Author Instructions
Overview
Innovative Publication, a
publisher of open-access journals. All submitted
manuscripts are managed by the Manuscript Peer-Review
Process, called MPRP, as a rapid and
rigorous double-blind peer-reviewed manuscript handling and editorial process.
On this single platform, all authors, reviewers, editors, and the editorial
office work.
Submission Checklist
During the final submission of an
article, a manuscript submission checklist is essential before sending it to
the journal for review.
- One
of the authors should be designated as the Corresponding author with
contact details.
- The
author must check the Aims and Scope of the journal.
- Use
the MS Word template to prepare the manuscript.
- An
author must ensure that Authorship Criteria, Research
and Publication Ethics, Manuscript Preparation, Copyright
Format, Illustrations, Data, and Reference Format are appropriately
considered.
- The
author has approved the content of the submitted manuscript.
- All
necessary files must have been uploaded with Keywords, figures, and tables
(including title, description, and footnotes).
- The
manuscript should have been spell-and grammar-checked.
The author must have obtained permission for copyrighted material.
Manuscript Submission Guidelines
Manuscript Submission Process
All manuscripts must be submitted
online at www.mprp.in. The submitting
author, generally the corresponding author, is liable for the manuscript during
the submission and peer review. The submitting author must ensure that all
eligible co-authors have been included in the author list, acknowledge
the authorship
criteria,
and ensure that all of them have read and approved the submitted version of the
manuscript. To submit a manuscript, first-time users are required to register
themselves first by clicking on the register tab on the
submission portal. On successful registration, one will receive an email
verification, and after confirmation, he/she will be able to log in as an
author. One can directly log in by using their credentials (username-
registered ID & Password) or can directly sign in with Google or their
ORCID ID.
Once registration has been done successfully, log in as an author and submit your manuscript for further processing. While submitting, the author is required to provide information on payment and potential funder agreements. During submission of the funder details, one must ensure that he/she meet all their funder requirements.
Manuscript Preparation
- Title
Page Information:
Manuscripts must be prepared following the Manuscript Title, Author list,
affiliations, abstract, and Keywords.
- Original
Research Manuscript:
Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, Figures, Tables,
Conclusions, etc.
- Author
Ethical Responsibilities: The author should provide Supplementary
Materials, Acknowledgements, Author Contributions, Conflicts of Interest,
Funding, Data Availability Statement, and Citations.
- Presentation
and Format: Spacing,
Margins, Page Numbering, Word limit, etc.
Cover Letter
Cover Letters must be included
with each manuscript submission, and they should be concise and detail why the
content of the paper is significant and find the context of existing work. It
should explain that the manuscript is suitable as per the scope of the journal.
The cover letter should provide the following details:
- Manuscript
Title
- Type
of Manuscript
- Author's
full names (First name, Middle Name, and Last Name)
- Complete
Affiliations (in sequences)
- Contact
no and email ID
- ORCID
ID/Researcher’s profile
Title Page Information
The Title page should include:
- The
title of a manuscript which should be concise, specific, relevant, and
informative, and should contain the primary keywords, formulae, and
abbreviations used.
- Running
title or short title, which should not be more than 6 words.
- Authors’
first and last names must be provided. The initials of any middle name can
also be added. The standard format used for PubMed/MEDLINE for
affiliations is complete address information, including city, pin/zip
code, state, and country. The affiliations should be provided as 1, 2, and
3, but should not be marked with symbols.
- It should indicate the Corresponding author who will handle all levels of communication for pre- and post-publication of the manuscript. It must be ensured that the name, address, contact number, and e-mail address of the contributor responsible for correspondence about the manuscript are included. Updated details, including institutional e-mail addresses along with the contact number of the corresponding author, should be included. Please go through the Authorship qualification criteria.
Article type and Formatting
Original Research Article
Structured Abstracts: The abstract should be provided with a maximum of 150 -250 words with the following subheadings:
- Background: The background for the study should state the study’s purpose, basic procedures, main findings, and principal conclusions. It should emphasize new and important aspects of the study and observation.
