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Information For Authors

Authors

Interested in submitting to Akuatikisle: Jurnal Akuakultur, Pesisir dan Pulau-Pulau Kecil? We recommend that you review the About the Journal page for the journal's section policies, as well as the Author Guidelines. Authors need to register with the journal prior to submitting or, if already registered, can simply log in and begin the five-step process.

1. Desk Review

Before manuscripts enter the peer-review process, they will be reviewed by an editorial assistant, the reviewing editor, and the editor-in-chief. Akuatikisle: Jurnal Akuakultur, Pesisir dan Pulau-Pulau Kecil has desk-rejected more than 10% of all submissions in the past. To survive the desk-review, please make sure to fully adhere to Akuatikisle’s style guidelines and follow common standards in fisheries and marine science journals. The editorial on how to survive the desk-review provides further specific recommendations

2. Submitting a manuscript

Authors should submit papers electronically via the journal's electronic submission system.

The submission system is designed to be self-explanatory but help is available within the submission site via the 'Author Instructions' tab.

Authors should submit a minimum of two files. They should contain the following elements:

a. Author Information File:

  • the title of the article
  • the author(s)' names and affiliations
  • full contact details (including email, postal address and phone and fax numbers) for the corresponding author

b. Article:

  • the title of the article
  • an abstract of not more than 200 - 250 words
  • 5 - 8 keywords
  • the article in full, including references

3. Author Guidelines

Before prepare and submit article manuscripts, please note that author(s) are discouraged from withdrawing submitted papers after it is in the publication process (review, copyedit, layout, etc.,). 

Please prepare your manuscript before submission, using the following guidelines and the article template below:

Format

Article files should be provided in Microsoft Word format. We currently do not accept other formats, such as LaTex or PDF files.

Article Length

Articles should be between 10-25 pages, including references. A maximum of 5 pages long appendices are allowed.

Article Title

A title of 12 words maximum should be provided.

Author Details and Authorship

All contributing authors’ names should be added, and their names arranged in the correct order for publication. A correct email address should be supplied only by the corresponding author. The full name of each author must be present in the exact format they should appear for publication, including or exclude any middle names or initials as required. The affiliation of each contributing author should be correct on their individual author name.

The criteria of authorship are as follows; Substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work; or the acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data for the work; Drafting the work or revising it critically for important intellectual content; Final approval of the version to be published; Agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.

Structured Abstract

Authors must supply a structured abstract in their submission, which includes:

  • Purpose
  • Design/methods/approach
  • Findings/results
  • Conclusions

A maximum of 300 words in total excluding keywords. It has to be in English regardless of the articles content's languages.

Keywords

Authors should provide appropriate and short keywords that encapsulate the principal topics of the paper. The range number of keywords are 5-8 (five to eight) words.

Article Organization

The body of articles should be organized (at least) into the IMRaD structure as follow;

  • Introduction Section provides adequate background or context (problem and its significance) of the study. The subject should not be written extensively. It is expected that rationale or purpose of the study (gap analysis), the objective in general and specific, and hypothesis (if any) should be expressed clearly. Present a clear "state of the art" of the subject, which discussed literature and theoretical concepts behind it. A concise general background may be included in the article. Present at least 5 (five) years recent related works to support the novelty of the research.
  • Methods Section provides sufficient details to allow the work to be reproduced by an independent researcher. Methods that are already published should be summarized and indicated by a reference. If quoting directly from a previously published method, use quotation marks and also cite the source. Any modifications to existing methods should also be described. Indicate the participants observed, including demographic data, number of respondents, the rationale of respondents selection, etc. Describe the design of the experiment, such as the experiment procedures, surveys, interviews, observation characteristics, etc. Write the complete research procedure. Be sure that explanations made in the article will allow other researchers reproduce the work, or make future work out of it.
  • Results and discussions. Write results in logical sequence. Results with important findings should be present first. When presenting results in a table or figure, do not repeat all those contents in the text. Present only the summary of the text. Describe only new and important aspects of the study. Do not repeat all information from results section or any section above. Present limitations of the study. Write the issues that are new or unsolved, for future research. This section consists of the information on What/How the presented data were produced, no raw data should be present in the article. The produced data are presented in tables, or figures with an explanation of what is the result/findings from the work. The section will also need to address connections between findings and basic concepts or hypothesis made earlier. Authors should also express whether any arguments were needed relating to other works from other researchers. Write implications made by the work related to theoretical or applications.
  • Conclusions Section. The conclusion should be linked to the title and objectives of the study. Do not make statements not adequately supported by your findings. Write the improvements made to industrial engineering field or science in general. Do not make further discussions, repeat the abstract, nor only list the results of research results. Do not use bulleted points, use paragraphed sentences instead.

