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Lastname F., Lastname F., Lastname F.: Title of the Submitted Paper AUTHOR 1, Academic Title 1 E-mail: AUTHOR 2, Academic Title 2 E-mail: AUTOR 3, Academic Title 3 E-mail: 1 Affiliation 1 Address 1 2 Affiliation 2 Affiliation Address 2 3 Affiliation 3 Affiliation Address 3 TITLE OF THE SUBMITTED PAPER ABSTRACT Abstract is a concise preview of the entire paper. It shall provide the reader with brief information on the purpose and objective of research, new findings, methodology, achieved results and conclusions. No figure numbers, table numbers, references or displayed mathematical expressions should be included. Do not use nonstandard abbreviations, symbols or special characters. The abstract shall contain up to 200 words. KEY WORDS (max 6 keywords) keyword 1; keyword 2; keyword 3; keyword 4; keyword 5; keyword 6 1. INTRODUCTION This template, modified in MS Word, provides authors with most of the formatting specifications needed for preparing electronic versions of their papers. The template is used to format the paper and style the text. Margins, column widths, line spacing, and type styles are built-in. The pull-down style menu is at the left of the Formatting Toolbar at the top of your Word window (for example, the style at this point in the document is “Text-ZIRP”). To apply the style from the menu, do the following: type over sections of the template or cut and paste from another document. Highlight a section that you want to designate with a certain style and then select the appropriate name on the style menu. The style will adjust your fonts and line spacing. Do not change the font sizes or line spacing to squeeze more text into a limited number of pages. Use italics rather than bold for emphasis; do not underline. 2. PREPARATION OF THE PAPER 1

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Page 1: unizg.hr€¦ · Web viewThe abstract shall contain up to 200 words with no formulae nor bibliography. Key words shall provide the reader with an at-a-glance identification of the

Lastname F., Lastname F., Lastname F.: Title of the Submitted Paper

AUTHOR 1, Academic Title1

E-mail: AUTHOR 2, Academic Title2

E-mail:AUTOR 3, Academic Title3

E-mail:1 Affiliation 1Address 12 Affiliation 2Affiliation Address 23 Affiliation 3Affiliation Address 3

TITLE OF THE SUBMITTED PAPER

ABSTRACTAbstract is a concise preview of the entire paper. It shall provide the reader with brief information

on the purpose and objective of research, new findings, methodology, achieved results and conclusions. No figure numbers, table numbers, references or displayed mathematical expressions should be included. Do not use nonstandard abbreviations, symbols or special characters . The abstract shall contain up to 200 words.

KEY WORDS (max 6 keywords)keyword 1; keyword 2; keyword 3; keyword 4; keyword 5; keyword 6

1. INTRODUCTIONThis template, modified in MS Word, provides authors with most of the formatting specifications

needed for preparing electronic versions of their papers. The template is used to format the paper and style the text. Margins, column widths, line spacing, and type styles are built-in. The pull-down style menu is at the left of the Formatting Toolbar at the top of your Word window (for example, the style at this point in the document is “Text-ZIRP”).

To apply the style from the menu, do the following: type over sections of the template or cut and paste from another document. Highlight a section that you want to designate with a certain style and then select the appropriate name on the style menu. The style will adjust your fonts and line spacing. Do not change the font sizes or line spacing to squeeze more text into a limited number of pages. Use italics rather than bold for emphasis; do not underline.

2. PREPARATION OF THE PAPERThe paper shall be written in English. The authors information (name, academic degree – e.g.

B.Sc./M.Sc./Ph.D., affiliation and address), the title, abstract and key words shall be also sent in their native tongue (or the first author’s native tongue). Text shall be grammatically correct, free of spelling mistakes, written using WordOffice text processing program. Scope (including figures and drawings) shall be limited to 12 pages. Pages have to be numbered.

A note to the authors who are not native English speakers: there is no full stop following the years; thousands, millions, etc. are divided by a comma – 2,340,532; milliards are designated as bn (billion); decimal numbers are written with a full stop (point) – 1.45

1

Page 2: unizg.hr€¦ · Web viewThe abstract shall contain up to 200 words with no formulae nor bibliography. Key words shall provide the reader with an at-a-glance identification of the

Lastname F., Lastname F., Lastname F.: Title of the Submitted Paper

2.1 Title, abstract, key wordsTitle shall describe accurately, clearly and concisely, in as few words as possible (max 18 words),

the content of the paper. It shall be understandable for subsequent processing of the paper in indices and abstracts, where the title is the basis for the classification into the scientific areas and fields. Do not use abbreviations unless they are unavoidable. Only abbreviations firmly established in the field may be eligible.

