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Turkish Journal of Mathematics

i) Article Types

Turkish Journal of Mathematics accepts the following types of submissions matching its Aim & Scope.

Original research articles and review articles are welcome.

Research Articles: A research article reports the results of original research and assesses its contribution to the body of knowledge in a given area with the relevant data and findings in an orderly, logical manner. Research articles should be no longer than 30 pages, should have an abstract of 300 words at most, and should have no more than 10 figures and tables combined.

Review Articles: A review article is written to summarize the recent developments, improvements, discoveries, and ideas in various subjects. Review articles should present an unbiased summary of the current understanding of the topic.

Review articles should cover subjects that fall within the scope of the journal and are of active, current interest. Review articles should be no longer than 50 pages, should have an abstract of 300 words at most, should contain a limit of 120 references, and should have no more than 12 figures and tables combined. Principal sections should be numbered consecutively (1. Introduction, 2. Historical background, etc.), and subsections should be numbered 1.1., 1.2., etc. All reviews should contain an introduction section and a conclusion section, with relevant section headings in between. The introduction should explain the importance of the subject, the text should be comprehensive and detailed, and the references should be exhaustive. Review articles should be written with the support of original published studies of the author(s).

ii) ORCID

All authors are required to provide their ORCID iD during the submission process so that the process of evaluation and publishing of the manuscripts can continue in accordance with our publishing policy. If you do not have an ORCID iD, you can visit https://orcid.org/ to get your unique 16-digit ORCID iD number.

iii) Instructions for Authors/Submission Guidelines

You must proofread your manuscript before submission to check for spelling and grammatical errors. During submission, please choose the most suitable category (article type) for your paper. The manuscript should be in standard MS word document format only, and you will be guided stepwise through the creation and uploading of the various files.

Papers are accepted for evaluation on the understanding that

  • they have not been published,
  • they are not being considered for publication simultaneously elsewhere,
  • they are not going to be submitted for publication elsewhere.

After a manuscript has been submitted, it is not possible for authors to be added or removed or for the order of authors to be changed. If authors do so, their submission may be canceled (see Policies and Publishing Ethics Section for details).

All authors need to send their ORCID iDs so that the process of evaluation and publishing of the manuscripts can continue in accordance with our publishing policy. Authors can visit https://orcid.org/ to get a unique 16-digit ORCID iD number.

During the first check, journal administrators may return the articles for the following reasons:

  • The manuscript is not prepared in the format provided on the journal’s website,
  • The manuscript file is not the same as the manuscript template file given on the journal’s website,
  • The number of references or pages exceed the specified limits,
  • The authors did not perform the requested corrections or provide the necessary documents within the requested time,
  • Similarity index (iThenticate result) is higher than the permitted threshold. There is no single number for the similarity percentage since each report is investigated in detail, but submissions exceeding 25% score are generally returned to authors. The resubmission of the same title without reducing the similarity score may cause a ban of the authors from the journal. Similarity reports with more than 50% scores, even in a single submission, may cause a ban from the journal and the authors’ future submissions may not be considered for publication.

a) Preparation of the Manuscript

Manuscripts that are not prepared using the template will not be considered for publication.

Manuscripts must be prepared and submitted in LaTeX format.

All authors who report experiments on animals are required to give assurance in the “Materials and methods” section that the animals were treated in accordance with the guidelines of the local ethics committee; approval reference number should be included where relevant.

Manuscripts should be divided into clearly defined and numbered sections as appropriate. Principal sections should be numbered consecutively (1. Introduction, 2. Materials and methods, etc.) and subsections should be numbered 1.1., 1.2., etc. Do not number the Acknowledgments or References sections.

  • Title and contact information

The first page should contain the full title in sentence case (e.g., Polynomial root separation in terms of the Remak height), the full names (last names fully capitalized) and affiliations of all authors in English (Department, Faculty, University, City, Country), the ORCID iDs of all authors, and the contact e-mail address for the clearly identified corresponding author. Only one corresponding author is permitted per manuscript.

  • Abstract

The abstract should provide clear information about the research and the results obtained and should not exceed 300 words. It should not contain citations. Abstracts of review articles should be a brief overview of the main points from the review.

  • Key words

Please provide a minimum of 3 and maximum of 6 key words or phrases to enable retrieval and indexing. Only the first letter of the first key word should begin with a capital letter; the other key words should be written in lower case. Please do not put a period at the end of the list of key words. Acronyms should be avoided. Key words should not be a virtual copy of the title. Each manuscript should also be accompanied by classification numbers from the American Mathematical Society’s classification scheme.

  • Acknowledgments/disclaimers/conflict of interest, if any

Please include any necessary acknowledgments or disclaimers here. Names of funding organizations should be written in full.

