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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.
  • The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  • The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
  • Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
  • The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.
  • The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.

Author Guidelines

Journal Guidelines for SKEWNESS

SKEWNESS accepts articles on research, thoughts and views, or review articles in all areas of statistics (see: Aim and Scope). Specifically for review articles are considered to be loaded if written by a person deemed an expert or at the request of the editor.

Articles received are original articles that have not been and are not under consideration for publication in other publications.

The manuscript is written in Bahasa Indonesia or English on A4 size paper. Left, right, and lower borders are 4 cm, 4 cm, 3 cm, and 3 cm, respectively. The font is Times New Roman with a size of 12 pt and is written with a spacing of 1.5 spaces with MS Word.

Aim and Scope

The systematics of the article include:

  1. Title and Author Information

    The title of the manuscript is written in capital letters, brief and clear. The author's name is written complete without a title and is placed under the title. Below the author's name is the institution where the author is affiliated, followed by the author's email address below.

  2. Abstracts

    Abstracts are written in English with a single spacing and 11 pt letter size, no more than 200 words followed by key words.

  3. Introduction

    Introduction contains background, problem formulation, objectives, and benefits or research contributions.

  4. Research Methods

    Research Methods contain all matters related to the steps or ways of research, research data, as well as tools and research materials.

  5. Results and Discussion

    Results and Discussion contain the results of research that has been obtained and discussion of the results.

  6. Conclusions and Suggestions

    Conclusions and Suggestions contain conclusions from the results of research that has been done and suggestions related to the results of research that has been obtained.

  7. Acknowledgments

    Acknowledgments, if necessary, are addressed to those who have contributed to the skill and writing of the article.

  8. Bibliography

Bibliography Guidelines

  1. For the book:

    Principal name (surname), abbreviation of author's original name. (Publishing year). Title of book, volume, edition. Publisher place: publisher name.

    For example: Bartle, R. G., and Sherbert, D.R. (2000). Introduction to Real Analysis, Third Edition. USA: John Wiley & Sons.

  2. For articles in magazines / scientific journals:

    Principal name (surname), initial name abbreviation. (Publishing year). Article title. Magazine / journal name, volume(number): start and end pages of articles. For magazine / journal name and volume numbers printed in italic.

    For examples: Bougoffa, L. and Moulay, M.S. (2005). A Class of Composite Type Equations, J. Indones. Math. Soc.,11(1): 1-8.

  3. For articles in scientific meeting proceedings:

    Principal name (surname), initial name abbreviation of author. (Publishing year). Article title. Proceeding name. Date of Seminar. Name of scientific meeting organizer, place of scientific meeting meeting, organizing year, start page and end of article.

    For example: Prasad, P. (2006). Propagation of Curved Non Linear Wavefronts and Shock Fronts. Proceedings of International Conference on Applied Mathematics 2005. December 17, 2005. In Andonowati et al. (Eds.), ITB, Bandung, 2006, 22-34.

  4. For articles in the book:

    Principal name (surname), initial name abbreviation of author. (Publishing year). Article title. Editor name. Book title. Publisher place: Publisher name, start and end pages of articles.

    For example: Lindstrom, T. (1980). A Set of Hyperreals. Cutland, N. (ed.). Nonstandard Analysis and Its Application. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 4-21.

  5. For articles from internet sites:

    Principal name (surname), initial name abbreviation of author. Article title. Place of publication. Publishing year. Article source site name, download time.

    For example: Addy, S. K. Neural Net Generated Seismic Map and Its Application in Various Geologic Environment. CGG-ASI-Houston. 1998. http://www.flagshipgeo.com/texmex, Accessed on May 25, 2023.

  6. Literature Quote in Manuscript:

    The literature quote in the manuscript is written in parentheses containing the family name and the year of publication. For authors of more than two, in parentheses the first family name was followed by word et al. Or et al and year published.

    For example: (Chow, 2007), (Ishikawa et al., 2005), (Chow, 2007: 22), (Ishikawa et al., 2005: 22).

Tables and Drawings

Any tables and drawings such as diagrams, graphs, or photographs should be numbered according to the sequence of reference in the article text with a sentence or phrase that describes the contents. If there is only one table or image in a single article then the image does not need to be numbered. The numbers and captions are placed underneath the image.

Template

The article template can be downloaded here