Authors Responsibilities
Manuscripts submitted for publication must be based on original, unpublished research. They must include the data obtained and used as well as an objective discussion of the results. They must supply enough information to allow any specialist to reproduce the research and confirm or refute the interpretations defended in the manuscript.
Authors must be aware of and refrain from engaging in scientific misconduct and by breaching publishing ethics
Authors should present their results clearly, honestly, and without fabrication, falsification, or inappropriate data manipulation.
All authors must ensure that the data and results reported in the manuscript are original and have not been copied, fabricated, falsified or manipulated.
Plagiarism in all forms, multiple or redundant publication, as well as data invention or manipulation constitute serious ethical failings and are considered scientific fraud.
Authors should provide appropriate authorship and acknowledgement. Authors must refrain from deliberately misrepresenting a scientist’s relationship with published work. All authors must have significantly contributed to the research.
Authors must tell the journal when they have a direct or indirect conflict of interest with editors or members of the Editorial board or International scientific committee.
No significant part of the article shall have been previously published either as an article or as a chapter, or be under consideration for publication elsewhere.
When authors discover a serious mistake in their manuscript, they must report this to the person responsible for the journal as soon as possible in order to modify the manuscript, withdraw it, retract it, or publish a correction o erratum notice.
If the Editorial Board detects the potential error, they authors must ten demonstrate that their manuscript is free from error
Authors are obliged, for all materials submitted, to participate in a peer review process and to follow publication conventions.