have a descriptive title and
if numerical measurements are given, the units should be included in the column heading.
Vertical rules should not be used. These should clarify or supplement the manuscript text, not
duplicate the text. They should be sized as this page as illustrated as follows.
2
Table 1. Primer sequences
Gene
Primer sequences (5’ to 3’)
Length (bp)*
Temp**
Reaction Enzyme
SREBP1
F: CCACAACGCCATCGAGAAACGCTAC
348, 432
65
320
57
F: GTGTCCTGTTGTTGTGCTTCATCCTGCC
197
60
NcoI
R: AATATTCTCTCGGGGGTTGATGGTCTTG
156, 41
F: GTCTCAGCTGCACAGATCC
378
62
MscI
R: GAAGACCTCCGGCCGCGAT
163, 215
F: ATTTAGGAAACGACTACTGG
129
65
MlucI
R: ATTTGTATTCTCTTATTATCATC
129, 70, 63
F: GCACCATCCTCTTCCTCAAG
411
66
EaeI
R: GGAAGCGCTTTCGGATG
203, 208
F: TTGTGAGTCTCGTGGAGAACG
224
65
MspAII
R: TCGATGACATTGTCCAACTGCTGC
159, 65
F: ATCTGCTGCCTGGCTGTGTCTGACT
219
65
MspI
R: GGCGTAGAAGATGGAGATGTAGCGG
138, 81
R: GGCCTTCCCTGACCACCCAACTTAG
mtDNA
F: GCCCCATGCATATAAGCAAG
R: CGAGATGTCTTATTTAAGAGG
SCD1
EDG1
CW-2
DGAT1
MC1R (E+, ED)
MC1R (E, e)
Fig 1. Representative result. Note: (1) Negative control, (2-8 and 10-16) RFLP Product, (9)
Marker, (17) PCR Product
3
3.3 Acknowledgments and Legal Responsibility
All acknowledgments (if any) should be included at the very end of the paper before the
references and may include supporting grants, presentations, and so forth. While the advice
and information in the conference are believed to be true and accurate on the date of its going
to press, neither the authors, the editors, nor the publisher can accept any legal responsibility
for any errors or omissions that may be made. The conference makes no warranty, express or
implied, with respect to the material contained herein
4. References
Authors are responsible for ensuring that the information in each reference is complete and
accurate. All references should be cited within the text; otherwise, these references will be
automatically removed.
Mu’in MA. 2008. Genetic polymorphism of growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor1 and associated with pre-weaning of beef cattle in Indonesia. Disertation.
Postgraduate program, Faculty of Animal Science, Universitas Gadjah Mada.
Yogyakarta.
Putra DE, Paul RC, Thu LNA, Okuda Y, Yurnalis, Ibi T, Kunieda T. 2018. Genetic
characterization of Indonesian Pesisir cattle using mitochondrial DNA and ychromosomal haplotypes and loci associated with economical traits and coat traits.
The Journal of Animal Genetics 46: 17-23.
Steel RGD, Torrie JH. 1995. Principles and Procedures of Statistics.
Gramedia Pustaka Utama, Jakarta-Indonesia.
4
Authora,*, Authorb
a
Department ,Affiliation, Country
E-mail address: [email protected]
b
Department ,Affiliation, Country
E-mail address: [email protected]
Abstract
Abstracts of scientific papers are sometimes poorly written, often lack important information,
and occasionally convey a biased picture. This example provides detailed suggestions for
writing the background, methods, results, and conclusions sections.
Keywords: Abstract, preparing a manuscript, writing skills, Grammar
1. Background/ Objectives and Goals
This section should be the shortest part of the abstract and should very briefly outline the
following information:
What is already known about the subject, related to the paper in question? What is not known
about the subject and hence what the study intended to examine (or what the paper seeks to
present)
In most cases, the background can be framed in just 2–3 sentences, with each sentence
describing a different aspect of the information referred to above. The purpose of the
background, as the word itself indicates, is to provide the reader with a background to the
study, and hence to smoothly lead into a description of the methods employed in the
investigation.
2. Methods
The methods section is usually the second-longest section in the abstract. It should contain
enough information to enable the reader to understand what was done, and important
questions to which the methods section should provide brief answers.
