Conservation, Information, Evolution CIE Template Conservation, Information, Evolution: Authors’ Instructions for Paper preparation Tomas Bergman1,1, Anna White1, Kim Joung1 1 Kaposvár University, 40, Guba S. 7400 Kaposvár, Hungary Abstract. The abstract should summarize the contents of the paper and should contain at least 100 and at most 200 words. It should be set in 9-point font size and should be inset 1.0 cm from the right and left margins. There should be two blank (10-point) lines before and after the abstract. This document is in the required format. Keywords: maximum 5 keywords 1 Heading1 This instruction file may be used as a template. The structure of the paper must be: • Title – bold, center adjusted • Authors – regular, center adjusted • Institutions and Addresses of authors • Abstract – approximately 100-200 words • Keywords - 5 maximum • Introduction • Further sections as in the first draft and accepted by the Editor • Conclusion • Acknowledgements • References 1.1 Heading2 This instruction file for Word users may be used as a template. 2 Heading1 Use 10-point type for the name(s) of the author(s) and 9-point type for the address(es) and the abstract. For the main text, please use 10-point type and single-line spacing. We recommend the use Times. Italic type may be used to emphasize words in running text. Bold type and underlining should be avoided. 1 e-mail address of the corresponding author 1 ISSN: XXXX-XXXX. Conservation, Information, Evolution CIE Template 2.1 Figures Figures should be numbered, positioned under the figures and center adjusted. Colored pictures are also welcome. 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 -2 Xi, nd -4 A1 -6 A2 A3 -8 -10 -12 Time, min Fig. 1. Title of the figure 2.2 Formulas Preferable, equations should be written in Microsoft Equation Editor and it should normally be placed on separate lines from the text. Equations should be numbered sequentially, the number appearing to the right of the equation and in round parentheses (). Mt St Ct (1) 2.3 Tables Tables should be placed close to where they are referenced in the text. A table number and title should be placed above each table. Table 1. Font sizes of headings. Table captions should always be positioned above the tables. 2 Heading level Title (centered) Example 1st-level heading 2nd-level heading 3rd-level heading 4th-level heading 1 Introduction ConsInfEv … 2.1 Printing Area Headings. Text follows … Remark. Text follows … Font size and style 14 point, bold 12 point, bold 10 point, bold 10 point, bold 10 point, italic ISSN: XXXX-XXXX. Conservation, Information, Evolution CIE Template 2.4 Citations Citations should be indicated by author and publication year –one author (Smith, 2000); two authors (Smith & Jones, 2000); more than two authors (Smith et al, 2000). 2.5 Page Numbering and Running Heads There is no need to include page numbers. If your paper title is too long to serve as a running head, it will be shortened. Your suggestion as to how to shorten it would be most welcome. Acknowledgments. The heading should be treated as a 3rd level heading and should not be assigned a number. 3 References Section Literature quoted in the text should be indicated by author and publication year –one author (Smith, 2000); two authors (Smith & Jones, 2000); more than two authors (Smith et al, 2000). References must be listed in alphabetical order of 1st author. Names of all authors must be included. The reference must contain – author(s) name(s), year, title (sentence case), journal name in full (or ‘In: proceedings of….’ or book publisher), volume number, issue, page range. Non-English titles should be followed by English translation of the title in parentheses. Proceedings (or collected works) editors should be named. References Foster, I., Kesselman, C. 1999. The Grid: Blueprint for a New Computing Infrastructure. Morgan Kaufmann, San Francisco Foster, I., Kesselman, C., Nick, J., Tuecke, S. 2002. The Physiology of the Grid: an Open Grid Services Architecture for Distributed Systems Integration. Technical report, Global Grid Forum Kim, H. M., M. S. Fox, M. Gruniger. 1995. An Ontology of Quality for Enterprise Modeling. IEEE Proceedings of WETICE, 105-116. Los Albamitos, CA, USA. National Center for Biotechnology Information, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Wolfert, J., C. N. Verdouw, C. M. Verloop, A. J. M. Beulens. 2010. Organizing information integration in agri-food – A method based on a service-oriented architecture and living lab approach. Computers and Electronics in Agriculture, 70(2): 389-405. 3 ISSN: XXXX-XXXX.