skeleton.Rmd 11 KB

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  1. ---
  2. title: Template for preparing your research report submission to PNAS using RMarkdown
  3. # Use letters for affiliations, numbers to show equal authorship (if applicable) and to indicate the corresponding author
  4. author:
  5. - name: Alice Anonymous
  6. affiliation: a,1,2
  7. - name: Bob Security
  8. affiliation: a,b
  9. address:
  10. - code: a
  11. address: Some Institute of Technology, Department, Street, City, State, Zip
  12. - code: b
  13. address: Another University Department, Street, City, State, Zip
  14. corresponding_author:
  15. - code: 2
  16. text: "To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: [email protected]"
  17. # For footer text
  18. lead_author_surname: Anonymous
  19. ## Remove this if not required
  20. equal_authors:
  21. - code: 1
  22. text: "A.O.(Author One) and A.T. (Author Two) contributed equally to this work (remove if not applicable)."
  23. author_contributions: |
  24. Please provide details of author contributions here.
  25. ## Remove this if not required
  26. conflict_of_interest: |
  27. Please declare any conflict of interest here.
  28. abstract: |
  29. Please provide an abstract of no more than 250 words in a single paragraph. Abstracts should explain to the general reader the major contributions of the article. References in the abstract must be cited in full within the abstract itself and cited in the text.
  30. significance: |
  31. Authors must submit a 120-word maximum statement about the significance of their research paper written at a level understandable to an undergraduate educated scientist outside their field of speciality. The primary goal of the Significance Statement is to explain the relevance of the work in broad context to a broad readership. The Significance Statement appears in the paper itself and is required for all research papers.
  32. acknowledgements: |
  33. Please include your acknowledgments here, set in a single paragraph. Please do not include any acknowledgments in the Supporting Information, or anywhere else in the manuscript.
  34. keywords:
  35. - one
  36. - two
  37. - optional
  38. - optional
  39. - optional
  40. ## must be one of: pnasresearcharticle (usual two-column layout), pnasmathematics (one column layout), or pnasinvited (invited submissions only)
  41. pnas_type: pnasresearcharticle
  42. bibliography: pnas-sample.bib
  43. csl: pnas.csl
  44. ## change to true to add optional line numbering
  45. lineno: false
  46. output: rticles::pnas_article
  47. ---
  48. This PNAS journal template is provided to help you write your work in the
  49. correct journal format. Instructions for use are provided below.
  50. Note: please start your introduction without including the word
  51. "Introduction" as a section heading (except for math articles in the
  52. Physical Sciences section); this heading is implied in the first
  53. paragraphs.
  54. Guide to using this template {.unnumbered}
  55. ========================================
  56. Please note that whilst this template provides a preview of the typeset
  57. manuscript for submission, to help in this preparation, it will not
  58. necessarily be the final publication layout. For more detailed
  59. information please see the [PNAS Information for
  60. Authors](http://www.pnas.org/site/authors/format.xhtml).
  61. Author Affiliations {#author-affiliations .unnumbered}
  62. -------------------
  63. Include department, institution, and complete address, with the
  64. ZIP/postal code, for each author. Use lower case letters to match
  65. authors with institutions, as shown in the example. Authors with an
  66. ORCID ID may supply this information at submission.
  67. Submitting Manuscripts {#submitting-manuscripts .unnumbered}
  68. ----------------------
  69. All authors must submit their articles at
  70. [PNAScentral](http://www.pnascentral.org/cgi-bin/main.plex). If you are
  71. using Overleaf to write your article, you can use the "Submit to PNAS"
  72. option in the top bar of the editor window.
  73. Format {#format .unnumbered}
  74. ------
  75. Many authors find it useful to organize their manuscripts with the
  76. following order of sections; Title, Author Affiliation, Keywords,
  77. Abstract, Significance Statement, Results, Discussion, Materials and
  78. methods, Acknowledgments, and References. Other orders and headings are
  79. permitted.
  80. Manuscript Length {#manuscript-length .unnumbered}
  81. -----------------
  82. PNAS generally uses a two-column format averaging 67 characters,
  83. including spaces, per line. The maximum length of a Direct Submission
  84. research article is six pages and a PNAS PLUS research article is ten
  85. pages including all text, spaces, and the number of characters displaced
  86. by figures, tables, and equations. When submitting tables, figures,
  87. and/or equations in addition to text, keep the text for your manuscript
  88. under 39,000 characters (including spaces) for Direct Submissions and
  89. 72,000 characters (including spaces) for PNAS PLUS.
  90. References {#references .unnumbered}
  91. ----------
  92. References should be cited in numerical order as they appear in text;
  93. this will be done automatically via bibtex, e.g. @belkin2002using and
  94. @berard1994embedding [@coifman2005geometric]. All references, including
  95. for the SI, should be included in the main manuscript file. References
  96. appearing in both sections should not be duplicated. SI references
  97. included in tables should be included with the main reference section.
  98. Data Archival {#data-archival .unnumbered}
  99. -------------
  100. PNAS must be able to archive the data essential to a published article.
  101. Where such archiving is not possible, deposition of data in public
  102. databases, such as GenBank, ArrayExpress, Protein Data Bank, Unidata,
  103. and others outlined in the Information for Authors, is acceptable.
  104. Language-Editing Services {#language-editing-services .unnumbered}
  105. -------------------------
  106. Prior to submission, authors who believe their manuscripts would benefit
  107. from professional editing are encouraged to use a language-editing
  108. service (see list at www.pnas.org/site/authors/language-editing.xhtml).
  109. PNAS does not take responsibility for or endorse these services, and
  110. their use has no bearing on acceptance of a manuscript for publication.
