Technical Paper Writing
Dr. S.N. Sridhara
Principal/Director,
K.S. School of Engineering and Management
Bangalore
sridharasn1964@gmail.com
1
What is a Technical Paper?
• It is a research article published in the
interest of scientific community to
– Showcase NEW results in the area of
interest
– Gain the credit of carrying out this
research for the first time – be a leader
– To attract the attention of other
researchers towards the results obtained
and to develop a dialogue in scientific
community
2
When do you Write Technical
Paper?
As soon as you complete a valuable
segment of research and
you have results that can be published
3
Where Do You Publish the
Technical Paper?
• National Conference
• International Conference
• Indian Journal
• International Journal
4
Contents of a Technical Paper
• Paper Title
• Author’s whereabouts
• The Abstract
• The Introduction
• The Body
• Results and Discussions
• The Conclusions
• Future Work
• The Acknowledgements
• References
• Appendices
• Nomenclature
5
Title
Title must be specific to the work proposed and
self-explanatory.
It should not be too long but must represent
the complete work in abstract.
6
• Title should not be too general. (Avoid
phrases such as: Studies on.. Etc)
• Title of a research paper cannot be
same as that of a book
7
Title
Examples of Titles of Technical Papers
• A Wideband Digital Receiver With Hard-
Switching Mixers for Cognitive Radio
• Experimental Investigations of Heat
Transfer Characteristics of a Miniature
Heat Pipe
• Design of a WSN Platform for Long-Term
Environmental Monitoring for IoT
Applications
• VLSI Design of a Monolithic Compressive-
Sensing Wideband Analog-to-Information
Converter
8
Examples of Titles of Technical Papers
• A Study on Synthetic Fuzzy Measurement Model
of Marketing Competitiveness
• Research on Mechanism and Operation Model
of Logistics Finance
• An Encryption Method Based on Dual-chaos
System (Check for this title’s viability)
• Study of new proton conducting glasses for fuel
cells (Check for this title’s viability)
• 3D printed concentrator arrays for external light
trapping on thin film solar cells (Check for this
title’s viability)
9
Author’s whereabouts
• Author’s whereabouts imply author’s name and
professional address and/or contact details.
• In the author’s name, usually the title such as
Mr., Mrs., or Dr. Etc will not be used.
10
Examples:
11
Author’s whereabouts
• Abstract is like a summary of complete
paper
• It includes
– Importance of the paper
– Gap in literature
– Problem statement and /or Work carried
out
– Major Results and Conclusions
12
Abstract
• Usually the abstract will be framed only
after the complete body of the paper is
ready.
• Since abstract has to be very short and
comprehensive and represents the
entire paper, it must be carefully
framed.
13
“Abstract”
Example of an “abstract” -1
• The Cosmic-ray Soil Moisture Observing System is a promising soil
moisture measurement network. It can measure soil moisture at an
intermediate spatial scale with a single sensor.
• In this letter, the measured cosmic-ray neutron counts during the Heihe
Watershed Allied Telemetry Experimental Research were used to evaluate
the capabilities of the cosmic-ray probe in soil moisture retrieval at a
heterogeneous farmland. The Cosmic-ray Soil Moisture Interaction Code
model was utilized to model the interaction between the measured neutron
counts and the soil water content. Soilmoisture at the footprint scale of the
cosmic-ray probe obtained using a wireless sensor network (SoilNET) was
used as the calibration and validation data.
• The results show that the cosmic-ray probe is capable of monitoring the
hourly heterogeneous soil moisture dynamics at the intermediate spatial
scale in a noninvasive way. Moreover, the informative measurement depth
of the cosmic-ray probe can also be derived and is consistent with the soil
moisture results.
14
• The Cosmic-ray Soil Moisture Observing
System is a promising soil moisture
measurement network. It can measure soil
moisture at an intermediate spatial scale with a
single sensor.
15
• In this letter, the measured cosmic-ray neutron counts during the Heihe
Watershed Allied Telemetry Experimental Research were used to evaluate
the capabilities of the cosmic-ray probe in soil moisture retrieval at a
heterogeneous farmland. The Cosmic-ray Soil Moisture Interaction Code
model was utilized to model the interaction between the measured neutron
counts and the soil water content. Soilmoisture at the footprint scale of the
cosmic-ray probe obtained using a wireless sensor network (SoilNET) was
used as the calibration and validation data.
