Author’s Rights:
1. They are required to publish a copy of their submitted paper on their own website, an institutional repository, or the authorized archive of their funding organization.
2. They are required to publish a copy of their accepted paper on their own website, an institutional repository, or the archive chosen by their funding organization. Authors who archive or self-archive approved papers are required to provide a URL in their submission that leads to the website of the Journal.
3. Individual authors, as well as any academic institution in which they are employed at the time, are permitted to replicate their material for the purpose of teaching it in a class setting.
4. It is permissible for authors to reuse their material in whole or in part in other works that they have generated for non-commercial reasons, provided that the initial publication in our journal is recognized via a remark or reference.
Author’s Responsibilities
1. It is the responsibility of the authors to provide a comprehensive report of the observations made and the data gathered if they are to fulfill their commitment to offer an accurate account of the study that was carried out.
2. In order for readers to be able to assess the article in an impartial manner, authors are required to establish a connection between their own work and the work of others, explicitly attributing any and all assertions, equations, figures, and tables that are drawn from the work of others to their original source, and providing citations that are both comprehensive and correct.
3. It is important for authors to provide a description of the safeguards that are utilized in order to demonstrate compliance with both formal and informal standards of ethical conduct in research. These safeguards include the approval of a research protocol by an institutional committee, the acquisition of informed consent, the adherence to codes of ethical conduct for the treatment of human or animal subjects, and the maintenance of confidentiality of personal data on patients, among other things.
4. It is the responsibility of the authors to guarantee that the articles that are approved for publication do not include any kind of bias, particularly with gender and racial stereotypes.
5. Authors should avoid providing reports that are of little importance or separating the outcomes of their study into many articles. Because of this technique, not only does it increase the amount of work that editors and referees have to do, but it also compels readers to look for many journals rather than just getting one.
6. It is the responsibility of the corresponding author to provide evidence that all of the co-authors have read and approved the article in its current form. When the Editor is dealing with papers that have more than one author, they make the assumption that the author who corresponds to the document is allowed to react on behalf of the collaboration.
7. Before submitting their work to Our journals, authors are responsible for receiving any consent or clearance of the publication from their respective institutions or companies, whether it be official or informal.
8. The authors are required to provide citations to personal communication and unpublished data in order to identify the sources of any and all information and material that was collected in a private setting.
9. When a piece of writing includes content (tables, figures, charts, etc.) that is protected by copyright, it is the responsibility of the author to get explicit permission from the person who has the copyright, which is typically the publisher. Prior to the final approval of the article, the Editorial Office must get letters of authorization from the author.
10. It is the responsibility of the authors to disclose any information that may alter the decision on whether or not the article will be accepted. Indicating if the work has been presented in any manner before (conference proceedings, abstract publishing, etc.) and presenting a list of comparable manuscripts that the author has in press or that are being considered by another journal are both included in this information. Without the awareness that the work has previously been submitted to, accepted by, or published in another journal, the manuscript will only be considered for publishing if it meets the aforementioned conditions.