The Bioanalysis Glossary
importance to bioanalysts, and provide background inform- ation, issues and advice for implementing and following the regulations.
Manuscript preparation
Spacing & headings Please use double line spacing throughout the manuscript. No more than four levels of subheading should be used to divide the text and should be clearly designated.
Abbreviations Full terms should be given on the first use only, with abbreviations used thereafter.
Spelling US-preferred spelling will be used in the final publication.
Figures, tables & boxes Future Science has a charge for the printing of color figures in the print issue of the journal. We have no page charges and
aim to keep our color charge to a minimum. The charge does not apply to the online version of articles, where all figures appear in color at no charge.
Copyright If a figure, table or box has been published previously (even if you were the author), acknowledge the original source and submit written permission from the copyright holder to reproduce the material where necessary. As the author of your manuscript, you are responsible for
obtaining permissions to use material owned by others. Since the permission-seeking process can be remarkably time-con- suming, it is wise to begin writing for permission as soon as possible. Please send us copies of letters or forms granting you
permission for the use of copyrighted material so that we can see that any special requirements with regard to wording and placement of credits are fulfilled. Keep the originals for your files. If payment is required for use of the figure, this should be covered by the author.
Key formatting points Please ensure your paper concurs with the following article format: Title: concise, not more than 120 characters. Author(s) names & affiliations: including full name, address, phone & fax numbers and e-mail. Abstract/Summary: approximately 120 words. No references should be cited in the abstract. Keywords: approximately 5–10 keywords for the review, including brief definitions. Body of the article: article content under relevant headings and subheadings. Conclusion: analysis of the data presented in the review. Future perspective: a speculative viewpoint on how the field will evolve in 5–10 years time. Executive summary: bulleted summary points that illustrate the main topics or conclusions made under each of the main headings of the article. References: • Primary literature references, and any patents or websites, should be numerically listed in the reference section in the order that they occur in the text.
• Should appear as a number i.e., [1,2] in the text. • Any references that are cited in figures/tables/boxes that do not appear in the text should also be numerically listed in the reference section in the order that they occur in the text.
• Quote first six authors’ names. If there are more than six, then quote first three et al. The Future Science Endnote style can be downloaded from our website at:
www.future-science.com/page/authors.jsp Reference annotations: please highlight 6–8 references that are of particular significance to the subject and provide
a brief (1–2 line) synopsis. Papers should be highlighted as one of the following:
of interest of considerable interest
Figures/Tables/Boxes: Summary figures/tables/boxes are very useful, and we encourage their use in reviews/perspect- ives/special reports. The author should include illustrations and tables to condense and illustrate the information they wish to convey. Commentary that augments an article and could be viewed as ‘stand-alone’ should be included in a separate box. An example would be a summary of a particular trial or trial series, a case study summary or a series of terms explained. Please include scale bars where appropriate. If any of the figures or tables used in the manuscript requires permission from the original publisher, it is the author’s responsibility to obtain this. Figures must be in an editable format.
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Bioanalysis (2016) 8(21) Suppl. 1
future science group
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