American Journal of Researching Science
(AJRES)
Email: contact@researchsciecnce.org
Authors are encouraged to follow the standard guidelines provided by (AJRES) while preparing their manuscripts and also request that the authors submit the cover letter, which includes a description, i.e, how the article is suitable for publication in the journal, and a statement that the article has not been published anywhere.
It is the authors' responsibility to maintain the accuracy and correct format of the References. Authors should cross-check the Submission Checklist before submitting the manuscript so that AJRES will suggest the reviewers and facilitate the quick peer-review process.
Preparing data and results, intellectual property theft, and plagiarism are highly unacceptable, it is beyond the ethics of an author. Manuscript should include a signed statement of informed consent to publish (online) patient descriptions, photographs, and pedigrees from all persons (parents or legal guardians for minors) who can be identified in such written descriptions.
Photographs. Title/Heading: The title should be suitable to the subject and not irrelevant to its detailed work.
Author Affiliation: Respective Author Full Name, Department/Institution/University, City should be drafted with the article.
Corresponding Author: Full Name, Department/Institution/University, City, State, Country, Telephone, Fax, and Email.
Abstract: It should be relevant, self-explanatory, and comprehensive. The abstract is the main part of the article, corresponding to the total subject matter and giving a notion as a summary of the detailed script portrayed by the author. It should also relate to significant outcomes and provide further scope to continue in the field.
Keywords: In alphabetical order, separated with semicolons, and exhibiting a catchy nature with respect to the subject, it should be written in alphabetical order, which is separated with semicolons.
Abbreviations: Here, write the list of abbreviations that are presented in the article
Materials and Methods: Describes the research population or study sample, describes the method used to gather information or data collection and describes the means used for measuring or measures.
Results: Summarize your findings using clear text and support them with visual elements such as charts, graphs, and tables. Ensure that each table, figure, and graph includes a descriptive legend or caption for clarity.
Discussion: Here, analyze findings, explain the importance of the research, and suggest future projects.
References: List the number of citations used in the research (APA, MLA styles are accepted).
Acknowledgement: Includes affirmation of individuals, grant details, funds, and conflict of interest.
Format Type: Microsoft Word (DOC, DOCX), PDF.
Manuscript Structure
Your manuscript should include the following sections:
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Title Page (Title, Authors’ names and affiliations, Corresponding author’s email)
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Abstract (200–300 words, structured if applicable)
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Keywords (3–6 relevant keywords)
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Introduction
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Materials and Methods
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Results
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Discussion
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Conclusion
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Acknowledgments (if any)
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References (in standard format, e.g., Vancouver or APA – confirm with the journal’s style)
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Tables and Figures (with legends/captions)
Manuscript Preparation
1. General Format:
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Use clear, concise, and fluent English.
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12-point Times New Roman font.
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Number all pages starting from the title page.
2. Title Page:
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Include article type, full manuscript title, author names with affiliations.
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Mark corresponding author with *; include email and phone.
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Add a short running title (≤50 characters)
3. Abstract & Keywords:
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Abstract (≤250 words) summarizing aims, methods, results, and conclusion.
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Include 4–6 relevant keywords.
4. Introduction:
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State research problem, objectives, and relevant literature briefly.
5. Materials and Methods:
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Describe study design and methods for reproducibility.
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For Case Reports: Include patient info, symptoms, tests, etc.
6. Results:
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Present logically with tables/figures. Avoid redundancy.
7. Discussion:
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Interpret findings, relate to existing studies, note limitations, and future directions.
8. Conclusion:
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Concise summary of key findings.
9. Acknowledgments:
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Credit contributors who aren't listed as authors.
10. Ethics Statement:
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Include ethical approval and consent where applicable.
11. Conflict of Interest:
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Disclose any potential conflicts.
12. References:
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Use consistent citation style (e.g., APA, MLA, Harvard). Match in-text citations to reference list.
Example:
Article Type
Title
by Author Name1, Author Name2*, ...
1Institution, City, Country
Corresponding Author: Name, Institution, Contact Info