3. Results
The results section is the most important part of the abstract and nothing should compromise
its range and quality. The results section should therefore be the longest part of the abstract
and should contain as much detail about the findings as the journal word count permits.
1
3.1 Formula and Equation
In this sample, the following equations are presented as illustration.
t 1
t
bT 1 bT 1
P (t )
,
b 1
(1)
where t = 0, . . . , T, and b is a number greater than 1.
It should noted that all easily confused characters and symbols, upper and lower case letters,
as well as block and italicized lettering should be noticed to the proceedings editor
3.2 Figures and Tables
Upon submission of an article, authors are supposed to include all figures and tables in the
Word file of the manuscript. Figures and tables should be placed in suitable spaces. All
figures should be cited in the paper in a consecutive order. Figures should be supplied in
either vector art formats (Illustrator, EPS, WMF, FreeHand, CorelDraw, PowerPoint, Excel,
etc.) or bitmap formats (Photoshop, TIFF, GIF, JPEG, etc.). Bitmap images should be of 300
dpi resolution at least unless the resolution is intentionally set to a lower level for scientific
reasons. If a bitmap image has labels, the image and labels should be embedded in separate
layers.
Tables should be cited consecutively in the text. Every table must have a descriptive title and
if numerical measurements are given, the units should be included in the column heading.
Vertical rules should not be used. These should clarify or supplement the manuscript text, not
duplicate the text. They should be sized as this page as illustrated as follows.
2
Table 1. Primer sequences
Gene
Primer sequences (5’ to 3’)
Length (bp)*
Temp**
Reaction Enzyme
SREBP1
F: CCACAACGCCATCGAGAAACGCTAC
348, 432
65
320
57
F: GTGTCCTGTTGTTGTGCTTCATCCTGCC
197
60
NcoI
R: AATATTCTCTCGGGGGTTGATGGTCTTG
156, 41
F: GTCTCAGCTGCACAGATCC
378
62
MscI
R: GAAGACCTCCGGCCGCGAT
163, 215
F: ATTTAGGAAACGACTACTGG
129
65
MlucI
R: ATTTGTATTCTCTTATTATCATC
129, 70, 63
F: GCACCATCCTCTTCCTCAAG
411
66
EaeI
R: GGAAGCGCTTTCGGATG
203, 208
F: TTGTGAGTCTCGTGGAGAACG
224
65
MspAII
R: TCGATGACATTGTCCAACTGCTGC
159, 65
F: ATCTGCTGCCTGGCTGTGTCTGACT
219
65
MspI
R: GGCGTAGAAGATGGAGATGTAGCGG
138, 81
R: GGCCTTCCCTGACCACCCAACTTAG
mtDNA
F: GCCCCATGCATATAAGCAAG
R: CGAGATGTCTTATTTAAGAGG
SCD1
EDG1
CW-2
DGAT1
MC1R (E+, ED)
MC1R (E, e)
Fig 1. Representative result. Note: (1) Negative control, (2-8 and 10-16) RFLP Product, (9)
Marker, (17) PCR Product
3
3.3 Acknowledgments and Legal Responsibility
All acknowledgments (if any) should be included at the very end of the paper before the
references and may include supporting grants, presentations, and so forth. While the advice
and information in the conference are believed to be true and accurate on the date of its going
to press, neither the authors, the editors, nor the publisher can accept any legal responsibility
for any errors or omissions that may be made. The conference makes no warranty, express or
implied, with respect to the material contained herein
4. References
Authors are responsible for ensuring that the information in each reference is complete and
accurate. All references should be cited within the text; otherwise, these references will be
automatically removed.
Mu’in MA. 2008. Genetic polymorphism of growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor1 and associated with pre-weaning of beef cattle in Indonesia. Disertation.
Postgraduate program, Faculty of Animal Science, Universitas Gadjah Mada.
Yogyakarta.
Putra DE, Paul RC, Thu LNA, Okuda Y, Yurnalis, Ibi T, Kunieda T. 2018. Genetic
characterization of Indonesian Pesisir cattle using mitochondrial DNA and ychromosomal haplotypes and loci associated with economical traits and coat traits.
The Journal of Animal Genetics 46: 17-23.
Steel RGD, Torrie JH. 1995. Principles and Procedures of Statistics.
Gramedia Pustaka Utama, Jakarta-Indonesia.
4