Submissions
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Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
  • The text has neither been published previously nor is currently being submitted to publication elsewhere.

  • The paper has to be sent as a MS Word file (extensions: doc, docx, RTF); additionally, images, tables, pictures, diagrams, drawings and special fonts have to be included as a HD graphic file; if you are going to reproduce stuff that is r can be other people’s intellectual property, a written permission is needed.

  • If applicable, the afore-mentioned written permission is submitted to AMU Press.

  • Reference formatting

Author Guidelines

Guidelines for authors; stylesheet

  1. By submitting a proposal to Studia Romanica Posnaniensia, authors commit themselves to the originality thereof, which means that their texts have neither been published previously nor are currently being under consideration elsewhere (written statement is necessary if a proposal is accepted by the referees).
  2. The paper has to be sent as a MS Word file (extensions: doc, docx, RTF, 25,000-35,000 characters including spaces, abstract, key words and bibliography); additionally, images, tables, pictures, diagrams, drawings and special fonts have to be included as a HD graphic file; if you are going to reproduce stuff that is or can be other people’s intellectual belonging, a written permission is needed.
  3. If applicable, the afore-mentioned written permission is submitted to the AMU Press.
  4. The Editorial Board of the journal restrict the right to perform an initial pre-selection of the submitted papers and to reject those which do not conform with the journal's or the issue's profile. As the journal publishes themed issues, only contributions addressing the subject matter of a particular issue will be accepted. 
  5. Reference formatting
    Where applicable, author(s) name(s), journal title/book title, chapter title/article title, year of publication, volume number/book chapter and the pagination must be present. Yet, all in-text references have to be listed carefully in the reference list at the end. Conversely, under no circumstances can the reference list contain items that have not been quoted in the body of the paper. Use of the DOI is mandatory. Likewise, a valid URL must be added. Note that missing or inaccurate data will be highlighted at proofreading stage for the author to correct them. Please, try to comply with the following recommendations (see the sample below). The Digital Object Identifier (DOI) must be used to cite and link to electronic documents. Example of a correctly given DOI (in URL format): http://dx.doi.org/10.3196/003581213805393405. When you use a DOI to create links to documents on the web, the DOIs are guaranteed never to change.
  6. In the upper left corner of the paper:
    Received: (data)                      Accepted: (data)
  7. Main title: Times New Roman 18 (bold, centred [Ctrl+E])
  8. Main title in English: 1,5 space, Times New Roman 14, italics, centred.
  9. 2 x 1,5 space, then first and last name of the author (centred, Times New Roman 16).
  10. 1,5 space, affiliation of the author (centred, Times New Roman 9).
  11. Author’s e-mail address.
  12. ORCID.
  13. 3x1,5 space, Abstract (bold, Times New Roman 12), Enter, then the abstract in English (Times New Roman 12).
  14. 1,5 space, Keywords (bold, Times New Roman 12): after the colon the keywords in English.
  15. 2x 1,5 space and the content of the article.
  16. Please 1,5-space your main text throughout. Use Times New Roman 12. Subtitles are required to be written in Block Capitals centred (e.g. LES CONTRAINTES SYNTAXIQUES)
  17. Apart from the original title, authors are kindly requested to insert its English translation; then keywords (4-6, please avoid too general terms: ‘Middle Ages’, ‘philosophy’, ‘lexicon’) and an English abstract are compulsory
  18. Footnotes: Please, use your footnotes sparingly. Number them consecutively throughout the article, using superscript Arabic numbers. Times New Roman 10, first line indentation: 0,7. Please, do not use bibliographic footnotes (e.g. Fischer, 2000: 146, or Fischer, op. cit.: 146). Such stuff is to be placed in the body of your text
  19. Acknowledgments: Please, insert your acknowledgments as a separate section at the end of the article before the references. Do not place them on the title page, as a footnote to the title or otherwise. List those individuals and / or institutions who provided substantial help during the research (e.g., providing language help, writing assistance, financial support, etc.).
  20. Reference

Please verify if journal / periodical articles have DOI number (Digital Object Identifier). Use Cross/Ref Simple Text Query

Book:

one author:
 
Gardner, H. (1993). Frames of mind: The theory of multiple intelligences. New York: Basic Books.

two to seven authors:

Cargill, O., Charvat, W., & Walsh, D. D. (1966). The publication of academic writing. New York: Modern Language Association.