- Methods: Methods describe briefly the main methods or treatments applied and include relevant preregistration numbers.
- Results: Results are presented in logical sequence in tables, text, and figures, giving the main and most important findings. Emphasize or summarise only the most important observations; do not replicate all the data, tables, figures, and text.
- Conclusion: The conclusion indicates the interpretations with the goal of the study, but avoids unqualified statements, and the abstract should be an objective representation of the article. It must not consider results that are not presented and substantiated in the main text and should not exaggerate the main conclusions.
- Keywords: Keywords need to be added after the abstract, and it is recommended that the keywords are specific to the article and within the subject discipline. Keywords are used for indexing purposes, and abbreviations established in the field may be eligible.
Acknowledgements: Acknowledgement of grants, funds, persons, and
support in a separate section at the end of the article before the reference,
and include them on the title page as a footnote to the title or otherwise.
Introduction: The introduction should be briefly placed in a broad context and highlight its significance. It should define the purpose of the work and its significance, including specific and previous studies in the area. The current state of the research clearly describes the study purpose, the tested hypothesis, and its aim and scope. At last, briefly mention the main aim of the work and highlight the main conclusions. Keep the introduction comprehensible to scientists working outside the topic of the research paper.
Materials and Methods: The Methods section should only include information that was available at the time the study was planned or the protocol written; all information obtained during the conduct of the study belongs to the results section. New methods and protocols should be described in detail, while well-established methods can be briefly described and appropriately cited. One must provide the name and version of any software used and be clear where the computer code used is available. A statement indicating that the research was approved by an independent local, regional, and national level needs to be mentioned.
Results: Provide a concise and precise description of the experiment results and data on all primary and secondary outcomes, identified in the materials and methods part, and do not include methods, discussion, and conclusions. All Charts, figures, and Tables are cited in text in numerical order and include a brief description; consider using supplement material to highlight major findings.
Discussion: The author should discuss the results and how they can be interpreted from the perspective of previous studies and of the working hypotheses. The finding and their implications should be discussed in the broadest context possible, and limitations of the work highlighted, and further research directions may be mentioned. Explore the implications of findings for further research and policy, and combine them with results.
Conclusions: This section is crucial and required as it summarizes the key points and findings of your paper. It determines the overall conclusions of the study and the future research directions.
Patents: It is not mandatory, but may be updated if there is patent work reported in this manuscript.
Manuscripts submitted to the Journal of Oral Medicine, Oral Surgery, Oral Pathology and Oral Radiology that are not original articles must come into one of the following categories:
- Review Articles
- Case Report/Case Series
- Letter-to-Editor
- Short Communication/Commentary
- Editorial/Others
Review Article:
It is expected that review articles are written by individuals who have done substantial work on the subject or are considered experts in the field. Review articles should address a focused topic, issue, or question. They should be balanced and up-to-date. They should not simply restate the literature but rather interpret and integrate the findings to provide a framework for understanding the literature on a particular topic. A summary of the work done by the authors in the field of review should accompany the manuscript. The author submitting a review article should include a section describing the methods used for locating, selecting, extracting, and synthesizing data. Methods should be summarized in the form of an abstract.
Structure: Abstract, Keywords, Introduction, Discussion,
Conclusion, and References
The discussion part of the review should be managed into subdivisions headed by informative sub-titles. We welcome review articles as per the aims & scope of the journal, but the above topics' content should be discussed with the Editors prior to the submission, indicating how this manuscript would be different from recent review manuscripts in the field.
Case Report / Case Series:
Authors should submit new, interesting, and rare case reports/case series. They should be unique, describe a great diagnostic or therapeutic challenge, and provide a learning point for readers. Cases with clinical significance or implications will be given priority. Case reports do not require extensive patient details and should be submitted as Correspondence. Correspondence should not contain more than 800 words.
Letter-to-Editor:
Letters to the editor should be focused on news or on an article that has been published in a journal within the previous year. The letter should focus on significant aspect of the paper that is in the author’s opinion and its comments.