16
• The results show that the cosmic-ray probe is
capable of monitoring the hourly heterogeneous
soil moisture dynamics at the intermediate spatial
scale in a noninvasive way. Moreover, the
informative measurement depth of the cosmic-ray
probe can also be derived and is consistent with
the soil moisture results.
17
• An IoT / M2M system may support large number of battery operated devices in
addition to some mains operated devices. It is important to conserve energy of these
battery operated constrained devices. An IoT / M2M Gateway used in this system is
an intermediate node between IoT / M2M devices and an IoT / M2M Service
Platform. It enables distributed analytics and helps to reduce traffic load in the
network. This gateway could be stationary or mobile. In an IoT / M2M system, it
becomes important to conserve energy of this Gateway as well.
• This paper proposes a framework to reduce power consumption of M2M / IoT
devices as well as Gateway nodes. We buffer data at IoT Application, IoT Gateways
and Devices to keep devices and Gateway nodes in sleep mode as long as possible.
We allow computation of the duration to buffer this data using factors such as QoS
requirements, predicted pattern of future IoT / M2M messages and congestion
indicators from different network nodes.
• This potentially also allows intelligent aggregation of IoT messages at the Gateway
node. We also enhance signaling mechanisms and present software building blocks
for this framework. Mesh as well as Cellular access technologies are considered
here.
18
Example of an “abstract” - 2
• Marketing competitiveness is the core of enterprise competitiveness. How
to measure and evaluate marketing competitiveness is the important issue
that facing enterprises marketing.
• This study explores the measurement of marketing competitiveness. The
authors put forward with a framework for measuring marketing
competitiveness including five facets as product, distribution, service,
personnel and industry, and propose a fuzzy measurement model basing
on the theory of fuzzy mathematics and analytic hierarchy process (AHP).
Then, the authors give a numerical illustrative example to test and verify
this model.
• The proposed model can evaluate both individual factor and integrated
marketing competitiveness, which can illustrate enterprise’s market status.
The model provides insight into the creation of marketing competitiveness
through managing marketing resource of the product, the distribution, the
service, the personnel and the industry, and can be used as a decision
guide in marketing management process. Finally, the further research is
encouraged to refine and enhance the proposed model.
19
Example of an “abstract” - 3
The “Introduction”
• This part includes:
– The general introduction to the topic being
addressed
– The work carried out by other researchers in this
area
– The “Gap” in literature
– The problem statement
20
The “Body” of the Programme
• This section is the major part of the
paper in terms of length / volume.
• It depicts the work carried out with all
details and descriptions.
• This section must be written with high
clarity such that another researcher
must be able to follow the procedure
shown and must be able to repeat the
work.
21
The “Body” of the Programme
• The Methodology followed must be
explained in detail. No part must be
skipped.
• All specifications of equipment/tools
used, the experimental/numerical
procedure must be clearly indicated
• The error analysis of experimental /
numerical data is always desired and for
a few journals, it is mandatory.
22
Tables
• Tables are drawn to showcase important
statistical data derived from the work
• Tables are used to display a collection of
data in any section of the paper. The
tables must be prepared so that they are
self explanatory with proper titles.
• Tables must be numbered sequentially and
also cited in the text.
• Include the units of measurements in the
table text wherever the variable list is
used
23
Figures
• Figures must be self-explanatory and proper
caption must be given at the bottom of the figure.
• A graph, picture, copy of photograph are all
considered as figures.
• The graphs and contour plots are required in
“black and white” mode and not in colour mode.
• The centred symbols, curves, values on the axes
shown in the graph must be distinct, legible and
readable in the size it is printed.
24
Figures
• Figures must be clear and the texts in the figures
must be readable with minimum font
• All the symbols used in the graph must be labeled
either within the frame of the picture or in the
caption of the figure.
• The axes of the graph must be labeled and
quantified. The units of the quantities used must
be mentioned.
• All figures and tables must be cited in the text.
• Avoid snapshots of windows, poor images and
big-in-size pictures. The text and numerals if any
in the picture must be of readable size.
25
Equations
• All equations must be typed using Equation
Editor/Math type and must be numbered
sequentially
• Put the equation numbers right justified and
within the brackets, for ex… (1)
26
Results and Discussions
• The major results must be discussed in
the light of observed trends and
thoroughly compared with published
data.
• Showcase new results and thus highlight
the importance of present paper.
• Result section without discussion on
physics involved is considered as null
and void.
27
• This section describes the output of
your hardship.