Biographies and Acknowledgments

Those who contribute but do not meet all criteria for authorship should not be listed as authors, but they should be acknowledged at the end of the text. Only the names of the persons but not their role should be written under acknowledgement section. Authors must declare all sources of external research funding in their article and a statement to this effect should appear in the Acknowledgements section.

Authors who wish to include these items should save them together in the MS Word file to be uploaded with the submission. If they are to be included, a brief professional biography of 100 words maximum should be supplied for each named author.

Headings

Headings must be concise, with a clear indication of the distinction between the hierarchy of headings. The format is provided in the article's template.

Notes/Endnotes

Notes or Endnotes should be used only if absolutely necessary and must be identified in the text by consecutive numbers, enclosed in square brackets and listed at the end of the article.

Figures

All Figures (charts, diagrams, line drawings, web pages/screenshots, and photographic images) should be submitted in electronic form. All Figures should be of high quality, legible and numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals. Graphics may be supplied in colour to facilitate their appearance on the online database. Figures created in MS Word, MS PowerPoint, MS Excel should be supplied in their native formats. Electronic figures created in other applications should be copied from the origination software and pasted into MS Word template document. Photographic images should be inserted in the main body of the article and of high quality.

Tables

Tables should be typed and included in the main body of the article. The position of tables should be inserted in the text as close to the point of reference as possible. Ensure that any superscripts or asterisks are shown next to the relevant items and have corresponding explanations displayed as footnotes to the table, figure or plate.

References

Akuatikisle: Jurnal Akuakultur, Pesisir dan Pulau-Pulau Kecil prefers articles which refer mainly to journal articles, research reports, and conference proceedings, rather than rely heavily on textbooks or handbooks to demonstrate articles' novelty in the subject discussed. The use of Mendeley, Zotero, EndNote or others as a tool in referencing is preferable and encouraged. References should be carefully checked for completeness, accuracy, and consistency.

Author(s) should cite publications in the text following the APA citation style. At the end of the paper, a reference list in alphabetical order should be supplied as follows:

DVD
Holm, I., Narrator, & J. Fullerton-Smith. 2002. Producer, How to Build a Human [DVD]. BBC. London.

Sound Recording
Fisher, D., Writer, & T. Baker. 2009. Presenter, Doctor Who and the Creature From the Pit [Sound recording]. Audiobooks. BBC. Bath, UK.

Video Recording
Rogers, C., Writer & Director, Grrls in IT [Videorecording]. 1999. Bendigo, Vic.: Video Education Australasia.

YouTube/Vimeo Video
NRK. 2007. "Medieval helpdesk with English subtitles," YouTube, Feb. 26, 2007 [Video file]. Available: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQHX-SjgQvQ. [Accessed: Jan. 28, 2014].

Chapter or Article in Edited Book
Rezi, A. & M. Allam. 1995. "Techniques in array processing by means of transformations" in Control and Dynamic Systems, 69, Multidemsional Systems, C. T. Leondes, Ed. Academic Press, San Diego. pp. 133-180.

Book: Single Author
Chen, W.K. 1993. Linear Networks and Systems. Wadsworth. Belmont, CA. pp. 123-135.

Book: Two or More Authors
Gelinas, U. J., Jr., S. G. Sutton, & J. Fedorowicz. 2004. Business Processes and Information Technology. South-Western/Thomson Learning. Cincinnati.

Book: Organisation as Author
World Bank. 2002. Information and Communication Technologies: A World Bank group strategy. World Bank. Washington, DC.

Book: Government Agency as Author
Australia. 2003. Attorney-Generals Department., Digital Agenda Review, 4 Vols. Attorney- General's Department. Canberra.

Book: No Author
Anonim. 2003. The Oxford Dictionary of Computing, 5th ed. Oxford University Press. Oxford.

Book: Editor
Sarunyagate, D. Ed., 1996. Lasers. McGraw-Hill. New York.

Book: Different Editions
Schwalbe, K., 2004. Information Technology Project Management, 3rd ed. Course Technology. Boston.

Scientific/Technical Report
Elliott, K. E. & C.M. Greene, 1997. "A local adaptive protocol," Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, France, Tech. Rep. 916-1010-BB.

