Guidelines | |
---|---|
General Formatting |
|
Editing and Grammar | a. Is your tense appropriate and used consistently (unlike this checklist)? b. Issues with abbreviations c. Have you eliminated vague filler words (“some,” etc.)? d. Have you done your best to use active over passive voice? e. Did you use commas correctly? Rules to be mindful of: f. Have you used pronouns and who/whom correctly? g. Have you configured your sentences so that “for” is not the last word in your sentence? h. Did you use that vs. which correctly? i. Did you consider how you used from vs. with and in vs. among? j. Did you use “et al.” in a consistent manner? et al is Latin for “and others” and may be used both in text as well as in the bibliography of a manuscript. It should be written as “et al.” With no capitalization of the e in et and inclusion of the period following al. Note that AutoCorrect typically capitalizes the e in et. While my preference is to uniformly italicize et al. this appears to be field and journal dependent. k. Are “e.g.,” vs. “i.e.,” used properly? Note that each of these need periods after each letter followed by a comma. These translate from Latin into “for example “ and “that is, ”respectively. If your listing multiple illustrative examples and including commas, then you will be using e.g., while a single restatement of the previous would be appropriate for using i.e. Never use either these along with “etc.” at the end as that is redundant. l. Have you checked your spelling multiple times? m. You may want to consider reading the text aloud or having a peer edit it. |
Data and Figures (click for additional information) |
|
References |
|
Authorship |
|
Obtaining co-author input |
|
Acknowledgments |
|
Authorship forms and conflict of interest reporting |
|
Page Comparison
General
Content
Integrations