• Record all important results derived and
support them with proper scientific and
technical notes.
• Use the graphs, tables and mathematical
models to describe the results.
• Comparisons of the results obtained and
bringing connectivity to the published
literature would increase the gravity of
the result.
28
Results and Discussions
Conclusion is not a summary of the work, but
a listing of major outcomes derived from
the study.
Therefore do not state as what has been
done in your work, instead bring out the
outcome of the results and discussions in
terms of statements.
Many a time, the abstract and conclusions
are referred for a quick assessment of the
usefulness of the paper by the readers.
Hence these sections must be written with
upmost importance.
29
Conclusions
Conclusions
• Conclusions depict the outcome of your
paper
• Conclusions should not be obvious. (for
ex: heat flows from higher temperature
to lower temperature, etc.,)
• Conclusions must be crisp and
meaningful
30
31
What is Referencing:
It is the method of indicating the
resources for information relevant to
present research work
References
Why Referencing is required:
• It ensures that you have made a thorough study of
present status of research and you have identified
the gap (or requirement of present research)
• It directs the readers to correct sources for
further information related to present research
• It is a method of acknowledging the researchers
whose works were published earlier to your
research
• It is mandatory as a part of fight against Plagiarism
32
References
• APA (American Phsycological Association)
• MLA (Modern Language Association)
• Chikago
• IEEE
• Turabian and so on…
• Harward Style
Source:https://www.staffs.ac.uk/assets/harvar
d_quick_guide_tcm44-47797.pdf
33
Different Styles of Referencing and Citation
Source: https://www.staffs.ac.uk/assets/harvard_quick_guide_tcm44-47797.pdf
Staffordshire University
Harvard Style of Referencing
Source: https://www.staffs.ac.uk/assets/harvard_quick_guide_tcm44-47797.pdf
Staffordshire University
Harvard Style of Referencing
Source: https://www.staffs.ac.uk/assets/harvard_quick_guide_tcm44-47797.pdf
Staffordshire University
Harvard Style of Referencing
Source: https://www.staffs.ac.uk/assets/harvard_quick_guide_tcm44-47797.pdf
Staffordshire University
Harvard Style of Referencing
38
• References must appear in the reference list in
the order of appearance in the paper.
• Each reference must be cited at least once in
the text of the paper. An example for citing a
paper in the text is shown in the following
example.
“….The independent research works carried out by
many investigators [1, 4-8] have shown the impact of
dynamic forces and couples on the stability of the
vehicle…”
References and Citation
39
• In case the references are listed in
numbers, the citations & References
must be in the order of appearance and
must be synchronised.
“….The independent research works carried out by
many investigators [1, 4-8] have shown the impact of
dynamic forces and couples on the stability of the
vehicle…”
References and Citation
40
• In case the references are listed with
authors’ name, the citation will be with
the names of authors
“….The independent research works carried out by
many investigators [Rama et. al,(1987), Shama and
Bhama (2015)] have shown the impact of dynamic
forces and couples on the stability of the vehicle…”
References and Citation
41
[1] N. Dombrowski and W. R. Johns (1963), The Aerodynamic
Instability and Disintegration of Viscous Liquid Sheets, Chem.
Eng. Sci., vol. 18, pp. 203-220.
[2] N.A.Chigier (1991), The Physics of Atomization, Proceedings
of Fifth International Conference on Liquid Atomization and
Spray Systems, July 15-18, 1991.
[3] Whitfield A and Baines N C(1990), Design of Radial
Turbomachines, Longman Scientific Technical, New York.
References (example)
A Few Good Sources for Technical
Paper Writing
• http://infolab.stanford.edu/~widom/paper-
writing.html
• http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~dahlin/profession
al/paper-writing.pdf
• http://www.macalester.edu/~bressoud/capsto
ne/TechPaperHowTo.pdf
• http://www.uni-
kassel.de/eecs/fileadmin/datas/fb16/Fachgebi
ete/VS/Documents/HowToWritePaper.pdf
42
43
• Annexures are additional document
attached to the technical paper or thesis
to give additional information to the
readers.
• These may include lengthy derivations,
detailed drawings, procedures,
photographs etc.
• It is added at the end of document to not
to disturb the flow of paper but may be
required to educate the reviewer.