more than seven authors:

Cooper, L., Eagle, K., Howe, L., Robertson, A., Taylor, D., Reims, H., . . . Smith, W. A.  (1982). How to stay younger while growing older: Aging for all ages. London: Macmillan.

no author given:

Experimental psychology. (1938). New York: Holt.

no publication date given:

Smith, J. (n.d.). Morality in masquerade. London: Churchill.

an organization or institution as “author”:

University of Minnesota. (1985). Social psychology. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
U.S. Census Bureau. (2000). Statistical abstract of the United States. Washington, DC:  U.S. Government Printing Office.

an editor as “author”:

Updike, J. (Ed.). (1999). The best American short stories of the century. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

an edition of an author’s work:
Brockett, O. (1987). History of the theatre (5th ed.). Boston: Allyn and Bacon.

a translation:

Freud, S. (1970). An outline of psychoanalysis (J. Strachey, Trans.). New York: Norton. (Original work published 1940)

a work in a series:

Cousins, M. (1984). Michel Foucault. Theoretical traditions in the social sciences. New York: St. Martin's Press.

a work in several volumes:

Wilson, J. G., & Fraser, F. C. (Eds.). (1977-1978). Handbook of teratology (Vols. 1-4). New York: Plenum Press.

conference proceedings:

Schnase, J. L., & Cunnius, E. L. (Eds.). (1995). Proceedings of CSCL '95: The First International Conference on Computer Support for Collaborative Learning. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

chapter in an edited book:

Rubenstein, J.P. (1967). The effect of television violence on small children. In B. F. Kane (Ed.), Television and juvenile psychological development (pp. 112-134). New York: American Psychological Society.

Articles

journal / periodical (continuous pagination):

Brabant, S., & Mooney, L. A. (1997). Sex role stereotyping in the Sunday comics: A twenty year update. Sex Roles, 37, 269-281.

journal / periodical (non-continuous pagination):
Sawyer, J. (1966). Measurement and prediction, clinical and statistical. Psychological Bulletin, 66 (3), 178-200.

journal article with three to seven authors:
Tolin, D. F., Abramowitz, J. S., Brigidi, B. D., Amir, N., Street, G. P., & Foa, E. B. (2001).  Memory and memory confidence in obsessive-compulsive disorder. Behaviour Research & Therapy, 39, 913-927.

journal article more than  authors:
Mariani-Costantini, R., Ottini, L., Caramiello, S., Palmirotta, R., Mallegni, F., Rossi, L., . . . Jones, R. B. (2001). Taphonomy of the fossil hominid bones from the Acheulean site of Castel di Guido near Rome, Italy. Journal of Human Evolution, 41, 211-225.

newspaper:

Monson, M. (1993, September 16). Urbana firm obstacle to office project. The Champaign-Urbana News-Gazette, pp. 1, 8.

magazine:

Raloff, J. (2001, May 12). Lead therapy won't help most kids. Science News, 159, 292.

Review:

Gleick, E. (2000, December 14). The burdens of genius [Review of the book The last samurai by H. DeWitt]. Time, 156, 171.

article in a reference book or encyclopedia - signed and unsigned:
Sturgeon, T. (1995). Science fiction. In The encyclopedia Americana (Vol. 24, pp. 390-392). Danbury, CT: Grolier.
Islam. (1992). In The new encyclopaedia Britannica (Vol. 22, pp. 1-43). Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica.

a work in a collection or anthology:
Jesrani, P. J. (1998). Working turn tables. In N. Bhatia, S. Dhand, & V. Rupaleria (Eds.), Throwing a great party (pp. 19-48). Chicago: NT Publishers.
Shapcott, T. (1980). Margaret Atwood's Surfacing. In K. L. Goodwin (Ed.), Commonwealth literaturę in the curriculum (pp. 86). South Pacific Association of Common-wealth Literatures and Language Studies.

paper published as part of the proceedings of a conference:

Nicol, D. M., & Liu X. (1997). The dark side of risk (what your mother never told you about time warp). In Proceedings of the 11th Workshop on Parallel and Distributed Simulation, Lockenhaus, Austria, 10–13 June 1997 (pp. 188–195). Los Alamitos, CA: IEEE Computer Society.