Editorial, Short Communication, Commentary, and others as below mentioned:
Article Types: | Detail Descriptions |
Original Research Article | Words limit: 2000-4500 (Excluding references) Structured Abstracts: Aim & Objective, Background/Introduction, Material & Methods, Results, Conclusion, and Keywords (150 -250 Words) Keywords: (3-10) References: Minimum - 15 and Maximum – 70 Maximum Number of Figures: 8 (Quality: Pixel 300 DPI) Maximum No of Table: 8 Article explanation: Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, Conclusions |
Review Article | Words limit: 2500-6000 (Excluding references) |
Headings: Abstract, Keywords, Introduction, Discussion, Conclusion, and References | |
Maximum Number of Figures: 8 (Quality: Pixel 300 DPI) Maximum No of Table: 8 | |
References: Minimum - 15 and Maximum - 100 | |
Case Report/Case Series | Words limit: 1000- 2500 Excluding references |
Main Headings: Abstract, Introduction, Case Presentation/Series, Discussion, Conclusion, and Reference | |
Figures: 5-15 (Quality: Pixel 300 DPI) Table: 3-8 | |
References: In between 8-25 | |
Letter-to-Editor | Words limit: Up to 300-600 words |
Short Communication/Commentary | Words limit: Up to 600-1500 References: In between 5-15 |
Editorial/Guest Editorial/others | Words limit: Up to 300 – 1000 |
Author Ethical Responsibilities | Provide Supplementary materials, Acknowledgements, Conflicts of Interest, Funding Source, Author Contribution, Data Availability Statement, Citations, Clinical Trial Registry, Acknowledgments |
Manuscript Presentation and Formatting: All manuscript content should follow the given formatting style:
- Manuscripts should be submitted in Microsoft Word (MS-Word) only; No PDF or other format is allowed.
- Use normal plain font (e.g., 12-point, Times New Roman) for text.
- Use double-spaces for all text, including abstract, table, reference, footnotes, and figure legends.
- Use italics for emphasis.
- Page margins 1.00 from all four sides.
- Page numbers at the bottom.
- Keywords (3-10).
- Reference according to the journal instructions, punctuation marks checked.
- Submission of the manuscript without track changes.
- If any brand name is cited, provide the brand name, address, city, etc.
- Use the table function in Word, not Spreadsheet/Excel, to create a table.
- All tables (including title, description, and footnotes.)
- Sharp and clear Figures/graphics.
- All figure captions.
- Save your file in Docx format (MS Word 2007 or higher).
- All scientific names should be written in italics.
Measurement of Units: Internationally accepted rules, regulations, policies, and conventions use the International System of Units (SI). If any other units are mentioned, please provide their equivalent SI.
Preparation of Figure, Table, and Artworks
- Files for figures and tables must be provided during submission in a single zip/WinRAR file and archives and at a clear and high-resolution pixel width/height, or a resolution of 300 dpi (Dots Per Inch) or higher. Standard formats are accepted and preferred as TIFF, JPEG, EPS, and PDF.
- Authors are encouraged to prepare tables and figures in colour (RGB at 8-bit).
- Figures include photographs, radiographs, or micrographs and include only essential figures and use composite figures containing several panels of photographs.
- All Figures, tables, and artworks should have a short explanatory title and caption, and all table columns should have an explanatory heading. To facilitate the copy-editing of large tables, smaller fonts may be used. The author should use the Table option of MS Word to create a table.
- Tables are always cited in text in consecutive numerical order, and each table supplies a table caption (title) explaining the components of the table.
- Identify any previously published material by giving the source in the form of a reference at the end of the table caption. All experiment samples and controls used for one comparative analysis are run on the same pattern.
- You should check figures for duplications and ensure the figures are clear and accurate.
Author Ethical Responsibilities
Supplementary Materials: It describes any supplementary material published online alongside the manuscript (figure, table, spreadsheet, video, etc.). The author should indicate the name and title of each element as follows: Figure S1: title, Table S1: Title, etc.