Appendices Annexures
44
• Abbreviations refers to description of short-form
names used in the paper
• Nomenclature refers to the description of symbols
used
• The Abbreviations and Nomenclature will be listed
in Alphabetical order
• The abbreviations / Nomenclature will be included
in the beginning of the paper (after Abstract) or at
the end of the paper depending on the format file
specified by the editors of journal
Nomenclature.docx
Abbreviations / Nomenclature
A few Research Topics in Management
Studies
• Social and human capital influences on
opportunity recognition and resource
mobilization in India's handloom industry
• Effect of Quality Management Systems and
Total Quality Management on Productivity
before and after: Empirical Evidence from the
Indian Auto Component Industry
45
Thank You
46

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Technical Paper Writing Sridhara

  • 1. Technical Paper Writing Dr. S.N. Sridhara Principal/Director, K.S. School of Engineering and Management Bangalore sridharasn1964@gmail.com 1
  • 2. What is a Technical Paper? • It is a research article published in the interest of scientific community to – Showcase NEW results in the area of interest – Gain the credit of carrying out this research for the first time – be a leader – To attract the attention of other researchers towards the results obtained and to develop a dialogue in scientific community 2
  • 3. When do you Write Technical Paper? As soon as you complete a valuable segment of research and you have results that can be published 3
  • 4. Where Do You Publish the Technical Paper? • National Conference • International Conference • Indian Journal • International Journal 4
  • 5. Contents of a Technical Paper • Paper Title • Author’s whereabouts • The Abstract • The Introduction • The Body • Results and Discussions • The Conclusions • Future Work • The Acknowledgements • References • Appendices • Nomenclature 5
  • 6. Title Title must be specific to the work proposed and self-explanatory. It should not be too long but must represent the complete work in abstract. 6
  • 7. • Title should not be too general. (Avoid phrases such as: Studies on.. Etc) • Title of a research paper cannot be same as that of a book 7 Title
  • 8. Examples of Titles of Technical Papers • A Wideband Digital Receiver With Hard- Switching Mixers for Cognitive Radio • Experimental Investigations of Heat Transfer Characteristics of a Miniature Heat Pipe • Design of a WSN Platform for Long-Term Environmental Monitoring for IoT Applications • VLSI Design of a Monolithic Compressive- Sensing Wideband Analog-to-Information Converter 8
  • 9. Examples of Titles of Technical Papers • A Study on Synthetic Fuzzy Measurement Model of Marketing Competitiveness • Research on Mechanism and Operation Model of Logistics Finance • An Encryption Method Based on Dual-chaos System (Check for this title’s viability) • Study of new proton conducting glasses for fuel cells (Check for this title’s viability) • 3D printed concentrator arrays for external light trapping on thin film solar cells (Check for this title’s viability) 9
  • 10. Author’s whereabouts • Author’s whereabouts imply author’s name and professional address and/or contact details. • In the author’s name, usually the title such as Mr., Mrs., or Dr. Etc will not be used. 10
  • 12. • Abstract is like a summary of complete paper • It includes – Importance of the paper – Gap in literature – Problem statement and /or Work carried out – Major Results and Conclusions 12 Abstract
  • 13. • Usually the abstract will be framed only after the complete body of the paper is ready. • Since abstract has to be very short and comprehensive and represents the entire paper, it must be carefully framed. 13 “Abstract”
  • 14. Example of an “abstract” -1 • The Cosmic-ray Soil Moisture Observing System is a promising soil moisture measurement network. It can measure soil moisture at an intermediate spatial scale with a single sensor. • In this letter, the measured cosmic-ray neutron counts during the Heihe Watershed Allied Telemetry Experimental Research were used to evaluate the capabilities of the cosmic-ray probe in soil moisture retrieval at a heterogeneous farmland. The Cosmic-ray Soil Moisture Interaction Code model was utilized to model the interaction between the measured neutron counts and the soil water content. Soilmoisture at the footprint scale of the cosmic-ray probe obtained using a wireless sensor network (SoilNET) was used as the calibration and validation data. • The results show that the cosmic-ray probe is capable of monitoring the hourly heterogeneous soil moisture dynamics at the intermediate spatial scale in a noninvasive way. Moreover, the informative measurement depth of the cosmic-ray probe can also be derived and is consistent with the soil moisture results. 14
  • 15. • The Cosmic-ray Soil Moisture Observing System is a promising soil moisture measurement network. It can measure soil moisture at an intermediate spatial scale with a single sensor. 15
  • 16. • In this letter, the measured cosmic-ray neutron counts during the Heihe Watershed Allied Telemetry Experimental Research were used to evaluate the capabilities of the cosmic-ray probe in soil moisture retrieval at a heterogeneous farmland. The Cosmic-ray Soil Moisture Interaction Code model was utilized to model the interaction between the measured neutron counts and the soil water content. Soilmoisture at the footprint scale of the cosmic-ray probe obtained using a wireless sensor network (SoilNET) was used as the calibration and validation data. 16
