AUTHOR GUIDELINES

San International Book Publication’s mission is to publish books that span all of the most important academic fields, such as the sciences, the humanities, and the social sciences. The publishing is the result of a collaborative effort on the part of the author (or authors) and the publisher. It is strongly recommended that the author(s) limit their attention to the scientific content. The publisher will direct and assist with the layout, as well as take care of any other necessary legalities. San International Book Publication is responsible for the authoring and editing of the following works: Book, short Monograph, long Monograph, Book Chapter as a part of Edited Volume, Book series, Textbooks, Handbooks, and other related works. The Author Guidelines that are displayed on this page are derived from standardised book writing criteria and have been given the go-ahead by the San International Book Publication. Before sending in the manuscript to the publisher, the author(s) and editor(s), if there are any, should make every effort to follow these criteria to the letter. If you have an idea for a book, please submit an email with the title of the book, an abstract, and the names of each chapter to the following address: editor@nobelonline.in. After doing an editorial evaluation of the proposal, a member of our staff will get in touch with you.

 

  1. Originality

When you submit a manuscript, it is expected that the work in question has not been previously published and is not currently being considered for publication anywhere else. When you provide any kind of material to San International Book Publication, you immediately transfer all rights for publishing, sale, and distribution across all forms of media (including electronic and printed formats, etc.) to San International Book Publication. This is the case regardless of what kind of content you send. It is the duty of the individual who is submitting the materials to ensure that they have obtained the prior written approval of the organisation or individual who was responsible for carrying out the work.

  1. English Style

In order to ensure that there is coherence across the whole piece of writing, the manuscript has to be written in either British or American English, in a manner that is concise and dynamic. When it comes to examining the language, style, and grammar of their manuscripts, authors who come from countries where English is not the primary language should work together with colleagues who speak English or make contact with professional English editing organisations.

  1. Content Organization

Copyright letter

Title

Title Page

Authors and Institutional Affiliations

Table of contents

Abstract

Keywords

Main Text

Greek Symbols and Special Characters

Equations

Conclusion

Patient Consent

Ethical issues

List of Abbreviations

Acknowledgements

Conflict of Interest

References

Figure/Illustrations

Chemical Structures

Tables

Supportive/Supplementary Material

 

  1. Files

 

It is required that the whole manuscript be submitted in the form of a single zipped folder that contains soft copies of all of the resources, including the primary text in Microsoft Word format.

 

  1. Tables & figures

 

Tables and figures need to be included within the body of the text. It is important that tables and figures be presented in the same order as they occur in the text. It has been proposed that the discussion on the tables and figures should be included in the text prior to the appearance of the tables and figures in question. There should be no tables or figures included unless they are discussed or referenced elsewhere in the text.  Tables should include sufficient explanation so that they may be understood independently of any accompanying text. It is important to remember to use double spacing throughout the whole table, especially in the table heads and footnotes. The heads of the table need to be put above the table itself. The footnotes have to be written in superscript lowercase characters and positioned underneath the table.

 

  1. Abbreviations, special characters, etc

 

Before submitting the paper, the author(s) should do a thorough proofreading of it, checking for errors such as abbreviations, special characters, mathematical symbols, Greek letters, equations, tables, figures, references, and pictures, and making sure that these elements appear in the correct sequence and structure.

 

 

  1. Acknowledgements

 

It is possible to include a quick acknowledgment section. This is the area in which you should mention the persons who should be thanked for their aid in preparing the article, providing financing for the study, etc. An appreciation should be given for each and every source of financial support. The authors are obligated to disclose any involvement on the part of the funding organisation in the study’s conception, data collection, analysis, and interpretation, as well as the writing of the publication. If the research sponsors were not involved in any way, the authors of the paper need to make that clear.

 

  1. Ethical approval (Wherever applicable)

 

This section is required for articles dealing with medical research. In cases when human beings are used, additional criteria for evaluating a manuscript include obtaining their informed permission, safeguarding their privacy, and adhering to other human rights standards. It should provide a statement to indicate that the authors have acquired all required ethical permission from a relevant institutional, state, national, or international committee. This statement should be provided to certify that the authors have obtained all necessary ethical approval. Either the fact that this research is not contrary to the public interest or the fact that the disclosure of information is permitted by law is validated by this evidence. Each and every paper that contains animal subjects is required to have permission from either an Institutional Review Board (IRB), an Ethical Committee, or an Animal Utilisation Study Committee, and this statement as well as the approval number are required to be included with the submission.

 

  1. Reference style

 

It is required that the references be provided at the very end of the manuscript and numbered in the same sequence in which they occur in the body of the work. Every citation that is mentioned in the body of the text must also be included in the list of references, and vice versa. Citations should be denoted inside the body of the text by the reference number enclosed in brackets [3].

 

Reference to a journal

 

  1. Hilly M, Adams ML, Nelson SC, A study of digit fusion in the mouse embryo, Clinical & Experimental Allergy, 32(4), 489-98, 2002.

 

Reference to a book:

 

  1. Rang HP, Dale MM, Ritter JM, Moore PK. Pharmacology. 5th ed. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone; 2003.