Funding and
Acknowledgments: This may include administrative
and technical support or donations in kind of people, grants, funds, etc.,
should be placed in a separate section on the title page of the manuscript and
repeated before references.
In addition, please provide the funding information in a separate step while submitting of manuscript process. If the funding institution you need is not listed, it can be entered as text. Funding information will be published as searchable metadata for the accepted article, where acknowledgments are published on the page.
Author Contributions: Authors are required to include a statement of responsibility, to have made substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work, or the acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of the data, or drafting the work, and substantively revising it. Authorship must include and be limited to those who have contributed substantially to the work.
Data Availability Statement: Provide details regarding where data supporting reported results can be found, including links to publicly archived datasets analysed or generated during the study, or you might choose to exclude this statement if the study did not report any data.
Conflicts of Interest: Authors must disclose any financial and personal support or interest that may be recognized and determine the representation or interpretation of reported research results. Potential conflicts of interest include employment, consultation, ownership, honorarium, patent application, testimony, etc. Any project funded by the industry must pay special attention to the full declaration of funder involvement. If there is no role, please state that the sponsors had no role in the design, execution, recognition, or writing of the study. According to The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE), authors should avoid signing into any agreements with study sponsors, both for-profit and non-profit, that interface with the author’s access to all of the study’s data or that interface with their ability and interpretation of data, and publish manuscripts independently when they select. For more details, visit Conflict of Interest.
The statement should reflect all the collected potential conflict of interest disclosures in the form. If no conflicts exist, the authors should state that they declare no conflicts of interest.
References: References must be numbered in order of appearance in the text (including figures, captions, tables, and legends) and listed individually at the end of the manuscript. The reference style can be learned from reading earlier issues of this journal. Text citation of the reference in number at the end of a sentence or at the end of a clause that requires a literature citation. Original research is limited to 70 references and a maximum of 100 references for review articles. We recommended preparing the reference with bibliography software like Zotero, EndNote, etc. to avoid typing mistakes and duplicated references. We encourage citations to data, other citable and research material.
Citation: Reference and Citation in supplementary files are permitted and provided that they also appear in the main text and the reference list in order.
Supplementary Materials, Data submission
Journal is committed to
accepting open scientific exchange and enabling our authors to achieve best
practices in sharing and archiving research data. We encourage all
authors of articles published in the Innovative Journal to share their research
data. Every journal guideline can be found on the journal's “Instructions
for Authors.”
The Policy of data sharing concerns the minimal dataset support and findings of
a published study. Collected data should be publicly available and cited under
the guidelines of the journal.
Publication data policies
Before submission of research
datasets as electronic supplementary material, authors should read the journal's
guidelines. We encourage research data to be archived in data repositories
wherever possible. The author should ensure that the data shared is under the
consent provided by participants for the use of confidential data. An
availability of data statement provided regarding where the data reporting and
supported results can be found, including publicly archived datasets analysed
and generated during the study.
Data availability and suggested
statements are mentioned below:
- Journal encourages
authors to provide articles with an external database that helps to build
a better understanding of time to explain the research.
- Publicly
available data accessible in the repository
Data presented in the study are
openly available in (repository name, e.g., Fig Share) at (DOI), reference
number (reference number).
- Datasets
are assigned a DOI
A data repository may be cited in
the reference list. Data citations should include the minimum information
recommended by Data Cite: Authors, title, publisher (repository name), and
identifier.
- Available
data on request due to restrictions, e.g., Ethical or privacy
Presentation of data in this
study is available on request from the corresponding author; the data are not
publicly available due to (mention the reason).
- Third-Party
Data
Restrictions apply to the
availability of these data. Data were obtained from (third party) and are
available from the authors/website with the permission of (third party).
- Data
sharing is not applicable
The new data sharing was created
or analysed in this study does not apply to the article.