Abstract is a concise preview of the entire paper. It shall provide the reader with brief information on the purpose and objective of research, new findings, methodology, achieved results and conclusions. The abstract shall contain up to 200 words with no formulae nor bibliography.

Key words shall provide the reader with an at-a-glance identification of the purpose and object of research. Provide a maximum of 6 key words, avoiding general and plural terms and multiple concepts (avoid, for example, “and”, “of”). Key words shall be separated by a semicolon (;) and shall not contain abbreviations.

2.2 Content sectionsFor the sake of concision, the paper shall be divided into numbered sections beginning with an

introduction and ending with a conclusion. A section may contain subsections but only up to second level.

Introduction shall contain the information on the topic (ideas), procedures and achieved results of the object of research and the reader does not necessarily have to have previous knowledge of the field of research. The purpose and objective of research have to be clearly described providing also an evaluation of the past research;

Basic hypothesis proven in the paper i.e. research of the author(s), shall be logically developed with consistent progression.

Research results and presentation of methods refer only to those that are the main ones and representative ones that contain author's conclusions regarding the object of research.

Discussion shall speak about the significance and meaning of the research results. By explaining the research results, the basic hypotheses can be formulated. The purpose of the discussion is to present the relations between the observed (identified) results and the facts.

Conclusion shall contain clearly claimed statements of the author(s) and possible open issues as well as recommendations for further research.

Sections Acknowledgements (optional) and References shall not be numbered.

2.3 Abbreviations and AcronymsExplain abbreviations and acronyms at first mentioning in the text, even after they have been

defined in the abstract. Key words shall not contain abbreviations. Do not use abbreviations in the title or heads unless they are unavoidable. Only abbreviations firmly established in the field may be eligible.

2.4 EquationsFormulae and equations shall be preferably written in one line with adequate numbering on the

right of the line in parentheses – (1). The equations must be clear, compact and free of any ambiguity. For all the used physical values their names shall be indicated (possibly also the measuring units), and less known physical values shall be also explained in terms. The indices, sub- and super-scripts, shall be written in a clear manner. Superscripts need to be avoided so as prevent confusing them with numerical exponents.

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Page 3: unizg.hr€¦ · Web viewThe abstract shall contain up to 200 words with no formulae nor bibliography. Key words shall provide the reader with an at-a-glance identification of the

Lastname F., Lastname F., Lastname F.: Title of the Submitted Paper

The application of SI (International System of Units of Measurement) is obligatory, with or without the adequate prefix. The legally approved old measuring units, not coherent with SI can be indicated in brackets along with the SI units.

3. USING TEMPLATEThe paper shall be formatted using this template and the referencing styles from the scroll down

window (Styles) at the left of the Formatting Toolbar. All Sections of the paper should be formatted accordingly:

Header – “Header-ZIRP” style Title of the paper – “Title-ZIRP” style Authors names – “Authors-ZIRP” style Information on authors – “Auth-Info-ZIRP” style The Abstract title – “Abs-Title-ZIRP” style The Abstract text – “Abs-Text-ZIRP” style The Keywords title – “KW-Title-ZIRP” style Keywords – “KW-Text-ZIRP” style The first-level heading – “Head1-ZIRP” style The second-level heading – “Head2-ZIRP” style The third-level heading (only if necessary) – “Head3-ZIRP” style Body text – “Text-ZIRP” style Figure caption – “Fig-Caption-ZIRP” style Source of the figure – “Fig-Source-ZIRP” style Title of the table – “Tab-Title-ZIRP” style Source of the table – “Tab-Source-ZIRP” style Text in the table – “Tab-Text-ZIRP” style Titles Acknowledgements and References – “Ack-Ref-ZIRP” style References – “References-ZIRP” style Lists – “List-ZIRP” style

3.1 Authors and AffiliationsAuthors shall provide their full first name and family name. For the middle name an initial is

sufficient. Along with the name author should provide her/his academic degree (e.g. Ph.D., M.Sc., B.Sc.). Note that the academic degrees are formatted with “Auth-Info-ZIRP” style.

Indicating e-mail addresses for all authors is mandatory. Under the name (before e-mail) of the author who is responsible for correspondence with the Editorial shall be written: (Corresponding author).

Affiliations and corresponding addresses shall not be repeated each time for multiple authors of the same affiliation. Affiliations should include: organisation (i.e. university), organisational unit (i.e. faculty or department), street name and house number, city with postcode, state, country.

