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Chemical compounds

           Arts & Communication requires authors to fulfill the requirements below while reporting and/or describing a chemical compound in articles:
            Scenario                           Requirements
            Naming chemical compounds          Use either IUPAC conventions or common names such as cholesterol and
                                               cephalosporins
            Reporting a new chemical compound   Provide the exact structure of the compound as well as sufficient data regarding the
                                               purity and identity of the compound
            Reporting the use of a known chemical   Provide sufficient data regarding the source, purity and identity of the compound
            compound



           Figures
           Include  all  figures,  including  photographs,  scanned  images,  graphs,  charts  and  schematic  diagrams,  at  the  back  of  manuscript.  Avoid
           unnecessary decorative effects (e.g., 3D graphs) and minimize image processing (e.g., changes in brightness and contrast applied uniformly
           for the entire figure should be avoided or minimized). All images should be set against white background.
           All figures should be numbered (e.g., Figure 1, Figure 2) in boldface. Label all figures (e.g., axis, structures), and add caption (a brief title) and
           legend as a description of the illustration below each figure. Explain all symbols and abbreviations used. Each figure should have a brief title
           (also known as caption) that describes the entire figure without citing specific panels, followed by a legend, which is either the description of
           each panel or further description about the single image. Identify each panel with uppercase letters in parenthesis (e.g. (A), (B), (C), etc.)
           Figures must be cited in chronological manner in the text.
           The preferred file formats for any separately submitted figure(s) are JPEG, PNG and TIFF. All figures should be of optimal resolution. Optimal
           resolutions preferred are 300 dots per inch (dpi) for RBG colored, 600 dpi for grayscale and 1,200 dpi for line art. Although there is no file-size
           limitation imposed, authors are highly encouraged to compress their figures to an ideal size without unduly affecting the legibility and resolution
           of figures.
           If necessary, the editors may request author(s) to supply high-resolution and/or unprocessed images after submission or paper acceptance for
           pre-screening/review and production purposes, respectively.


           Tables
           Include all tables at the back of manuscript. Editable tables created using Microsoft Word are preferred. A table should be accompanied by a
           caption on top of it. Captions and legends (which are placed beneath table) should be concise. All tables should be numbered (e.g., Table
           1, Table 2) in boldface. Explain all symbols and abbreviations used. Tables must be cited in chronological manner in the text.


           Lists and math formulae
           Lists and math formulae should be properly aligned and included within the main body of the manuscript. List them using Roman numerals in
           parenthesis (e.g. (I), (II), (III), (IV), etc.) Lists and math formulae must be cited in chronological manner in the text.

           Lists and math formulae should be given in editable text and not as images. Use the solidus (/) for small fractional terms, e.g., X/Y. In principle,
           variables should be italicized.

           In-text citations

           Reference citations in the text should be numbered consecutively in superscript square brackets. Some examples:
              •   Negotiation research spans many disciplines [3,4] .

              •   This result was later contradicted by Becker and Seligman .
                                                           [5]
              •   This effect has been widely studied [1–3,7] .

           Do not include citations in the Abstract.
           Personal communications and unpublished works can only be used in the manuscript and are not to be placed in the References section.
           Authors  are  advised  to  limit  such  usage  to  the  minimum.  These  should  be  made  identifiable  by  stating  the  authors,  year  of  personal
           communications  or  unpublished  works,  and  the  words  “personal  communication”  or  “unpublished”  in  parenthesis,  e.g.,  (Smith  J,  2000,
           unpublished).
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