Data Citation:
- (dataset)
Authors. Year. Dataset title, repository data or archives, Version (if
available); Persistent identifier (e.g., DOI)
Supplementary Material and
References
While submitting the manuscript,
additional data and files can be uploaded as “Supplementary Files”.
Supplementary files will also be available to the referees as part of the
peer-review process. Any additional files and formats are acceptable. We
recommend that non-proprietary and common formats be used where possible.
References and citations in supplementary files are permitted provided that
they also appear in the main text and the reference list.
Unpublished and Research Data Policy
- The availability of data limits should be mentioned in the paper and at the time of submission. All observations pertaining to the submitted manuscript should be published by the authors as unpublished data or supplementary information. Submission of data to the journal indicates that all raw data and resources specified in the publication will be publicly accessible to any researcher who wants to use them for non-commercial reasons without violating participant confidentiality. It is recommended that authors make sure their datasets are either included in the primary publication or other supporting files, or deposited in publicly accessible repositories.
- Journal accepts all sequence names, and the accession numbers provided by the databases must be provided in the materials and methods section of the article.
Research and Publication Ethics
Research Ethics Involving Human
and Plant
When reporting studies on human subjects, indicate whether the procedures followed were under the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation (institutional or regional) and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2000 (available at https://www.wma.net/what-we-do/medical-ethics/declaration-of-helsinki/doh-oct2000/). Do not use patients’ names, initials, or hospital numbers, especially in illustrative material. Written consent for publication must be signed by participating patients with information. Related data to participants must be explained in detail, and personal information of patients need not be disclosed unless it is an identifiable matter that is of relevance to the research, like patients' photographs, or faces that show particular complications. Patients’ particulars or other identification need not appear in any form of images.
A manuscript that includes any
case details, like personal information and images of patients, authors must
obtain signed informed consent for publication from patients or
relatives/guardians before submitting to the Innovative Publication journal.
Details of the patient must be anonymous as far as possible, e.g., do not
mention age, ethnicity, occupation, or relations if they are not relevant to
the conclusions. An available Patient Permission
Template form[HS1] is available to
Download. A plain version of the form used to obtain permission without the
patient's name or signature must be uploaded with your submission. The editor
reserves the right to reject any submission that does not meet these criteria.
After speaking with your affiliated
university, the author may use our sample form as a guide and submit a suitable
form for publication. Unlimited permission for publication in all formats,
including print, online, and others, as well as for sublicensed and reprinted
versions, as well as for other works and products under an open access license,
should be included in the journal and permission, release form, or consent. The
kind of contributions that qualify for authorship are not specified by the
publisher. It is advised that authors follow the authorship rules that apply to
their particular field of study.
The submitted manuscript will be
checked by the editorial office or, upon request, for documentary evidence
related to the discussed documents. When studies describe groups by race,
gender, disability, disease, religion, etc., an explanation regarding why such
categorization was needed must be clearly stated in the article.
If articles do not contain
studies with human participants by any of the authors, the statement should be
as follows:
- Informed
consent if the research involved human participants.
- The
author will be held responsible for false statements or failure to fulfil
the guidelines on humans.
References Style
The reference list should include
the full title, as recommended by the ACS style guide. Style files for Endnote
and Zotero are available. Reference should be described and depending on the
types of the work, which is mentioned as below:
For Journal Article
The surname is followed by the
first initials. (et al. after six authors). Article title. Title of
the journal with a standard abbreviation. Year of publication; Volume (Issue
number): Pages.
Example:
- Choudhury
DD, Sonawane JP, Chowdhary A. The study of prevalence of needle stick and
sharp injuries among healthcare works in tertiary care hospital, Navi
Mumbai. IP Int J Med Microbiol Trop Dis. 2021;7(4):227-31.
- Onweh
DA, Edeogu CO, Okezie AO, Ogbodo EC, Nwanguma DE, Oguaka VN et al. Effect
of trace elements in the immune system of pregnant women attending
antenatal clinic in alex ekwueme federal university teaching
hospital. J Community Health Manag. 2021;8(4):181-9.