Conference Paper in Print
Liu, L. & H. Miao, 2004. "A specification based approach to testing polymorphic attributes," in Formal Methods and Software Engineering: Proc. of the 6th Int. Conf. on Formal Engineering Methods, ICFEM 2004, Seattle, WA, USA, November 8-12, 2004, J. Davies, W. Schulte, M. Barnett, Eds. Springer. Berlin. pp. 306-19.

Conference Paper from the Internet
Lach, J. 2008. "SBFS: Steganography based file system," in Proc. of the 2008 1st Int. Conf. on Information Technology, IT. 19-21 May 2008, Gdansk, Poland [Online]. Available: IEEE Xplore, http://www.ieee.org. [Accessed: 10 Sept. 2010].

Conference Proceedings
van Weert , T. J., & R. K. Munro. 2003. Eds., Informatics and the Digital Society: Social, ethical and cognitive issues: IFIP TC3/WG3.1&3.2 Open Conf.e on Social, Ethical and Cognitive Issues of Informatics and ICT, July 22-26, 2002. Kluwer Academic. Dortmund, Germany. Boston.

E-book
Bass, L., P. Clements, & R. Kazman. 2003. Software Architecture in Practice, 2nd ed. Reading, MA: Addison Wesley, [Online] Available: Safari e-book.

Chapter from an E-book
D. Kawecki, 2008. "Fuel preparation," in Combustion Engineering Issues for Solid Fuel Systems, B.G. Miller and D.A. Tillman, Eds. Academic Press, Boston, MA. 199-240. [Online] Available: Referex.

Article from an Electronic Encyclopaedia
Thompson, G. S., & M. P. Harmer. 2001. "Nanoscale ceramic composites," in Encyclopedia of Materials: Science and Technology, K. H. J. Buschow, R. W. Cahn, M. C. Flemings, B. Ilschner, E.J. Kramer, S. Mahajan, and P. Veyssière, Eds. Elsevier, Amsterdam. pp. 5927-5930. [Online]. Available: ScienceDirect.

Journal Article from a Full Text Database
Ayasso, H. & A. Mohammad-Djafari. 2010. "Joint NDT Image Restoration and Segmentation Using Gauss-Markov-Potts Prior Models and Variational Bayesian Computation," IEEE Transactions on Image Processing, 19(9): 2265-77. [Online]. Available: IEEE Xplore, http://www.ieee.org. [Accessed Sept. 10, 2010].

Journal Article from the Internet
Eilers, P.H.C. & J. J. Goeman. 2004. "Enhancing scatterplots with smoothed densities," Bioinformatics, 20(5): 623-628, March 2004. [Online]. Available: www.oxfordjournals.org. [Accessed Sept. 18, 2004].

Electronic Document
European Telecommunications Standards Institute. 1997. "Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB): Implementation guidelines for DVB terrestrial services; transmission aspects," European Telecommunications Standards Institute, ETSI TR-101-190. [Online]. Available: http://www.etsi.org. [Accessed: Aug. 17, 1998].

Government Publication
Australia. Department of of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations. 2008. Survey on Changes in Awareness and Understanding of Science, Engineering and Technology: Report on findings. The Department. Canberra. [Online]. Available: http://www.dest.gov.au/NR/rdonlyres/241263CF-8585-4EEC-B104-C947C6C18029/23713/SurveyonChangesinawarenessunderstandingofSET.pdf. [Accessed: Sept. 7, 2010].

Whole Internet Site
Geralds, J. 2001. "Sega Ends Production of Dreamcast," vnunet.com, para. 2, Jan. 31, 2001. [Online]. Available: http://nl1.vnunet.com/news/1116995. [Accessed: Sept. 12, 2004].

Journal Article in Print: Abbreviated titles
Liu, G., K. Y. Lee, & H. F. Jordan. 1997. "TDM and TWDM de Bruijn networks and shufflenets for optical communications," IEEE Trans. Comp., 46: 695-701.

Journal Article in Print: Full titles
Beveridge, J. R. & E. M. Riseman. 1997. "How easy is matching 2D line models using local search?" IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, 19: 564-579.

Unpublished Thesis
M. W. Dixon. 1999. "Application of neural networks to solve the routing problem in communication networks," Ph.D. dissertation, Murdoch Univ., Murdoch, WA, Australia.

Published Thesis
M. Lehmann, 2006. Data Access in Workflow Management Systems. Aka. Berlin.

Thesis from a Full Text Database
Sudweeks, F. 2007. Development and Leadership in Computer-Mediated Collaborative Groups. PhD [Dissertation]. Murdoch Univ., Murdoch, WA. [Online]. Available: Australasian Digital Theses Program.

 

update: 1 June 2020