JCAI

Author Guidelines

Journal of Computer Allied Intellegence(JCAI, ISSN: 2584-2676) is an open access, peer-reviewed scholarly journal. The primary objective is to achieve proficiency in the rapidly advancing field of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning through the provision of high-quality education. The journal publishes research articles, review articles, commentaries, editorials, technical articles, and short communications with a Bi-monthly frequency (06 issues per year).

    Requirements for publication
    • The article must be written by the correct Template.
    • Researchers should make sure that the work they send in is original, has not been released anywhere else, and hasn’t been copied from other sources.
    • A high-quality plagiarism detection program, such as Turnitin or iThenticate, will be used to assess the similarity of the content, ensuring that it does not exceed 20%, including the reference section. If references are excluded, the percentage should be below 5%. If the work reports on research that is not in accordance with ethical standards.
    • The length of the abstract should range from 200 to 1000 characters. Please refrain from using too many abbreviations and avoid referencing any sources in the abstract.​
    • Five keywords that describe the main idea of the article are needed.
    • Please use the reference style that is shown in the template. If the references are not in the right style, they may need to be rewritten and checked frequently.
    • The articles must be written in proper English and must pass both a grammar and spell check.
    • Only published works and abstracts, those under press, and those accessible through open e-print/preprint servers may be referenced.
    • The Reference List cites every reference that is referenced in the text, and vice versa.
    • Significant quality is required for figures and tables.
    • The use of copyrighted content from other sources has been approved (such as the Internet).
    Article types
    • Research paper: papers (4000–8000 words) reporting unique research with a have the objective, questions, methods, results, discussions, and conclusions.
    • Review paper: reviews that are in-depth (4000–8000 words) and build upon thorough citations to the material that has already been published. These articles aim to provide pertinent ideas, theoretical propositions, frameworks, and constraints related to the subject matter.
    • Technical paper: Technical papers are original stories on specialised technical work that are meant to be read by professionals. There are not any rules about how long a piece can be, but it should be long enough to clearly explain the work that was done, but not so long that it makes it harder to understand.
    • Short communications: Short papers (1000–2500 words) that feature original study. The papers should be important to the study group in the journal and not just basic reports or small amounts of data.

    Estimated Time for Approval: It will take minimum 04 to 06 weeks.

    Manuscript Submission

    Submission of a manuscript

    When a manuscript is submitted, it is assumed that the work described has never been published before, that it is not being considered for publication elsewhere, and that the responsible authorities at the institute where the work was conducted, as well as any co-authors, have given their tacit or explicit approval for the publication of the work. If there are any demands for compensation, the publisher will not be held legally liable.

    Permissions

    Authors must seek permission from the copyright owner(s) for both the print and online forms, and provide proof that such permission has been obtained, before submitting their articles if they desire to use figures, tables, or text sections that have previously been published elsewhere. Without such proof, any content received will be assumed to have come from the writers.

    Article Modification

    Any changes made to an article that has been published must have the journal’s editor’s approval. The extent of the revisions will be determined by the editors. The original article has minor edits made directly to it. The situations listed below apply to significant changes.

    Retraction

    A retraction is a statement indicating that the work should not be considered a canonical work of science. If there is sufficient proof that the results are unreliable which may be from wrongdoing or sincere error retractions are provided.
    Retraction occurs when:

    • The results have already been published elsewhere without the required acknowledgement, consent, or explanation.
    • Whether the work has been plagiarized.
    • If the work reports research that is not in accordance with ethical standards.