For Book
The surname is followed by the
first initials. Book title. Edition (if applicable). Place: Publisher; Year.
Example:
- Jena
S, Kumar G. Advanced Diagnostic Techniques for Oral Cancer Detection.
1st ed. New Delhi: IP Innovative Publication; 2022.
For Book Chapter
The surname is followed by first
initials. Title of the chapter. In: Surname editor Initial(s), editor. Book
title. Edition (if available). Place: Publisher; Year. Pages.
Example:
- Bomzon
PS. Tree Diversity in Indian Forests. In: Laha J, Chakravort P, Mukherjee
D, Sinha NK, Mukherjee R, Samanta AK. Forestry in India-An overview. New
Delhi: IP Innovative Publication; 202 p. 34-58.
For E-Book
The surname is followed by first
initials. Book title [Internet]. Place: Publisher; Year [cited date]. Available
from: URL.
Example:
- Bareja
R. Practical Medical Microbiology for BMLT [Internet]. New Delhi: IP
Innovative Publication; 2021 [2022 Jan 15]. Available from:
https://www.wonderslate.com/Practical Medical Microbiology for
BMLT/ebook?siteName=books&bookId=26316
Conference Proceeding Papers
The surname is followed by first
initials. Title of paper. In: Surname editor Initial(s), editor. Title of the
conference. Place: Publisher; Year. Pages.
Example:
- Venkatesh
A. Role of Human Resources in Organizational Innovation for sustainability
of New Business. In: Lohara J. 2nd International Conference on
Innovation and Sustainability of New Businesses. New Delhi: IP Innovative
Publication; 2019. p- 216-9.
Newspaper Articles
The surname is followed by first
initials. (if available). Title of article. Title of newspaper. Date: Pages (if
available).
Example:
- Coronavirus
in India live updates: Delhi reports 57 new cases, zero deaths in last 24
hours. The Times of India. Sep 15, 202
Thesis Unpublished:
Author; The surname is followed
by first initials. Title of Thesis (Type of Thesis). Location of University:
University Name; Year.
Example:
- Joy
L. Prevalence and antibiogram of burkholderia species isolated from
tertiary care hospital (Research). Kerala: Jubilee Mission
Hospital; 202
Thesis Published:
Author; The surname is followed
by first initials. Title of Thesis (Type of Thesis). Place of Publication:
Publisher Name; Year of Publication.
Example:
- Joy
L. Prevalence and antibiogram of burkholderia species isolated from
tertiary care hospital (Research). New Delhi: IP Innovative
Publication; 202
Website
Author; The surname is followed
by first initials. Title [Internet]. Place: Publisher; Date of publication
[updated date; cited date]. Available from: URL.
Example:
Donovan R. Everything You Need to
Know About Heart Disease. [Internet]. New York: Healthline; Updated on
2020 February 27. Available from:
https://www.healthline.com/health/heart-disease
Always use the standard
abbreviation of the journal’s name according to the ISSN number and list of
titles Word Abbreviations check. If you are unsure, please use the full journal
title.
Clinical Trial Registry
We recommend that clinical trials
be prospectively registered in a public domain database, and clinical trial
registration numbers should be mentioned in all papers that report their
results. Authors are asked to provide the name of the trial register and the
clinical trial registration number in the manuscript. If a clinical trial is
not registered or registered retrospectively, the reason must be provided at the
time or before the time of the patient's first enrolment as a condition of
consideration for publication.
Journal follows the International
Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) guidelines. We strongly
encouraged authors to pre-registration clinical trials with international
clinical trials register and cite a reference to the registration in the method
section. A suitable database must be included and requires a complete
consolidation of standard reporting trials as per the CONSORT minimum
guidelines for publication. Suitable databases include http://ctri.nic.in/Clinicaltrials/login.php and those listed
by the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials
Registry Platform.
Authors are required to submit
approval to conduct a study from a local and independent, regional, or national
authority. Journal reserves the right to reject a paper without trial
registration for further peer review process. Reports of randomized clinical
trials should present information on all major studies, including the protocol,
assignment of interventions, based on the CONSORT statement.
