Article 5 (Composing manuscripts)
1. Korean and English may be used in the papers; papers written in Korean should include the abstract and the names of authors in English.
2. The length of the papers at the final printing should be within 8 pages including figures, graphs, etc. and additional submission payments will incur in the case of exceeding pages or special production as defined in Article 7.
3. When submitting manuscripts, the basic format of papers should be in files produced with Hangul 97 or MS Word 2000 and above. Manuscripts for revision will be composed on A4 papers using font size 10 and font type Times New Roman, double spaced, with 3cm margins on the top, bottom, right, and left.
The papers will be composed in the following order:
A. Title
B. Author(s)
C. Abstract and keywords
D. Body
E. Acknowledgements (if necessary)
F. References
G. Legend (if necessary)
H. Appendix (if necessary)
5. Title
The first letter of the sentence will be capitalized for English titles. If the whole paper is written in Korean, the title of the paper will be written in Korean first, below which the title in English will be placed. The font size of the title on top should be 14, while that of the title below should be 13. Both should be center-aligned.
Eg. 1) Example of a title
해수면 상승 영향으로 인한 경제 피해 비용 분석
(14, 견고딕, 가운데 정렬)
Economic Damage Cost Analysis of Sea Level Rise Impact
(13, Times, Bold, Center Align)
6. Author(s)
Author’s surname should be written before his or her given name in English. Each author’s name, title and institution should be indicated in English as well. Contact information including an e-mail address, working address (including postal code), and working phone number should be added as a footnote for the corresponding author. Each other's ORCID (Open Research and Contributor ID) should be included in the first page of the paper. An ORCID can be obtained through the ORCID webpage at https://orcid.org/. If the whole paper is written in Korean, above information written in Korean should be followed by that in English.
Eg. 2) Example of authors
홍길동*†.김유신**.강감찬***
OO대학교 OO학과 부교수*, OO대학교 OO학과 박사후 연구원**, OO대학교 OO대학
석사과정학생***
Hong, Gil Dong*†, Kim, Yoo Shin** and Kang, Gam Chan***
*Associate Professor, Dept. of OOOOO, OO Univ., Seoul, Korea
**Postdoctoral Fellow, Dept. of OOOOO, OO Univ., OOO, Korea
***Master Student, Dept. of OOOOO, OO Univ., OOO, Korea
†Corresponding author:OOOO@OOOO.ac.kr, (contact information)
홍길동 0000-0000-0000-0000
김유신 0000-0000-0000-0000
강감찬 0000-0000-0000-0000
7. Abstract and keywords
English abstract should be about 200~250 words and will be placed before the body. The abstract should reveal the main content of the paper in a specific manner, and should be understandable even if separated from the body. Key words should be placed below the English abstract.
Eg. 3) Example of an English abstract
Abstract
The present works analyze … (Times, 9pt)
Key words : Climate Change, Sea Level Rise, Economic Damage ……. (Times, Italic, 9pt)
8. Body
Papers written in either Korean or English will be composed in the following order: abstract, keywords, introduction, material and methods, results, discussion, conclusion, (acknowledgements), references. Tables and figures should be included in the body if possible.
The body will be composed at the authors’ discretion, but should maintain consistency. However, the paragraph numbers will be organized in the following manner for chapters, topics, and subtopics. Times New Roman with font size 10 will be used.
Eg. 4) Example of subtitles
1. Introduction (12, Gothic, Bold)
2. Current state of climate change
2.1. Current state of rising sea levels(10, Gothic Medium, Bold)
2.1.1. Current state of seas around Korea (10, Gothic Medium)
3. Method for calculating economic damages
4. Conclusion and discussion
Acknowledgements (12, Gothic, Bold)
References (12, Gothic, Bold)
9. Figures and tables
Figures and tables will all be presented in English. Captions for figures will be centered below the figure, and the captions for tables will be placed on the top-left corner. If it is necessary to place two or more figures and tables in the same place, or if comparison in necessary, (a), (b) etc. must be used.
Eg. 5) Example of figures and tables
10. Formula
Formulas should be organized into lines and the number for each formula will be marked as (1), (2), (3), etc. To mark many formulas at the same time, use (1a), (1b), (1c), etc.
11. Citation
A. When referring to figures and tables inside the body, mark them as Fig. 1., Fig. 2., Table 1(a)., Table 2., etc. Mark formulas in the same manner. However, if two figures are being compared at the same time, mark them as “Fig. 1(a). and Fig. 2(c).,” place “and” in between
B. Citing references
(Eg.) For 1 author : Hong (1990)
For 2 authors : Hong and Lee (1959)
For 3 auhors and above : Hong et al. (1982),
12. Units
SI units will be used.
13. Acknowledgements
If necessary, authors may express their acknowledgements regarding advice given, data provided, research funds granted, or other matters.
14. References
A. When citing references from the body inside parentheses, place a comma between the author name and the year of publication. When there are two or more consecutive cited references, write them in the order of time and separate using semicolons.(Eg.) (Hopke, 1990; Lin et al., 1989)
B. References should be written in English regardless of the language of the manuscript. If the reference is a Korean paper with an English abstract, write “in Korean with English abstract” within parentheses next to the name of the citation. The author’s name is followed by the year, title, journal name, volume (issue) number, pages, and DOI for academic journals. The author’s name is followed by the year, title, publisher, country of publication, and pages for books. As shown in Example 6, all authors’ names (or editors’ names) should be written regardless of the number of the author (or editor).
C. The reference format follows the style of “Coucil of Science Editors–CSE 8th, Name–Year Sequence”, which is available in many reference software such as EndNote, Mendeley, and RefWorks, etc.
Eg. 6) Example of references
· Journal article
1) Gamelin FX, Baquet G, Berthoin S, Thevenet D, Nourry C, Nottin S, Bosquet L. 2009. Effect of high intensity intermittent training on heart rate variability in prepubescent children. Eur J Appl Physiol 105: 731-738. doi: 10.1007/s00421-008-0955-8
· Online Journal Article
1) Slifka MK, Whitton JL. 2000. Clinical implications of dysregulated cytokine production. J Mol Med. doi: 10.1007/s001090000086
· Newspaper Article
1) Shin HH. 2017 Jun 25. Korea reeling from climate change. The Korea Herald.
· Book
1) South J, Blass B. 2001. The future of modern genomics. London: Blackwell
· Book chapter
1) Brown B, Aaron M. 2001. The politics of nature. In: Smith J (ed) The rise of modern genomics, 3rd edn. Wiley, New York, pp 230-257.
· Website
1) Air Korea. 2018. What’s CAI; [accessed 2018 Aug 3]. http://www.airkorea.or.kr/eng/cai/cai1
· Conference Paper
1) Palmer RN. 2018. Translating climate science into adaptation: Examples from the US northeast climate adaptation science center. Proceedings of 2018 KSCC International Conference; 2018 Jun 18~Jun 20; ICC JEJU. Jeju, Korea: The Korean Society of Climate Change Research. p. 82-84
· Technical Report
1) Myeong SJ. 2017. Green space accessibility analysis in terms of environmental justice. Seoul, Korea: Korea Environmental Institute. Policy Report 2017-15.
· Dissertation
1) Trent JW. 1975. Experimental acute renal failure. [Dissertation]. University of California
15. Nomenclature
If the author thinks that there has been an excessive use of symbols and that there is a need for a separate organization of symbols, he or she may do so.
16. Appendix
If the author thinks that there are details that are not important enough to be mentioned in the body but that will help readers to understand, he or she may add them in the appendix.