All authors should also disclose any conflict of interest that may have influenced either the conduct or the presentation of the research.

  • Informed Consent

Manuscripts reporting the results of experimental investigations conducted with humans must clearly state that the study protocol received institutional review board approval and that all participants provided informed consent in the format required by the relevant authorities and/or boards. Please reference the relevant review board(s) and approval code(s) here.

  • Style and Format

Manuscripts that are not prepared using the template will not be considered for publication. Manuscripts must be prepared and submitted in LaTeX format.

Formulae should be numbered consecutively in parentheses.

In general, the journal follows the conventions of Scientific Style and Format, The CSE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers, Council of Science Editors, Reston, VA, USA (7th ed.).

The manuscripts should be divided into logically ordered and numbered sections. Principal sections should be numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals (1. Introduction, 2. Materials and methods, etc.) and subsections should be numbered 1.1., 1.2., etc. Do not number the Acknowledgments and References sections. 

Manuscripts should be double-spaced with 3-cm margins on all sides of the page, in Times New Roman font size 12. Every page of the manuscript, including the title page, references, tables, etc., should be numbered. All copies of the manuscript should also have line numbers starting with 1 on each consecutive page. Manuscripts must be written in English. Contributors who are not native English speakers are strongly advised to ensure that a colleague fluent in the English language or a professional language editor has reviewed their manuscript. Concise English without jargon should be used. Repetitive use of long sentences and passive voice should be avoided. It is strongly recommended that the text be run through computer spelling and grammar programs. Either British or American spelling is acceptable but must be consistent throughout.

  • Symbols, Units, and Abbreviations

Spaces must be inserted between numbers and units (e.g., 3 kg) and between numbers and mathematical symbols (+, –, ×, =, <, >), but not between numbers and percent symbols (e.g., 45%). Please use SI units. All abbreviations and acronyms should be defined at first mention. Any Latin terms such as et al., in vitro, or in situ should not be italicized.

  • Tables and Figures

All illustrations (photographs, drawings, graphs, etc.), not including tables, must be labeled “Figure.” Figures must be submitted both in the manuscript and as separate files.

All tables and figures must have a caption and/or legend and be numbered (e.g., Table 1, Figure 2), unless there is only one table or figure, in which case it should be labeled “Table” or “Figure” with no numbering. Captions must be written in sentence case (e.g., Macroscopic appearance of the samples.). The font used in the figures should be Times New Roman. All tables and figures, including subfigures, must be numbered consecutively as they are referred to in the text; e.g., Figures 2a, 2b, and 2c should be referred to in the text in that order before Figure 3. Please refer to tables and figures with capitalization and unabbreviated (e.g., “As shown in Figure 2…”, and not “Fig. 2” or “figure 2”).

The resolution of images should not be less than 118 pixels/cm when the width is set to 16 cm. Images must be scanned at 1200 dpi resolution and submitted in jpeg or tiff format. Graphs and diagrams must be drawn with a line weight between 0.5 and 1 point. Graphs and diagrams with a line weight of less than 0.5 point or more than 1 point are not accepted. Scanned or photocopied graphs and diagrams are not accepted.

Tables and figures, including caption, title, column heads, and footnotes, must not exceed 16 × 20 cm and should be no smaller than 8 cm in width. Please do not duplicate information that is already presented in the figures.

  • References

Do not include personal communications or unpublished data or materials (such as project final reports, websites, computer programs, poster papers, presentations, and manuscripts that are not published yet) as references. However, these materials may be inserted as a footnote in the main text. The footnotes for websites should be given in the format shown below:

ANSYS (2018). Structural Analysis Software [online]. Website https://www.ansys.com/products/structures [accessed 00 Month Year].

MathWorks Inc. (2018). MATLAB [online]. Website https://www.mathworks.com/products/matlab.html [accessed 00 Month Year].

References within the text

References must be listed in alphabetical order at the end of the article and numbered in square brackets. All authors should be included in reference lists unless there are 6 or more, in which case only the first 5 should be given, followed by et al. (not italicized). Within the manuscript, cite references by their given number in square brackets. Do not use individual sets of brackets for citation numbers that appear together, e.g., [2,6], not [2], [6]. Do not include personal communications, unpublished data, or other unpublished materials as references, although such material may be inserted as footnotes in the text. In the case of publications in languages other than English, the published English title should be provided if one exists, with an annotation such as “(in Turkish)”. If the publication was not published with an English title, cite the original title only; do not provide a self-translation. Please transliterate the titles of publications published in non-Latin alphabets. Please ensure that author names are given exactly as they were published; e.g., if the names of Turkish authors were originally published with Turkish characters, include the Turkish characters: Güneş et al. [2]. If the original publication did not use Turkish characters, do not include them in your citations: Gunes et al. [2].