  111. ![Placeholder image of a frog with a long example caption to show
  112. justification setting.<span data-label="fig:frog"></span>](frog.png)
  113. Digital Figures {#sec:figures .unnumbered}
  114. ---------------
  115. Only TIFF, EPS, and high-resolution PDF for Mac or PC are allowed for
  116. figures that will appear in the main text, and images must be final
  117. size. Authors may submit U3D or PRC files for 3D images; these must be
  118. accompanied by 2D representations in TIFF, EPS, or high-resolution PDF
  119. format. Color images must be in RGB (red, green, blue) mode. Include the
  120. font files for any text.
  121. Figures and Tables should be labelled and referenced in the standard way
  122. using the `\label{}` and `\ref{}` commands.
  123. Figure \[fig:frog\] shows an example of how to insert a column-wide
  124. figure. To insert a figure wider than one column, please use the
  125. `\begin{figure*}...\end{figure*}` environment. Figures wider than one
  126. column should be sized to 11.4 cm or 17.8 cm wide.
  127. Single column equations {#single-column-equations .unnumbered}
  128. -----------------------
  129. Authors may use 1- or 2-column equations in their article, according to
  130. their preference.
  131. To allow an equation to span both columns, options are to use the
  132. `\begin{figure*}...\end{figure*}` environment mentioned above for
  133. figures, or to use the `\begin{widetext}...\end{widetext}` environment
  134. as shown in equation \[eqn:example\] below.
  135. Please note that this option may run into problems with floats and
  136. footnotes, as mentioned in the [cuted package
  137. documentation](http://texdoc.net/pkg/cuted). In the case of problems
  138. with footnotes, it may be possible to correct the situation using
  139. commands `\footnotemark` and `\footnotetext`.
  140. $$\begin{aligned}
  141. (x+y)^3&=(x+y)(x+y)^2\\
  142. &=(x+y)(x^2+2xy+y^2) \label{eqn:example} \\
  143. &=x^3+3x^2y+3xy^3+x^3.
  144. \end{aligned}$$
  145. <!-- pandoc writes all tables using longtable, which fails in 2-column mode
  146. Species CBS CV G3
  147. ----------------------- ------ ------ ------
  148. 1\. Acetaldehyde 0.0 0.0 0.0
  149. 2\. Vinyl alcohol 9.1 9.6 13.5
  150. 3\. Hydroxyethylidene 50.8 51.2 54.0
  151. : Comparison of the fitted potential energy surfaces and ab initio
  152. benchmark electronic energy calculations
  153. -->
  154. Supporting Information (SI) {#supporting-information-si .unnumbered}
  155. ---------------------------
  156. The main text of the paper must stand on its own without the SI. Refer
  157. to SI in the manuscript at an appropriate point in the text. Number
  158. supporting figures and tables starting with S1, S2, etc. Authors are
  159. limited to no more than 10 SI files, not including movie files. Authors
  160. who place detailed materials and methods in SI must provide sufficient
  161. detail in the main text methods to enable a reader to follow the logic
  162. of the procedures and results and also must reference the online
  163. methods. If a paper is fundamentally a study of a new method or
  164. technique, then the methods must be described completely in the main
  165. text. Because PNAS edits SI and composes it into a single PDF, authors
  166. must provide the following file formats only.
  167. ### SI Text {#si-text .unnumbered}
  168. Supply Word, RTF, or LaTeX files (LaTeX files must be accompanied by a
  169. PDF with the same file name for visual reference).
  170. ### SI Figures {#si-figures .unnumbered}
  171. Provide a brief legend for each supporting figure after the supporting
  172. text. Provide figure images in TIFF, EPS, high-resolution PDF, JPEG, or
  173. GIF format; figures may not be embedded in manuscript text. When saving
  174. TIFF files, use only LZW compression; do not use JPEG compression. Do
  175. not save figure numbers, legends, or author names as part of the image.
  176. Composite figures must be pre-assembled.
  177. ### 3D Figures {#d-figures .unnumbered}
  178. Supply a composable U3D or PRC file so that it may be edited and
  179. composed. Authors may submit a PDF file but please note it will be
  180. published in raw format and will not be edited or composed.
  181. ### SI Tables {#si-tables .unnumbered}
  182. Supply Word, RTF, or LaTeX files (LaTeX files must be accompanied by a
  183. PDF with the same file name for visual reference); include only one
  184. table per file. Do not use tabs or spaces to separate columns in Word
  185. tables.
  186. ### SI Datasets {#si-datasets .unnumbered}
  187. Supply Excel (.xls), RTF, or PDF files. This file type will be published
  188. in raw format and will not be edited or composed.
  189. ### SI Movies {#si-movies .unnumbered}
  190. Supply Audio Video Interleave (avi), Quicktime (mov), Windows Media
  191. (wmv), animated GIF (gif), or MPEG files and submit a brief legend for
  192. each movie in a Word or RTF file. All movies should be submitted at the
  193. desired reproduction size and length. Movies should be no more than 10
  194. MB in size.
  195. ### Still images {#still-images .unnumbered}
  196. Authors must provide a still image from each video file. Supply TIFF,
  197. EPS, high-resolution PDF, JPEG, or GIF files.
  198. ### Appendices {#appendices .unnumbered}
  199. PNAS prefers that authors submit individual source files to ensure
  200. readability. If this is not possible, supply a single PDF file that
  201. contains all of the SI associated with the paper. This file type will be
  202. published in raw format and will not be edited or composed.
  203. <!-- Leave these lines as they are at the end of your .Rmd file to ensure placement of methods & acknowledgements sections before the references-->
  204. \showmatmethods
  205. \showacknow
  206. \pnasbreak