Specific Study Designs and
Reporting Guidelines
Journal requires a complete CONSORT 2010 Checklist key document
and CONSORT 2010 flow diagram, as a condition
of submission of reporting the results of the randomized clinical trial. The
author can find templates of these reporting guidelines on the CONSORT
website www.consort-statement.org. Authors are also
referred to the EQUATOR network for further information on
the available reporting guidelines for health research. Various other
checklists are available for various study designs. We encourage our authors to
follow the guidelines of SAGER's “Sex and Gender Equity in Research”
rationale for the SAGER guidelines and recommend use whenever it is relevant.
Authors should describe in the background whether sex and gender differences
may be expected. If sex and gender analysis were not conducted, the rationale
should be given in the discussion part. Journal suggests the author follow the full guidelines
of SAGER.
Publication Ethics Statement
The journal will follow the COPE guidelines on how to handle
potential acts of misconduct in publication ethics.
Authors must follow the submission
guidelines of the journal.
- Authors
must ensure that the work they are submitting as their manuscript is
entirely original. Authors must certify that the manuscript has not
previously been published elsewhere. Authors sign a declaration stating
that the manuscript and the illustrations within are original, or that they
have taken all necessary steps to avoid breach of copyright.
- Submitting the same paper to more than one journal constitutes unethical publishing practice. The author submitting the manuscript to the journal ensures that all contributing co-authors and no uninvolved person(s) are included in the author list.
- Any conflicts of interest that can be interpreted as influencing the article must be disclosed by the authors to the editors. If an author finds a serious error or inaccuracy in the submitted paper, they are required to give retractions or corrections of faults at any time.
- Data
and methods used in the research need to be presented in sufficient detail
in the paper so that other researchers can replicate the work.
- A
single study should not be split up into several parts to increase the
number of submissions and submitted to various journals or one journal.
- Results
should be presented clearly and honestly, without any falsification or
fabrication of data.
- Plagiarism,
manipulation, and data fabrication are not allowed.
Plagiarism
Copyright, text ideas,
photographs, and even your own published work are all considered plagiarism if
you do not provide due acknowledgment to the original author. Stealing and
passing off someone else's thoughts or ideas as one's own, using someone else's
work without giving them credit, or passing off anything as a new, unique
concept or product that was inspired by an already-existing source.
"Self-plagiarism" is regarded as plagiarism by us. When an author
uses a passage from their own previously published work without properly citing
it in their recently submitted piece, it is considered self-plagiarism.
We use iThenticate software to check plagiarism. If plagiarism is found or noticed from other sources, the editorial board should check the status. If the plagiarism is confirmed as intentional thing, then the following actions will be carried out. This should be reported to the editorial board, authors, and corresponding authors, and all authors' names will be marked as blacklist.
Reviewer Suggestions
Once the manuscript has been
submitted, please suggest any two potential reviewers having the suitable
expertise to review the manuscript. The editors will not necessarily approach
these referees. Please provide detailed information upon the completion of the
manuscript, such as Name, Email id, contact number, and homepage. The proposed
reviewer should be from a different institution from the authors, or the author
may identify appropriate Editorial Board members of the journal as potential
reviewers. You may suggest reviewers from among the authors whom you frequently
cite in your paper.
English Language Corrections
The submitted manuscript must be grammatically correct. We suggest that authors facilitate proper peer review of their manuscripts. In case, guidance is required with writing in English or are not a native English speaker, we suggest that you have your manuscript professionally edited before submission or read by a native English-speaking colleague. Using a professional English language editing service where editors will improve the English to ensure that your meaning is clear and identify problems that require your review. These services can be carried out by Innovative Author Services. Professional editing will enable reviewers and future readers to easily read and assess the content of submitted manuscripts. All accepted manuscripts undergo language editing; however, a fee will be charged to the author in case very extensive English corrections must be made by the Editorial Office. Pricing is according to the services.
