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Information retrieval and communication
Published in F.B.J. Barends, J. Lindenberg, H.J. Luger, L. de Quelerij, A. Verruijt, Geotechnical Engineering for Transportation Infrastructure, 2017
B. Rydell, A. Salomonson, J. Lindgren
Journals are normally distributed by publishers and until a few years ago were only published in printed form. With the birth of the Internet, bibliographic reference information and summaries of articles in journals have begun to be published via the World Wide Web and e-mail. During the 1990s, development of this service has been extended to include the publishing of journals in full text on the Internet, a method which has been adopted by many publishers. Articles in reviewed journals are usually published from half a year up to two years after the manuscript has been sent to the publisher. Publishing via the Internet may shorten this time and thereby result in a more current content. To be able to use this full text service, a subscription has to be taken out. A number of publications containing geotechnical information are listed in Appendix 4.
Presenting and Publishing the Research Findings
Published in Vinayak Bairagi, Mousami V. Munot, Research Methodology, 2019
Krishna Warhade, Vinayak K. Bairagi, J. Jayanth
Good publication is also sometimes looked as a key to career advancements, gaining monetary benefits. Writing a clear, and a reader friendly manuscript that highlights novel findings /contributions, supports it with valid results and signifies its importance, is critical and inevitable component of a good publication.
Cycling near misses: a review of the current methods, challenges and the potential of an AI-embedded system
Published in Transport Reviews, 2021
Mohamed R. Ibrahim, James Haworth, Nicola Christie, Tao Cheng, Stephen Hailes
First, all manuscripts related to cycling near misses were gathered to-date. These manuscripts included peer-reviewed journal articles, governmental and non-governmental reports, and conference proceedings. They covered the different aspects of cycling near misses, methods used, and the risk factors identified. These manuscripts can be accessed from four search engines (Scopus, Google Scholar, and Web of Science) via a combination of “cycling” or “road” with keywords in a Boolean expression such as: Cycling AND near AND miss*, cycling AND perceived AND risk*, perceived AND traffic and risk*, cycling AND near AND collision*, road AND conflict*, cycling AND risk and risk*. The total results for the specified combined terms are 556, 435, and 389 for google scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus respectively. After removing duplicates, the sample size reduced to 531. Second, records were first screened by title and abstracts which reduced the records to 325. The second phase of screening included reviewing each manuscript, which reduced the number to 189 manuscripts that focus on the various types of conflicts between different road-users, including near misses. At this phase, manuscripts were filtered to exclude studies that involved collisions without addressing near misses were excluded, except where they were required to draw a baseline or lesson learned that could be beneficial for near miss studies (i.e. Beck et al., 2016; Cho, Rodríguez, & Khattak, 2009; Orsi et al., 2014). Studies that involved safety policies that address cycling without addressing near misses are excluded. Last, we reduced studies to 19 manuscripts that focus only on cycling near misses which we focused on analysing them in details (See Figure 1).
A simplified thermal approximation method to include the effects of Marangoni convection in the melt pools of processes that involve moving point heat sources
Published in Numerical Heat Transfer, Part A: Applications, 2021
Sagar H. Nikam, Justin Quinn, Shaun McFadden
The manuscript is divided into Methodology, Results, Discussion, and Conclusion sections. The Methodology section describes the governing equations, boundary conditions and simulation setups used for the CFD and heat conduction models. The Results section describes the thermal histories, thermal profile, peak temperatures, and melt pool dimensions obtained for each code. The discussion section proposes a correlation between correction factor and surface tension gradient. Finally, the conclusion section summarizes the significant outcomes of the present study.
From the Editor: Progress on JOEH procedural changes
Published in Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene, 2018
JOEH Style and Submission Updates Over the past several months, we have made important revisions to the instructions to authors that more fully explain the manuscript preparation, submission, and revision processes. An updated style guide, which specifies the formatting requirements for manuscripts, is available on the JOEH website on the “Instructions for Authors” page. This style guide matches the publication formatting (table and figure numbering scheme, reference formatting, etc.), which speeds the typesetting of author proofs.