Peer Nest | Submission Guidelines

Peer Nest Submission Guidelines

So you want to be a research writer? Welcome to the Peer Nest. We’re your publishing partners and will help amplify your research work to a large audience, creating greater impact.
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Look around for inspiration or content on specific research published in the journal.
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I’m an author looking to publish an article or a manuscript
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Visit here and go through some of our high quality content on scientific research. Well you’ve come to the right place! Let’s get you started.
(the bold part is like 2 tabs where he person can make a decision about what he wants to do while he’s on the site. If he just wants to browse he clicks on the first tab and the below text redirects him to the journal page where all articles can be viewed. If he choose the second tab ‘I’m an author…’ he can continue on to read the author guidelines)
The Peer Nest’s Submission Guidelines
A 6-step process to publishing superstardom!
STEP 1 STEP 2 STEP 3 STEP 4 STEP 5
Formatting Your Article Submitting Your Article The Peer Review Process Paying the Article Processing Fee You’re Published!
Formatting your article
First things first, get it all together! Prepare your article for submission by following the points set by this formatting guideline. This guideline is constantly reviewed and updated to uphold the international standards of publishing followed by the journal. So even if you’ve previously published articles on our journal, we request your to thoroughly go through this guideline. Once you’ve read the guideline, we highly recommend that you go through the journal and it’s published articles to familiarize yourself with the way we do things, the kind of content we publish, the community we work with and the work we’ve delivered.
Document type
Your manuscript must be submitted as a Microsoft Word Document or any parallel compatible format. Page formatting should be in letter size paper - 8.5x11 inches.
Fonts
Times New Roman in 10 font size, single-spaced with one inch margins, left justified, and single- column. These formatting rules follow the American Psychological Association (APA) guidelines.
Structure of the manuscript
Title page (should have title of the manuscript, author contact information, and a short description of each author in 100 words)
Title (should be concise and include important keywords)
Abstract (should be well written, include all keywords and key phrases and limited to 250 words)
Keywords (select a combination of 4-5 keywords that are not generic words, but specific to the field)
Introduction
Body of manuscript
Tables, figures, infographics, images, videos placed in a uniform formats
Conclusion
Acknowledgments (if any)
References (In the American Psychological Association format)
Appendices (if any)
Headings
Four levels of headings are allowed. The first level should be BOLD ALL CAPS, second level Bold, third level Italics, and fourth Underlined.
Tables & Figures
Use the Microsoft Word to create tables, not Excel or Google Spreadsheets. Tables and figures should be located in the text and numbered sequentially using Arabic numerals, i.e., Table 1 and Figure 1. Our journals are printed in black and white, so using different colors might misrepresent the data you’ve displayed on the figure
Abbreviations
The first use of the abbreviations should carry the proper full form and can then be used as an abbreviation through the document.
Footnotes
Bottom of the page footnotes are preferred to end of the manuscript endnote
References
References must be arranged numerical order
In print journal article citation:
One author:
Ruderforth A (2013) Exploring the Experiences of People Living with HIV in the United States: Modelling Muscle Ache/Pain and Medicaid Expansion, 10(2): 157-162. Pubmed link; Publisher link
Up to 3 authors’:
Ruderforth A, Ruderforth A, Ruderforth A (2013) Exploring the Experiences of People Living with HIV in the United States: Modelling Muscle Ache/Pain and Medicaid Expansion, 10(2): 157-162. Pubmed link; Publisher link
More than 3 authors’:
Ruderforth A, Ruderforth A, Ruderforth A, et al. (2013) Exploring the Experiences of People Living with HIV in the United States: Modelling Muscle Ache/Pain and Medicaid Expansion, 10(2): 157-162. Pubmed link; Publisher link
Online journal article citation:
Victor Mar, Roland Kane & Baltazar (2017) An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure: An Algorithm Using Non-Health Indicators to Predict Health Risks of an Individual, 35(8), 1561-1679. Pubmed link; Publisher link
Book citation:
Malfoy, Tom Chase & Rylin. (1998). Beyond Gender Binary in Survey Design.
Submitting your article
All are ready to submit your article? Let’s do it. Your article submission is a 1 step process:
  • Filling out the online submission form
Make sure to diligently fill in all fields of the form to ensure your article gathers maximum views and creates a resounding impact.

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