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Types of Communications
The following types of communications will be published:
- Full papers of up to 15 single-spaced pages
- Reports (e.g. projects) of up to 5 single-spaced pages. A recommendation
of the project director and topicality arguments are required.
- Extended essays (summaries of master thesis, etc.) of up to 3
single-spaced pages. A recommendation of the supervisor is required.
Review Process
Full papers will be reviewed by two reviewers through
a blind review process. Reports and extended essays are read by Editorial Board
Members. Comments are occasionally sought elsewhere.
Format
Authors should submit all files in electronic form to the Editor in Chief (arnold.baca@univie.ac.at).
Email attachments are
preferred. All papers submitted to the IJCSS should be electronically sent in
Microsoft Word format using the IJCSS template, which can be downloaded here:
IJCSS-Template
Originality
Full papers should contain original work and are not expected to make
extensive use of footnotes or other references to materials based on previously
published findings. All material submitted must be accompanied by a statement by
the lead author, with the authority of all of the authors, making it clear that:
the material submitted is original and unpublished, and is not under
consideration for publication elsewhere; the material will not be submitted for
publication elsewhere while it is under consideration for publication in the
International Journal of Computer Science in Sport; if accepted for publication
in the IJCSS, the material will not be submitted elsewhere for publication,
either in part or in whole, without the written consent of the Editor in Chief.
Material submitted will not enter the refereeing process until such an
undertaking has been received.
Article
General
The article must be in American English using SI units. It must be in Times New
Roman size 12 font throughout, fully justified, with a 3 cm margin on the both
sides, with pages numbered consecutively, with no line numbering and no 'headers
and footers' (other than page numbers). Arrange the article under headings (such
as Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion, Conclusions) and subheadings.
Abstract
Include an abstract of not more than 200 words that summarizes the paper and
gives a clear indication of the conclusions it contains. It should be inserted
in the article after the Authors' addresses, indented by 1 cm from both sides of
the normal text (i.e. 4 cm. margin in total). The abstract must not contain
figures or tables.
Key Words
A list of up to 5 key words that describe the general content of the
contribution should be included after the abstract.
Tables and illustrations
Illustrations, plates, tables and any other artwork should be included in the
electronic submission. Tables must be clearly and simply laid out with clear row
and column legends, units where appropriate, no vertical lines and horizontal
lines only between the table title and column headings, between the column
headings and the main body of the table, and after the main body of the table.
Photographs and line drawings, referred to as 'Figure 1', 'Figure 2', and so on,
must be numbered in the order in which they occur in the text.
References
Provide complete, APA-formatted references and text citations and make sure that
the two correspond exactly. The APA Manual provides (a) detailed guidelines on
preparing references and citations and (b) many excellent sample references and
citations. The manual includes the requirement that, when typing a reference for
a chapter in an edited book, the inclusive page numbers of the chapter must be
added.
The issue number of a journal should be included only to avoid confusion, as
when for example the pagination starts from 1 in each issue rather than being
continuous across a volume; in such cases use 16(4), etc.
Proofs
Proofs will, if necessary, be sent (electronically) to the corresponding
author for correction. The difficulty and expense involved in making amendments
at proof stage make it essential for authors to prepare their article carefully;
any alterations to the original text are strongly discouraged. Our aim is rapid
publication; this will be helped if authors provide good copy, follow the above
instructions, and return their proofs as quickly as possible.
Copyright
All authors of
manuscripts must transfer the copyright for their paper to the Publisher if and
when the paper is accepted for publication. The copyright covers the
exclusive rights to reproduce and distribute the paper, including reprints,
photographic reproduction, microfilm or any reproduction of a similar nature,
and translations.
Permissions
Authors must obtain permission to publish copyrighted
illustrations. Authors are responsible for paying permission fees.
Recommendations for papers describing software programs
Papers describing software programs should:
a) Start with the problem (i.e. what problem is this program designed to
solve).
b) The literature review should:
a. discuss existing systems which attempt to solve the problem
b. discuss problems with existing systems
c. identify reviews and research that has been carried out with existing
systems
d. discuss features that are critical to the development of the program (the
authors actually did some of this with the current paper)
e. lead into why their system was developed.
c) In addition to describing the program, the authors should present user
comments on the effectiveness of the system, or at a minimum describe the
evaluation system they will use to test the effectiveness of their system.
d) Provide a copy of the software to allow evaluators the opportunity to test
what is reported in the paper or some other way of confirming that the software
really works.
e) Suggest future issues/directions
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