Authorship
The journal and publisher assume
all authors agreed with the guidelines International
Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE), which state that all authors
gave explicit consent to the manuscript submission and that they obtained
consent from the authors’ responsibilities at the institution where the work
has been carried out. The publisher does not prescribe the role of contributions
that authorship. Those who contributed to the work but did not qualify
for authorship should be listed in the acknowledgements.
Any updates on the author list
should be approved by all authors, including any who have been removed from the
list. The corresponding author should act as a point of contact between
the editor and the other authors and should keep co-authors informed and
involve them in minor decisions about the publication. The publisher reserves
the right to request confirmation that all authors meet the authorship
conditions.
One can also visit for more
details about authorship, and check the Innovative Publication Ethics
website.
Author Appeals
The author has the right to send
an appeal to the editorial office of the journal by sending an email. The
appeal must provide a detailed justification, including all point-by-point
responses to the reviewer's and or Editor's comments. Expert advisory
recommendations on the manuscript may recommend acceptance, for further peer
review, or uphold the original rejection decision. A rejection decision at this
stage is final and cannot be reversed.
Once the manuscript gets
accepted, we will process it for a professional copy-editing team, English
editing, proofreading by the authors, final correction, pagination, and
publication on the journal website joooo.org
Print copy
The corresponding author will receive one print copy of the issue. In case the corresponding author or any other authors are looking for an additional hard copy, they can order from the editorial office at the Individual price of a single issue. The publisher and the society are not responsible for providing additional copies in case the original is lost.
Editorial Process and Peer-Review
Primary Scrutiny
All submitted manuscripts
received on the manuscript submission portal will be scrutinised by the
Editorial office to determine whether they are properly prepared and whether
they follow the editorial policies of the journal, taking care of human and
plant experimentation. The manuscript that is not suitable with the journal's
ethics policy or does not meet the standards of the journal will be rejected before
peer review. The manuscript that is not properly prepared will be returned to
the authors for revision and resubmission. Once these checks are done, the
Managing Editor will consult the journal, Editor-in-Chief, or Associate Editors
to identify whether the manuscript is suitable as per the scope of the journal
and whether it is scientifically acceptable. There is no judgment on the
potential impact of the work that will be made at this stage.
Peer-Review
When the submitted manuscript
completes primary scrutiny, the editorial office team assigns at least two
independent experts for peer review. In the case of regular submissions,
in-house assistant editors will invite experts, including recommendations by an
academic editor. Potential reviewers suggested by the authors may also be
considered. Reviewers should not have published with any of the co-authors
during the past three years and should not currently work or collaborate with
any of the institutions of the co-authors of the submitted manuscript.
All the submitted manuscripts,
reviews, and communications are managed by the Pre-Publication Portal of the
journal/peer-review system. The manuscript peer-review process receives at
least two reviews. The editorial office team will communicate the decision to
editors and inform the author.
All review comments should be
responded to via the pre-publication portal. When the author disagrees with a
reviewer, they must provide a clear response.
Peer-Review Duration
The Journal follows the ideal
average duration between the submission and publication of an article. The
first decision after submission will be taken within 1–5 days and will be communicated
to the authors. It generally takes 7–24 days for the peer-review process. Apart
from this, the publication time is 45–60 days after the submission of an
article by an author. It may vary on the basis of many factors, such as the
article type, the journal’s internal process, and the availability of peer
reviewers, along with authors, reviewers, and editorial staff communications.
Author Support
To support the Author in the
submission of articles, please visit the journal homepage. For detailed
instructions on the preparation of the submission of the manuscript, one may
please visit https://www.ipinnovative.com/contact-us. For contact details
for a query after acceptance of an article, visit www.mprp.in. You can check our
author FAQ at https://www.ipinnovative.com/content/FAQs/313 or write us
at support@ipinnovative.com
One can also visit for Training and Support.
Personal Assistance
In case one needs assistance with
the submission of their manuscript at our online submission portal, please
contact editorialoffice@ipinnovative.com.