Dissertations

obtained from university:

Carlson, W. R. (1977). Dialectic and rhetoric in Pierre Bayle. (Unpublished doctoral disertation).Yale University, USA.

obtained from Dissertations and Theses database:

Mancall, J. C. (1979). Resources used by high school students in preparing independent study projects: A bibliometric approach (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses database. (UMI No. AAT 7905069)

an abstract from DAI:

Delgado, V. (1997). An interview study of Native American philosophical foundations in education. Dissertation Abstracts International: Section A. Humanities and Social Sciences, 58(9), 3395

Other materials


patent:
Lemelson, J.H.  (1981). U.S. Patent No. 4,285,338. Washington, D.C.:  U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

video or DVD (motion pictures):
Mass, J. B. (Producer), & Gluck, D. H. (Director). (1979). Deeper into hypnosis [Motion picture]. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.

television program:

Pratt, C. (Executive Producer). (2001, December 2). Face the nation [Television broadcast]. Washington, DC: CBS News.

personal communications (email messages, interviews, lectures, and telephone conversations):
Because the information is not retrievable it should not appear in the reference list.  In your paper they should look as follows:  J. Burnitz (personal communication, September 20, 2000) indicated that  .… or   In a recent interview (J. Burnitz, personal communication, September 20, 2000).

Books online:

an entire electronic book retrieved from a database:

Murray, T. H. (1996). The worth of a child. Berkeley: University of California Press. Retrieved from netLibrary database.

an entire electronic book with direct link to item:

Bryant, P. (1999). Biodiversity and Conservation. Retrieved from http://darwin.bio.uci.edu/~sustain/bio65/Titlpage.htm

an article or chapter in an electronic book:
Symonds, PM. (1958). Human drives. In C. L. Stacey & M. DeMartino (Eds.), Understanding human motivation (pp. 11-22). Retrieved from PsycBOOKS database.

entire electronic technical or research report - available on the web:

Russo, A. C., & Jiang, H. J. (2006).  Hospital stays among patients with diabetes, 2004 (Statistical Brief #17). Retrieved from Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality: http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/statbriefs/sb17.jsp

paper from the proceedings of a conference:

Miller, S. (2000).  Introduction to manufacturing simulation. In Proceedings of the 2000 Winter Simulation Conference, (pp. 63-66).  Retrieved from http://www.informs-sim.org/wsc00papers/011.PDF

NOTE: The URL should not be underlined. Sometimes underlining appears automatically when a URL is displayed in a browser or in Word. Remove the underlining before submitting your paper.

Journal online article


New style guidelines use the DOI (Digital Object Identifier) which is an assigned alpha-numeric code that usually appears on the article or in the database record. If the DOI is not provided, enter the citation information using Cross/Ref Simple Text Query. The retrieval date is no longer required.

article with DOI assigned:
Whitmeyer, J. M. (2000). Power through appointment. Social Science Research, 29(4), 535-555. doi:10.1006/_ssre.2000.0680

article from electronic journal (no print version):

Ashe, D. D., & McCutcheon, L. E. (2001). Shyness, loneliness, and attitude toward celebrities. Current Research in Social Psychology, 6(9). Retrieved from http://www.uiowa.edu/~grpproc/crisp/crisp.6.9.htm

article with no DOI: 
(include URL for journal website not database)
Boutsen, F., Cannito, M. P., Taylor, M., & Bender, B. (2002). Botox treatment in adductor spasmodic dysphonia: A meta-analysis. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 45, 469-481. Retrieved from http://jslhr.asha.org

article - preprint version:

Turney, P.D. (in press). The latent relation mapping engine: Algorithm and experiments. Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research. Retrieved from http://cogprints.org/6305/1/NRC-50738.pdf

newspaper article from an online database:

Altman, L. K. (2001, January 18).  Mysterious illnesses often turn out to be mass hysteria. New York Times. Retrievedfrom the ProQuest Newspapers database.

a newspaper article from newspaper’s website:

Cary, B. (2001, June 18). Mentors of the mind. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved from http://www.latimes.com

company information from a database:

Ingersoll-Rand Company Limited. (2004). Company profile. Retrieved July 29, 2008 from Hoovers in Lexis-Nexis.

an article posted on an open-access or personal website:

Cain, A., & Burris, M. (1999, April). Investigation of the use of mobile phones while driving. Retrieved from http://www.cutr.eng.usf.edu/its/mobile_phone_text.htm

Archer, Z. (n.d.). Exploring nonverbal communication. Retrieved from http://zzyx.ucsc.edu/~archer

a cd-rom publication:

Reporter, M. (1996, April 13). Electronic citing guidelines needed [CD-ROM]. New York Times, (late ed.), p. c1. Retrieved from New York Times Ondisc.

