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ADR Journal Format

Dear sir,
Greetings!

With reference to our conversation, please find below the Journal format:

Your manuscript should be compiled in the following order:

1. Title [ The title, authors, and affiliations should all be included on a title page
as the first page of the manuscript file]
2. Authors
3. Affiliations
4. Abstract [ This section highlights the main points of the article, outlines the
results and conclusions and elucidates the significance of the results (Note that
no references should be cited in the abstract). It should not exceed 250
words.]
5. Keywords [There should be a minimum of 5 keywords]
6. Introduction [should provide a background that puts the manuscript into
context and allows readers outside the field to understand the purpose and
significance of the study; Define the problem addressed and why it is
important; Include a brief review of the key literature; Conclude with a brief
statement of the overall aim of the work and a comment about whether that
aim was achieved]
7. Materials and methods [This section briefly describes the procedures,
methods of observation and analysis and apparatus to enable other
researchers to reproduce the study]
8. Result [This section should be placed separately. It must represent sufficient
experimental data to enable the experiments to be repeated. Authors must
notify the main findings of the research, providing a clear explanation of their
significance and relevance. The author should present results in logical
sequence in the text, tables, and figures, giving the main or most important
findings first with no duplicate data in graphs and tables]
9. Discussion [ This section provides an assessment of the validity of results and
compares the results with other research. It also states the limitations and
significance of results for further research. It should be concise. An
accompanying theory and calculation section would be appropriate ]
10. Conclusion [This section should contain a short conclusion text]
11. Acknowledgements [This section should contain a precise and short
acknowledgement for funding and support agencies as well as scientific or
technical assistance (if any). Routine departmental or institutional support
should not be mentioned]
12. Sources of funding [The author has to provide a statement of all sources of
funding in the manuscript]
13. Conflict of interest statement [Conflicts of interest include financial,
institutional, personal and other relationships that might influence decision-
making. It is mandatory for authors to disclose all probable conflicts of interest
in the manuscript. In case, there is no conflict of interest, this should also be
clearly mentioned]
14. References [Chicago Manual should be followed]
15. Figures and figure legends
16. Tables with caption

A] Abbreviations should be defined in parentheses the first time they appear in the
abstract, main text, and in figure or table captions and used consistently thereafter.
B] SI Units (International System of Units) should be used.
C] Equations should not be used in picture format and should be editable.
D] All the Figures and Tables are to be numbered and should be cited in the text at
their first description, e.g., Figure 1 and Tables 1 and 3. Figures and Tables should be
clustered at the end of the document to be submitted.
Here is an example of a figure with figure legend: Figure 6 The comparison of antigenic
response between smokers (a) and non-smokers (b) using GATA-3. The ELISA was
repeated three times and mean ±SD was determined.
Here is an example of a table caption. Table 6. Correlations among the Proteins

References: Chicago Manual should be followed.

Style of Text Citation: References within the text should be cited as superscript
numbers. A reference list should appear at the end of each manuscript. List references
in the order in which they appear in the text. If there are more than six authors, name
the first six authors followed by et al.

Examples of References

Reference to a Journal Publication

Susan Satterfield, “Livy and the Pax Deum,” Classical Philology 111, no. 2 (April 2016):
170.

Reference to a Book:

Zadie Smith, Swing Time (New York: Penguin Press, 2016), 315–16. Kempe, C. H., &
Helfer, R. E. (1980). The battered child (5th ed.). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago
Press.

Dissertation/Thesis Cynthia Lillian Rutz, “King Lear and Its Folktale Analogues” (PhD
diss., University of Chicago, 2013), 99–100.

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