Authors are requested to consider the following points before submitting a manuscript.

  • Should read & follow the author guidelines narrated on the website.
  • The Manuscript should be written in English without grammatical mistakes.
  • Authors and Co-authors should take the responsibility for the scientific content and legal aspects of the manuscript.
  • Submitted manuscript should not be published anywhere either in print or electronic, and not under consideration by any other publisher.

Types of Manuscripts
Manuscript Structure
Article Processing Charges
Copyright

Types of Manuscripts

Research Article: A research article reports the results of the original research, evaluates its contribution to the body of knowledge in a given field of science and technology; with the framework of an abstract, introduction, materials & methods, results, discussion and references.

Review Article: A review article surveys and summarizes previously published studies, instead of reporting new facts or analysis. Review article can be any one of these literature, systematic, and meta-analyses. A comprehensive review usually takes 100 or more articles for reference.

Case Report: A formal summary of a unique patient and his or her illness, including the presenting signs and symptoms, diagnostic studies, treatment course, and outcome. Case report includes an abstract, introduction, case, discussion, conclusion, patient consent and references.

Mini Review Article: A mini-review details the summary of an individual researcher work with a statement of the main theory of a study, supporting arguments and essential points.

Rapid/Short Communication: A Rapid Communication or Short Communication that publishes swiftly and usually shorter than an original research article. Scientists use this format when they have findings that need to be shared immediately with the academic community.

Perspective: Perspective articles are scholarly reviews of fundamental concepts or prevalent ideas in a field. These are usually essays that presents a personal point of view critiquing widespread notions pertaining to a field. A perspective article can be a review of a single concept or a few related concepts.

Commentary: Commentaries are short articles that draw attention to or present criticism of a previously published article, explaining why it interested them and how it might be illuminating for readers.

Opinion: Highlights the author personal thoughts, beliefs, or feelings.

Editorial: An editorial can raise awareness of an issue while also influencing other people’s opinions on that topic.

Letter to the Editor: Letter to the Editor intends to promote further discussion of previously published work and to offer feedback and support to emerging authors.

Conference proceeding: A collection of academic papers can publish in the context of an academic conference or workshop, which contain the contributions made by researchers.

The manuscript should ideally be formatted in Word i.e. Microsoft word (DOC, DOCX).

Manuscript Structure

Title/Heading
Manuscript title limit should not exceed 30 words. It should not contain abbreviations and the title should be a brief phrase which describes the contents present in the article.

Names of Authors with Affiliation
Full Name, Department/Institution/University, City, Country should be drafted with the article.

Correspondence Author
Full Name, Department/Institution/University, City, State, Country, Telephone, Fax and Email.

Abstract
Should be relevant, self explanatory, exhaustive and brief in nature connected to the total subject matter and give a conception as a summary to the detailed script depict by the author while getting the experiment findings in a comprehensive manner. It should also relate to significant outcome and further scope to continue in the field.

Keywords
In alphabetical order, separated by semicolons and exhibit catchy nature with respect to the subject.

Main Text includes the following

Introduction: States the reason for the research: identifies and discusses findings of others, includes a review of the literature.

Materials and Methods: Describes the research population or study sample, describes the method used to gather information or data collection and describes the means used for measuring or measures.

Results: Encapsulates the results and present findings using text, figures, tables, charts, graphs and equations.

Discussion: Analyzes findings, explains the significance of the research, and suggests future projects.

Acknowledgement: Includes proclamation of individuals, grant details, funds, and conflict of interest.

Conflict of Interest Statement: Authors must disclose any financial, professional, institutional, or personal relationships that could be perceived as influencing the research, interpretation of data, or publication of the manuscript. All potential conflicts of interest should be clearly stated in this section to ensure transparency and maintain the integrity of the publication process. If no conflicts of interest exist, authors should include the statement:

Conclusion: Should reflect the most relevant aspects of the results obtained with the study presented.

References: An alphabetical listing of works that were cited and used to support the research.

The above mentioned structure mainly relatable to the original research article, the authors can arrange the text of manuscript accordingly to their work, i.e. a review, case report, mini-review, rapid/short communication, perspective, commentary, editorial, letter to the editor and proceeding.

Figures and Tables

In preparing the manuscript, an author may have information that can present more efficiently in a figure or table. Figures tend to summarize information visually, whereas tables allow space for more detail. Figures, tables, and legends should be placed close to the relevant content of the text. In addition, figures and tables should number in the order of their appearance in the text. All Figures must be clearly visible and should be submitted in JPEG, TIFF and EPS format.

Figure Legend: Usually, the first sentence or phrase contains text explaining a figure and to be placed below the figure.

Example: Figure 1. Flowchart of patient selection.
If a figure have multiple parts, or panels. The usual approach to label each of these with a letter: A, B, C, etc.

Example: Figure 2. The effects of risolol before and after animals were fed. (A) Risolol effects before feeding. Animals showed no changes in heart rate. (B) Risolol effects after feeding. Heart rate went up 10-fold, on average.

Table Legend: Usually, they consist only of a single phrase or sentence and to be placed above the table.

Example: Table 1. Patient characteristics.
If any need to provide more detail about what a table shows, can use a table footnote, which usually appears after the table. In the footnote, the author can define terms that abbreviated in the table, indicate the meaning of any superscript symbols used, and any other notes that help the reader understand what the table shows. These notes could include information about comparisons with different numbers of participants, or a methodological difference between comparisons in the table.

References

Authors may use:

  • Vancouver Style (Preferred)
  • APA Style
  • Harvard Style

DOI numbers should be included wherever available.

Author Corrections

Authors’ suggestions, before or after the publishing process, are acceptable and ensure that the corrections are clearly legible.

Article Processing Charges

All articles published by Uniscience are open access and freely available online, immediately upon publication. Authors are charged with an APC to cover publishing costs includes maintenance of the infrastructure, peer review, copyediting, typesetting, production, hosting, abstracting and indexing services. The APC, only payable when the article got accepted editorially and before publication.

The Article Processing Charges (APC) for each article $1059.

Authors based in low- and middle-income countries may benefit from a discount or waiver, must submit a request when submitting their articles. For any queries or discussions regarding APC, please contact us at: contact@unisciencepub.com.

Plagiarism Policy

The journal maintains a strict policy against plagiarism.

  • Similarity Index should generally not exceed 15–20%
  • Direct plagiarism, duplicate publication, and data fabrication are unacceptable
  • Manuscripts found to contain unethical content may be rejected immediately

Authors retain copyright for all articles they publish in Uniscience Journals under an open access, stating that anyone may read, download, copy, distribute, remix, transmit and adapt the work as long as the original published version is cited. This ensures maximum use and exposure to the authors work with appropriate credit.