Web sites

website of an organization or government
:
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. (2001). Glacial habitat restoration areas. Retrieved from http://www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/land/wildlife/hunt/hra.htm Midwest League. (n.d.). Pitching, individual records. Retrieved from http://www.midwestleague.com/indivpitching.html

a personal homepage: 
(retrieval date is included due to possibility of change)
Duncan, D. (1998, August 1). Homepage. Retrieved July 30, 2007 from http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Coffeehouse/1652/

a posting to an online discussion group or listserv:

Marcy, B. (1999, April 3). Think they'll find any evidence of Mallory & Irvine [electronic mailing list message]. Retrieved from http://everest.mountainzone.com/99/forum

a blog post:

MiddleKid. (2007, January 22). The unfortunate prerequisites and consequences of partitioning your mind [Web log message]. Retrieved from http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2007/01/the_unfortunate_prerequisites.php

an online video:

Norton, R. (2006, November 4). How to train a cat to operate a light switch [Video file]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vja83KLQXZs

NOTE:  The URL should not be underlined. Sometimes underlining appears automatically when a URL is displayed in a browser or in Word. Remove the underlining before submitting your paper.

Citations in text

In APA style, you acknowledge your sources by including parenthetical citations within your text. These refer the reader to the alphabetical list of references or works cited that appears at the end of the document. Use the first piece of information that appears in the reference and the year. For example:

Researchers have pointed out that the lack of trained staff is a common barrier to providing adequate health education (Fisher, 1999) and services (Weist & Christodulu, 2000).

When you are quoting directly from a work, you should also include the page number.

The close of the millennium was marked by a deep suspicion of the natural world and an increasing reliance “upon the pronouncements of soothsayers and visionaries, who caused hysteria with their doom-laden forecasts of the end of humanity” (Mulligan, 1977, p. 234).

If the context in which the quotation appears makes it clear which document in the bibliography the quoted text comes from, then no further identification is needed:

Baudino and Wyatt (2004) advocate "active learning promotes critical thinking and direct application of critical concepts" (p. 17).

A quotation from a web document with no pagination should include a paragraph number.

"Lake Champlain's ecosystem is under enormous pressure from urban growth" (Cushman, 2002, para. 3).

When you are quoting from a work with no author, use the first few words of the reference list entry (usually, part of the title).

Web Usability Studies are commonly conducted in libraries ("Benefits of Usability Studies," 2002, p. 34).

Personal communications, such as lectures or e-mail messages to you, or private interviews that you conducted with another person, should be referred to in your in-text citations but NOT in your reference list. For example:

J. Reiss indicated that “anthropologists are still debating the reasons for the Neanderthals’ disappearance” (personal communication, May 3, 2000).

Place direct quotations longer than 40 words in a free-standing block and omit quotation marks.

Jones's 1993 study found the following:

Students often had difficulty using APA style, especially when it was their first time citing  sources. This difficulty could be attributed to the fact that many students failed to purchase  a style manual or to ask their teacher for help. (p. 199)

When a source that has three to five authors is cited, all authors are included the first time the source is cited. If that source is cited again, the first author's surname and "et al." For example, (Baldwin, Bevan, & Beshalke, 2000) then (Baldwin et al., 2000). When a source that has six or more authors is cited, the first author's surname and "et al." are used every time the source is cited (including the first time). For example, (Utley et al., 2001)

To cite secondary sources, refer to both sources in the text, but include in the References list only the source that you actually used. For example "(Bandura, 1989, as cited in Feist, 1998)." Feist (1998) would be fully referenced within the list of References. Bandura (1989) would not be listed.

Footnotes

Content footnotes are occasionally used to support substantive information in the text (or to acknowledge copyright permission status). They begin on a separate page with a heading centered on the first line below the manuscript page header. The first line of each footnote is indented 5-7 spaces and they are numbered with Arabic superscript numerals following punctuation marks within the text.

 

This guide is available online.

You can also consult APA Style website.

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