  • 17. • The results show that the cosmic-ray probe is capable of monitoring the hourly heterogeneous soil moisture dynamics at the intermediate spatial scale in a noninvasive way. Moreover, the informative measurement depth of the cosmic-ray probe can also be derived and is consistent with the soil moisture results. 17
  • 18. • An IoT / M2M system may support large number of battery operated devices in addition to some mains operated devices. It is important to conserve energy of these battery operated constrained devices. An IoT / M2M Gateway used in this system is an intermediate node between IoT / M2M devices and an IoT / M2M Service Platform. It enables distributed analytics and helps to reduce traffic load in the network. This gateway could be stationary or mobile. In an IoT / M2M system, it becomes important to conserve energy of this Gateway as well. • This paper proposes a framework to reduce power consumption of M2M / IoT devices as well as Gateway nodes. We buffer data at IoT Application, IoT Gateways and Devices to keep devices and Gateway nodes in sleep mode as long as possible. We allow computation of the duration to buffer this data using factors such as QoS requirements, predicted pattern of future IoT / M2M messages and congestion indicators from different network nodes. • This potentially also allows intelligent aggregation of IoT messages at the Gateway node. We also enhance signaling mechanisms and present software building blocks for this framework. Mesh as well as Cellular access technologies are considered here. 18 Example of an “abstract” - 2
  • 19. • Marketing competitiveness is the core of enterprise competitiveness. How to measure and evaluate marketing competitiveness is the important issue that facing enterprises marketing. • This study explores the measurement of marketing competitiveness. The authors put forward with a framework for measuring marketing competitiveness including five facets as product, distribution, service, personnel and industry, and propose a fuzzy measurement model basing on the theory of fuzzy mathematics and analytic hierarchy process (AHP). Then, the authors give a numerical illustrative example to test and verify this model. • The proposed model can evaluate both individual factor and integrated marketing competitiveness, which can illustrate enterprise’s market status. The model provides insight into the creation of marketing competitiveness through managing marketing resource of the product, the distribution, the service, the personnel and the industry, and can be used as a decision guide in marketing management process. Finally, the further research is encouraged to refine and enhance the proposed model. 19 Example of an “abstract” - 3
  • 20. The “Introduction” • This part includes: – The general introduction to the topic being addressed – The work carried out by other researchers in this area – The “Gap” in literature – The problem statement 20
  • 21. The “Body” of the Programme • This section is the major part of the paper in terms of length / volume. • It depicts the work carried out with all details and descriptions. • This section must be written with high clarity such that another researcher must be able to follow the procedure shown and must be able to repeat the work. 21
  • 22. The “Body” of the Programme • The Methodology followed must be explained in detail. No part must be skipped. • All specifications of equipment/tools used, the experimental/numerical procedure must be clearly indicated • The error analysis of experimental / numerical data is always desired and for a few journals, it is mandatory. 22
  • 23. Tables • Tables are drawn to showcase important statistical data derived from the work • Tables are used to display a collection of data in any section of the paper. The tables must be prepared so that they are self explanatory with proper titles. • Tables must be numbered sequentially and also cited in the text. • Include the units of measurements in the table text wherever the variable list is used 23
  • 24. Figures • Figures must be self-explanatory and proper caption must be given at the bottom of the figure. • A graph, picture, copy of photograph are all considered as figures. • The graphs and contour plots are required in “black and white” mode and not in colour mode. • The centred symbols, curves, values on the axes shown in the graph must be distinct, legible and readable in the size it is printed. 24
  • 25. Figures • Figures must be clear and the texts in the figures must be readable with minimum font • All the symbols used in the graph must be labeled either within the frame of the picture or in the caption of the figure. • The axes of the graph must be labeled and quantified. The units of the quantities used must be mentioned. • All figures and tables must be cited in the text. • Avoid snapshots of windows, poor images and big-in-size pictures. The text and numerals if any in the picture must be of readable size. 25
  • 26. Equations • All equations must be typed using Equation Editor/Math type and must be numbered sequentially • Put the equation numbers right justified and within the brackets, for ex… (1) 26