3.2 GDPR According to Springer International instruction, the author is responsible for obtaining

permission necessary to quote from other works, to reproduce material already published and to reprint from other publications. In other word, it is necessary to obtain the permission if the authors use material from any of the following sources:

Any illustration from a published source, including tables, maps and diagrams, even when redrawn

Any photograph -- especially from a professional photographer -- even if it is of yourself

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Page 4: unizg.hr€¦ · Web viewThe abstract shall contain up to 200 words with no formulae nor bibliography. Key words shall provide the reader with an at-a-glance identification of the

Lastname F., Lastname F., Lastname F.: Title of the Submitted Paper

Any previously published material from which a direct quotation is used of a length which totals more than 5% of the whole, or which totals more than 250 words in any single excerpt or more than 500 words in total

Any quotation, regardless of length, from a song, poem, newspaper or any unpublished source (e.g. a letter, a speech)

Anything in its entirety (this applies particularly to holograph documents, such as postcards, etc.

The citations of non-original excerpts without permission could result in retractions later on. Therefore, please confirm with the authors whether it is necessary to request the permission for some materials. If the authors use the copyrighted materials, it needs to obtain the permissions even though they are cited in the sections.

If excerpts from copyrighted works (including websites) such as illustrations, tables, animations, or text quotations are included in your manuscript, please obtain permission from the copyright holder (usually the original publisher) for both the print and online format. Refer to the RightsLink or use the Permission Request Form.

The details about the permission can be found at https://www.springer.com/gp/authors-editors/book-authors-editors/resources-guidelines/rights-permissions-licensing.

If it needs to require the permission for use of Springer and non-Springer material, the instruction for obtaining permission can be found at https://www.springer.com/gp/authors-editors/book-authors-editors/resources-guidelines/rights-permissions-licensing/obtaining-permissions/5638 .

3.3 FiguresFigures will be reproduced exactly as supplied, with no redrawing or relabelling. It is therefore

imperative that the supplied figures are of the highest possible quality. The Internet contributions should be avoided because of poor print quality.

Figures shall be embedded at the appropriate place in the text. The preferred formats are .eps and .ai (vector formats) for line figures and .tiff or .jpeg (raster formats) for halftone figures with a minimum resolution of 300 dpi (dots per inch).

Figures must be accompanied by a caption and numbered. Caption and the source shall be indicated underneath. Insert figures after they are cited in the text (Figure 1).

Author is responsible for obtaining the GDPR rights (see section 3.2).

Figure 1 – CaptureSource:

Graphics may be full colour but please make sure that they are appropriate for black and white print. For example, coloured lines in graphs should be dotted or dashed lines, or shapes to distinguish them apart in black and white print (Figure 2).

Author is responsible for obtaining the GDPR rights (see section 3.2).

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Page 5: unizg.hr€¦ · Web viewThe abstract shall contain up to 200 words with no formulae nor bibliography. Key words shall provide the reader with an at-a-glance identification of the

Lastname F., Lastname F., Lastname F.: Title of the Submitted Paper

Figure 2 – Average Daily Southbound Traffic Comparison (Jan-April 2005/06)Source: [11]

3.3 TablesTables shall contain only data that are essential for the understanding of the text. The tables shall

be accompanied by a title and numbered. Insert tables after they are cited in the text.

Table titles should appear above the tables. The source of data shall be indicated underneath. Use formatting styles from the Formatting Toolbar (Tab-Title-ZIRP, Tab-Source-ZIRP, Tab-Text-ZIRP). The text in the table header row shall be in bold.

Author is responsible for obtaining the GDPR rights (see section 3.2).

Table 1 – Title

Test Vehicle approach Total vehicle mass (kg)

Speed(km/h) Test no.

TC 1.1.50TC 1.1.80

TC 1.1.100Vertical in the centre

900900900

5080

1001

TC 1.2.80TC 1.2.100 1300 80

100 1

TC 1.3.110 1500 110 1TC 2.1.80

TC 2.1.100Vertical ¼ vehicle outside the

cushion 900 80100 2

TC 3.2.80TC 3.2.100TC 3.3.110

The central at an angle of 15130013001500

80100110

3

TC 4.2.80TC 4.2.100TC 4.3.110

Side impact at an angle of 15130013001500

80100110

4

TC 5.2.80TC 5.2.100TC 5.3.110

Side impact at an angle of 165130013001500

80100110

5

Source: [4]

5

Page 6: unizg.hr€¦ · Web viewThe abstract shall contain up to 200 words with no formulae nor bibliography. Key words shall provide the reader with an at-a-glance identification of the

Lastname F., Lastname F., Lastname F.: Title of the Submitted Paper

3.4 ReferencesReferences shall be listed in order as it appears in the text, at the end of the paper in compliance with Vancouver Citation Style according to https://www.imperial.ac.uk/admin-services/library/learning-support/reference-management/vancouver-style/your-reference-list/.

