Section
Author's Guide | Reviewer'sGuide

ST Journal of Research
Authors' Guidelines

 

The Journal publishes original material; its contents are copyrighted by STMicroelectronics. It also publishes papers that have been previously copyrighted or already submitted to others for publication.

Read carefully this section or the guidelines contained in the authors'kit. Manuscripts non-compliant to general or technical guidelines will be automatically rejected.

A Microsoft Word template is available to prepare the manuscript according to the guidelines.

Download here the full authors' kit.

General Guidelines

  1. The title page of the manuscript should contain: the title of the paper, the names with initial(s) of the first name(s), e-mail address and affiliation of each author, and an abstract. Post addresses and company position of authors will not be published.

    E.g.: Robert White
    robert.white@st.com
    STMicroelectronics

    Daniel Green
    greend@ucla.edu
    University of California, Los Angeles

  2. The length of the whole paper should be 6000 words +/- 1000, thatis approximately 8-12 pages (depending on the formatting and the number of figures)

  3. Papers should contain an abstract. The abstract should be a concise statement (fewer than 200 words) of the purpose, methods, results and conclusions presented in the paper. It should contain the title"Abstract"

  4. The introduction should indicate the motivation, purpose, and scope of the manuscript, and how the work described differs from what has already been described in the technical literature. If the manuscriptis relatively long, inclusion of statements at the end of the introduction regarding manuscript organization can be helpful to the reader.

  5. The main body of the manuscript should provide the reader with a clear, accurate description of the work. The most important aspects of the work should be given the most emphasis; non-germane or superfluous text, tables and figures should be avoided. The development of the subject matter should be logical and free of gaps. The information and results presented should be adequate to support the conclusions drawn. Previous relevant work should be adequately referenced. Elucidation should be provided and/or references cited to enable the non-specialist reader to comprehend the specialized jargon or acronyms which are used.

  6. The manuscript should include a Conclusions section which "wrapsup" the presentation. Such a section is also an appropriate place for statement and/or restatement of the significance and limitations of the work which has been presented, and for suggestions regarding relevant areas which might be worth exploring.

  7. References to published papers or reports should consist of the name of each author, title of the paper, periodical name, volume,inclusive page numbers, and year of publication. It is preferred that authors' names appear exactly as they do on the referenced publication.

  8. Reference to items submitted to, but not yet accepted for publication in an identifiable and accessible archival journal, book, manual,or report at the time of scheduled publication of the manuscript in which the reference appears is not acceptable.

  9. References to reports or papers accepted for publication, but not yet in print should contain enough information to enable a reader to track them down, i.e., the name and volume number or year of the publication in which the paper/report is to be published.

  10. References to books should include the name of each author or editor (exactly as it appears in the referenced book), title, publisher's name and location, year of publication, and chapter or inclusive page numbers.

  11. The reference in text should be in brackets [1].

  12. Personal or private communications, if not handled entirely withinthe text, should be quoted in footnotes and mentioned in the References Section.

  13. Formulae and symbols must be written legibly. Such characters [e.g. 0 (numeral) and O (letter), 1 (numeral) and l (letter)] that are easily confused should be distinguished clearly.

  14. Equations and displayed formulae should be numbered consecutively.

  15. If the submitted paper has already been published, a permission from the copyright holder should accompany the submission. Please refer to the Copyright and Patents section.

Technical guidelines

File format and text

  1. Submit articles in any version of Microsoft Word (.doc) or Acrobat (.pdf). Acrobat files should be accompanied by the original source files. Latex files should come with all accompanying files: figures, style, bibliography and reference files.

  2. Text format: single or double column. For original papers, a Word template is available.

  3. Font: please use Adobe True Type fonts (preferred fonts are TimesNew Roman, Arial, Helvetica)

  4. Body text font size: 10 or 12 pt.

  5. Formulae font size: 10 pt.

Figures

  1. Figures should be referenced in the text with the wording Fig. followed by their number, use Figure #: in captions. Avoid to reference figures to as "the following figure" or "the previous figure".

  2. Indicate clearly the exact position of figures relative to the body text.

  3. All pictures and drawings must be provided in separate files and should respect the following criteria:

    a. Resolution: higher than 300 dpi.

    b. Image size: 10 x 8 cm (or multiple).

    c. Drawings: Acceptable formats are CorelDraw, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Powerpoint (.ppt) files.
    IMPORTANT: Drawings embedded in Winword documents ARE NOT acceptable, since they cannot be extracted from the file.

    d. Pictures, photos, diagrams should be saved as single .bmp, .gif,. tif, .jpeg, .psd, .ai, .cdr files.

    e. Figure files should be named consecutively (e.g., fig1.bmp, fig2.jpg, fig3.psd and so forth)

Copyright guidelines

The Journal publishes original material. It also publishes papers that have been previously copyrighted or already submitted to others forpublication.

The Journal publishes papers written by STMicroelectronics authors or invited papers.

All papers written by ST employees are copyrighted by STMicroelectronics.

Papers written only by non-ST authors are copyrighted by the authors' entities.

Papers written jointly by ST and external (= non- ST) employees are copyrighted following what stated in existing contracts between the involved entities. If there are no contracts, or dispositions on the specific subject of publications, papers will be copyrighted jointlyby all involved entities.

The submission form should be sent along with all papers.

Rules for papers written by non-ST authors

For articles written by third (=non-ST) parties or by ST and non-STauthors, the authorization to publish is required in writing via the copyright forms available for original and republished papers. Only non-ST authors should fill in and send in original copyright forms, to the address pre-printed in the text, following these simple rules:

  1. Original papers written by ST and non-ST authors: form copy_or_joint.doc

  2. Republications from papers written by ST and non-ST authors: form copy_rep_joint.doc

  3. Original articles written only by non-ST authors: form copy_or_nonst.doc

  4. Republications from articles written only by non-ST authors: form copy_rep_nonst.doc

REVIEW CONSIDERATIONS

Peer review is utilized in deciding whether to publish submitted manuscripts. Reviewer identities are not revealed to authors.

A typical set of statements for reviewer consideration follows.

Manuscripts prepared in accord with these considerations have a greaterlikelihood of eventual publication.

  1. The quality of the writing, from the standpoints of usage, grammar and spelling, is acceptable.

  2. The abstract is an accurate and concise representation of the purpose(s),method(s), result(s) and conclusions presented in the paper.

  3. The motivation and purpose of the paper are clearly developed.

  4. Antecedent work is appropriately reviewed and integrated.

  5. The originality and significance of the work is clearly stated.

  6. Methods employed are clearly and completely described. Claims are backed by detailed experimental results.

  7. Data and results are completely and objectively presented, i.e., sufficient for interpretation by the reader.

  8. Tables and/or figures and their captions are clear and relevant.

  9. Significant results are appropriately emphasized.

  10. Limitations of the results are shown.

  11. Discussion of the results clearly relates to the problem, as stated earlier in the paper.

  12. Conclusions drawn are justified by discussion of presented results

  13. Directions for future study of the problem(s), if appropriate, are discussed.

Finally, reading the Reviewers’ Guidelines is recommended to understand what reviewers will be looking for in a paper.