  • 27. Results and Discussions • The major results must be discussed in the light of observed trends and thoroughly compared with published data. • Showcase new results and thus highlight the importance of present paper. • Result section without discussion on physics involved is considered as null and void. 27
  • 28. • This section describes the output of your hardship. • Record all important results derived and support them with proper scientific and technical notes. • Use the graphs, tables and mathematical models to describe the results. • Comparisons of the results obtained and bringing connectivity to the published literature would increase the gravity of the result. 28 Results and Discussions
  • 29. Conclusion is not a summary of the work, but a listing of major outcomes derived from the study. Therefore do not state as what has been done in your work, instead bring out the outcome of the results and discussions in terms of statements. Many a time, the abstract and conclusions are referred for a quick assessment of the usefulness of the paper by the readers. Hence these sections must be written with upmost importance. 29 Conclusions
  • 30. Conclusions • Conclusions depict the outcome of your paper • Conclusions should not be obvious. (for ex: heat flows from higher temperature to lower temperature, etc.,) • Conclusions must be crisp and meaningful 30
  • 31. 31 What is Referencing: It is the method of indicating the resources for information relevant to present research work References
  • 32. Why Referencing is required: • It ensures that you have made a thorough study of present status of research and you have identified the gap (or requirement of present research) • It directs the readers to correct sources for further information related to present research • It is a method of acknowledging the researchers whose works were published earlier to your research • It is mandatory as a part of fight against Plagiarism 32 References
  • 33. • APA (American Phsycological Association) • MLA (Modern Language Association) • Chikago • IEEE • Turabian and so on… • Harward Style Source:https://www.staffs.ac.uk/assets/harvar d_quick_guide_tcm44-47797.pdf 33 Different Styles of Referencing and Citation
  • 38. 38 • References must appear in the reference list in the order of appearance in the paper. • Each reference must be cited at least once in the text of the paper. An example for citing a paper in the text is shown in the following example. “….The independent research works carried out by many investigators [1, 4-8] have shown the impact of dynamic forces and couples on the stability of the vehicle…” References and Citation
  • 39. 39 • In case the references are listed in numbers, the citations & References must be in the order of appearance and must be synchronised. “….The independent research works carried out by many investigators [1, 4-8] have shown the impact of dynamic forces and couples on the stability of the vehicle…” References and Citation
  • 40. 40 • In case the references are listed with authors’ name, the citation will be with the names of authors “….The independent research works carried out by many investigators [Rama et. al,(1987), Shama and Bhama (2015)] have shown the impact of dynamic forces and couples on the stability of the vehicle…” References and Citation
  • 41. 41 [1] N. Dombrowski and W. R. Johns (1963), The Aerodynamic Instability and Disintegration of Viscous Liquid Sheets, Chem. Eng. Sci., vol. 18, pp. 203-220. [2] N.A.Chigier (1991), The Physics of Atomization, Proceedings of Fifth International Conference on Liquid Atomization and Spray Systems, July 15-18, 1991. [3] Whitfield A and Baines N C(1990), Design of Radial Turbomachines, Longman Scientific Technical, New York. References (example)
  • 42. A Few Good Sources for Technical Paper Writing • http://infolab.stanford.edu/~widom/paper- writing.html • http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~dahlin/profession al/paper-writing.pdf • http://www.macalester.edu/~bressoud/capsto ne/TechPaperHowTo.pdf • http://www.uni- kassel.de/eecs/fileadmin/datas/fb16/Fachgebi ete/VS/Documents/HowToWritePaper.pdf 42
  • 43. 43 • Annexures are additional document attached to the technical paper or thesis to give additional information to the readers. • These may include lengthy derivations, detailed drawings, procedures, photographs etc. • It is added at the end of document to not to disturb the flow of paper but may be required to educate the reviewer. Appendices Annexures
  • 44. 44 • Abbreviations refers to description of short-form names used in the paper • Nomenclature refers to the description of symbols used • The Abbreviations and Nomenclature will be listed in Alphabetical order • The abbreviations / Nomenclature will be included in the beginning of the paper (after Abstract) or at the end of the paper depending on the format file specified by the editors of journal Nomenclature.docx Abbreviations / Nomenclature
  • 45. A few Research Topics in Management Studies • Social and human capital influences on opportunity recognition and resource mobilization in India's handloom industry • Effect of Quality Management Systems and Total Quality Management on Productivity before and after: Empirical Evidence from the Indian Auto Component Industry 45