Examples of most used forms of references are given in the section References at the end of this document.

The reference numbering in the list, as well as in the body text is written in square brackets – [1].

4. EDITORIAL POLICYThe papers shall be accepted for publishing only after the author has modified the paper in

compliance with the reviewers' and editorial's remarks. The author shall be responsible for all the data presented in the published paper.

REFERENCES (Examples of most used forms)

Journal Article: Print

[1] Maršanić R, Zenzerović Z, Mrnjavac E. Planning Model of Optimal Parking Area Capacity. Promet – Traffic & Transportation. 2010;22(6): 449-457.

Journal Article: online / electronic

[2] Brown JR, Thompson GL. Examining the influence of multidestination service orientation on transit service productivity: a multivariate analysis. Transportation. 2008;35(2): 237-252. Available from: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11116-007-9140-x [Accessed 18th Apr 2009].

or

[3] Chou J-S, Kim C, Kuo Y-C, Ou N-C. Deploying effective service strategy in the operations stage of high-speed rail. Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review . 2011;47(4): 507-519. Available from: doi:10.1016/j.tre.2010.12.004 [Accessed 18th June 2012].

Conference Proceeding

[4] Raicu Ş, Dragu V, Popa M, Burciu Ş. About The High Capacity Public Transport Networks Territory Functions. In: Guarascio M, Brebbia CA, Garzia F. (eds.) Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Urban Transport and the Environment, 22-24 June 2009, Bologna, Italy. Southampton, UK: WIT Press; 2009. p. 41-50.

Unpublished Conference Paper

[5] Bowden FJ, Fairley CK. Endemic STDs in the Northern Territory: estimations of effective rates of partner exchange. Paper presented at: The Scientific Meeting of the Royal Australian College of Physicians; 1996 June 24-25; Darwin, Australia.

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Page 7: unizg.hr€¦ · Web viewThe abstract shall contain up to 200 words with no formulae nor bibliography. Key words shall provide the reader with an at-a-glance identification of the

Lastname F., Lastname F., Lastname F.: Title of the Submitted Paper

Book: print

[5] Miles DA, Van Dis ML, Williamson GF, Jensen CW. Radiographic imaging for the dental team. 4th ed. St. Louis, MO: Saunders Elsevier; 2009.

[6] Dionne RA, Phero JC, Becker DE. (eds.) Management of pain and anxiety in the dental office. Philadelphia, PA: WB Saunders; 2002.

Book: online / electronic

[7] Simons NE, Menzies B, Matthews M. A Short Course in Soil and Rock Slope Engineering. London, UK: Thomas Telford Publishing; 2001. Available from: http://www.myilibrary.com?ID=93941 [Accessed 18th June 2015].

Chapter in a Book

[8] Alexander RG. Considerations in creating a beautiful smile. In: Romano R. (ed.) The art of the smile. London, UK: Quintessence Publishing; 2005. p. 187-210.

PhD Thesis

[9] Kay JG. Intracellular cytokine trafficking and phagocytosis in macrophages. PhD thesis. St Lucia, Qld: University of Queensland; 2007.

PhD Thesis retrieved from Database/Internet

[10] Pahl KM. Preventing anxiety and promoting social and emotional strength in early childhood: an investigation of aetiological risk factors [PhD thesis]. St Lucia, Qld: University of Queensland; 2009 [cited 2010 Mar 24]. Available from: University of Queensland Library E-Reserve

Report

[11] Leatherwood S. Whales, dolphins, and porpoises of the western North Atlantic. U.S. Dept. of Commerce. Report number: 63, 2001.

Acts of Parliament

[12] Canada. Environmental Health Directorate. Radiation protection in dentistry: recommended safety procedures for the use of dental x-ray equipment. Safety Code 30 . Ottawa: Ministry of Health; 2000.

Non-English Reference/Translated works

[13] Matišić A, Granić R. Troškovi distribucije prijevoza putnika u gradskom i prigradskom prometu [Distribution costs of transportation of passengers in urban and suburban traffic]. Ekonomika prometa. 2012;25(4): 296-302. Croatian

Re: A title written in square brackets indicates that it is not listed in the original language.

7