Reference list

The reference list must not contain more than 120 and 60 references for review articles and research articles, respectively. References should be formatted as follows (please note the punctuation and capitalization): 

Journal articles: Journal titles should not be abbreviated; the whole name of the journal should be given Include the doi number at the end in the format Reference Linking:

As stated on https://www.crossref.org/display-guidelines/, when displaying DOIs, it’s important to follow these display guidelines. Crossref DOIs should:

  • always be displayed as a full URL link in the form https://doi.org/10.xxxx/xxxxx
  • not be preceded by doi: or DOI:
  • not use dx in the domain name part of DOI links
  • and we recommend HTTPS (rather than HTTP).

For more information, please click on https://www.crossref.org/documentation/reference-linking/how-do-i-create-reference-links/

To create your reference links, please visit: https://apps.crossref.org/SimpleTextQuery

Lee SD, Kim BH, Choi JH. Warped product spaces with Ricci conditions. Turkish Journal of Mathematics 2017; 41 (6): 1365-1375. https://doi.org/10.3906/mat-1606-49

More than 5 authors

Skriver H, Mattia F, Satalino G, Balenzano A, Pauwels VRN et al. Crop classification using short-revisit multitemporal SAR data. IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing 2011; 4 (2): 423-431. https://doi.org/10.1109/JSTARS.2011.2106198

Article not in English

In the case of publications in languages other than English, the published English title should be provided if one exists, with an annotation such as “(in Turkish)”. If the publication was not published with an English title, provide the original title only; do not provide a self-translation.

Altıntaş A. Tristör ve triyak harmoniklerinin 3 boyutlu gösterimi ve toplam harmonik bozunuma eğri uydurma. Pamukkale Üniversitesi Mühendislik Bilimleri Dergisi 2004; 10 (3): 415-421 (in Turkish).

Koçyiğit Y, Dilmaç S. Cardiac arrhythmia diagnosis using firefly algorithm. KSÜ Mühendislik Bilimleri Dergisi 2018; 21 (3): 226-234 (in Turkish with an abstract in English). https://doi.org/10.17780/ksujes.435734

Books and reports

Kelly S, Tolvanen JP. Domain-Specific Modeling: Enabling Full Code Generation. Hoboken, NJ, USA: Wiley-IEEE Computer Society Press, 2008.

Lui SH. Numerical Analysis of Partial Differential Equations. Hoboken, NJ, USA: Wiley, 2011.

Chapters in books

Nathanson MB. One, two, many: individuality and collectivity in mathematics. In: Pitici M, (editor). The Best Writing on Mathematics 2011. Princeton, NJ, USA: Princeton University Press, 2012, pp. 43-51.

Conference proceedings

Luszczek P, Dongarra J. Design of interactive environment for numerically intensive parallel linear algebra calculations. In: .Computational Science – 4th International Conference Proceedings; Krakow, Poland; 2004. pp. 270-277.

Theses

Bozkaya C. Boundary element method solution of initial and boundary value problems in fluid dynamics and magnetohydrodynamics. PhD, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey, 2008.

Conflicts of Interest

The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors’ definition of conflicts of interest is as follows: “A conflict of interest exists when professional judgment concerning a primary interest (such as patients’ welfare or the validity of research) may be influenced by a secondary interest (such as financial gain). Perceptions of conflict of interest are as important as actual conflicts of interest.”

A conflict of interest defines the situations that might raise the question of bias, direct or indirect, in the work reported. These situations occur when an individual’s objectivity is potentially compromised by a desire for financial gain, prominence, professional advancement, or a successful outcome. Conflicts can also arise for other reasons, such as personal relationships or rivalries, academic competition, and intellectual beliefs.

Authors should avoid entering into agreements with study sponsors, both for- profit and nonprofit, that interfere with authors’ access to all of the study’s data or that interfere with their ability to analyze and interpret. In order to preserve the reliability of the TUBITAK academic journals, authors are required to disclose all and any potential conflicts of interest when they submit their manuscripts.

Conflicts of interest are the most likely to undermine the credibility of the journal, the authors, and science itself. That is why our editors are working diligently to ensure that what is published in our journals is balanced, evidence-based, and evaluated independently. In this manner, editors and reviewers are required to notify the journal if they find they do not have the necessary expertise to assess the relevant aspects of a manuscript, if they decide that the manuscript is very similar to one in preparation or under consideration by another journal, or if they suspect the identity of the author(s), which raises potential competing or conflicting interests.

b) Manuscript Template