Author Guideline
The manuscript texts are written in English. Manuscripts will be first reviewed by editorial boards. The main text of a manuscript must be requirements are few :
- Use Microsoft of Word, typed in papers A4 (Width: 21 cm, Height: 29.7 cm), Margin (Top: 2 cm, Left: 2 cm, Bottom : 2 cm, Right : 2cm), Times New Roman 11 pt);
- Use only English as the language;
- Articles must be following the journal template.
A submitted manuscript accepted for publication or published elsewhere is unacceptable and will not be published in to Journal of Big Data Science (JBDS). Manuscripts sent to Journal of Big Data Science (JBDS) must be free from plagiarism and self-plagiarism.
Download : Manuscript Template JBDS
General Formating Guidelines
Title
The title contains the studied variables and shows the manuscript content. It should be clear, brief, and informative. It should be written in Times New Roman 16pt Bold, with a Maximum of 12 Words.
Authors Name
It must be complete without title, accompanied by the author and affiliation address. The Corresponding author must provide and use an e-mail address to themselves and not shared with another author registered. And the maximum number of authors in 1 article is 3 authors; more than that, we will reject.
Abstract
Abstracts are written in English, Font Times New Roman 11 pt maximum 150 - 250 words. It is the first part in scientific article. It comprises summary of the whole content of scientific article. It brings a general overview about the content of scientific article to the reader. The abstract must be concise, clear and informative, summarizing the main aspects of the research without including unnecessary details. It should contain the following elements: the context or problem being addressed, the methodology or approach used, the most important findings and significance of the results. The abstract must not contain references, figures, or tables. It should be written in a single paragraph with no subsections, ensuring readability and enough information to allow readers to understand the essence of the study and its relevance without reading the full article.
Introduction
The introduction formulates and presents the purpose of the article/research. A good introduction avoids detailed references and research result presentations. The introduction should include background, research urgency, and gap analysis with existing research to show the novelty given. The purpose of the research should be seen in the introduction, which is better not to contain tables and figures. The introduction is straightforward.
Research Methodology
The Research Methodology should include relevant details on the materials, experimental design, and techniques to be repeated. Names of products and manufacturers should be included only if alternate sources are deemed unsatisfactory. Novel experiments should be described in detail. If the previous researcher method is used, please describe that method briefly and describe in detail if you modify the procedure.
Result and Discussion
The results and discussion are written in one unit; the author is not justified based on the results and prior discussion in the form of a new chapter. Writing in the results and discussion is done directly by directly reviewing one of the research results obtained with relevant references and prioritizing primary sources. The study results can be equipped with tables, pictures, and graphics to clarify the research results presentation verbally.
The results and discussion should be presented clearly and briefly in the same section. The discussion part should contain the benefit of the research result, not the repeat result part. The results and discussion can be written similarly to avoid extensive quotations. Tables or graphs must present different results. The results of data analysis must be reliable in answering research problems. References to the discussion should not repeat the references in the introduction. Comparisons to the findings of previous studies must be included.
Conclusion
This section contains research results, research findings in the form of answers to research questions, or the state of digest results of the discussion. The conclusion of the research is presented briefly, narratively, and conceptually. The research impact must be stated. This section is presented in paragraph form, not numbering/listing. Just like the second part above, since the first paragraph, the first sentence is also written indented into one tab. Conclusions are presented in one paragraph.
Acknowledgments
Acknowledgments should be made only to those who have substantially contributed to the study. Authors are responsible for obtaining written permission from people acknowledged by name if readers infer their endorsement of data and conclusions.
References
References should be from the last 10 years to ensure relevance and currency. Seventy percent (70%) of the references should be from scientific journals, preferably from internationally reputable journals. The remaining 30% may come from books or other relevant sources.
The example of references using the IEEE style can be seen as follows:
1. Electronic document
[1] European Telecommunications Standards Institute, “Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB): Implementation guidelines for DVB terrestrial services; transmission aspects,” European Telecommunications Standards Institute, ETSI TR-101-190, 2022. [Online]. Available: http://www.etsi.org. [Accessed: Aug. 17, 2022].
2. Electronic document: no author
[2] “A ‘layman’s’ explanation of Ultra Narrow Band technology,” Oct. 3, 2021. [Online]. Available: http://www.vmsk.org/Layman.pdf. [Accessed: Dec. 3, 2021].
3. Government publication: Australian Bureau of Statistics document
[3] Australian Bureau of Statistics, Engineering Construction Activity (cat. no. 8762.0). Canberra: ABS, 2021. [Online]. Available from AusStats, http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats. [Accessed: Sept. 7, 2021].
4. Government publication: Government department
[4] Australia. Department of of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations, Survey on Changes in Awareness and Understanding of Science, Engineering and Technology: Report on findings. Canberra: The Department; 2020.
5. Journal Article
[5] I. Thompson, “Women and feminism in technical communication,” Journal of Business and Technical Communication, vol. 13, no. 2, pp.154–178. 2021.
[6] E. S. Negara, “A Review Overlapping and Non-Overlapping Community Detection Algorithm”, Social Network, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 17 – 23. 2022
Mathematics
Use italics for variables, bold for vectors and matrices, a transform script, and a serif for tensors. Use superscripts and subscripts in a superior or inferior position; do not use raised and lowered fonts.
Tables
Every table must have a title, and all columns must have headings. Column headings must be arranged to clarify their relation to the data and refer to the column below. Footnotes should be indicated by superscript, lowercase letters. Each table must be cited in the text.
Figures
Cite each figure in numerical order in a text. Mark orientation on the figure if questionable. Ensure that each illustration has a caption. Supply captions separately, not attached to the figure. A caption should comprise a brief title (not on the figure itself) and a description of the illustration. Keep text in the illustrations themselves to a minimum but explain all symbols and abbreviations used. Indicate latitude and longitude on maps. Color figures, foldouts, pocket maps, etc., can be accommodated, but the author must bear the costs of color for publishing these special features.