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期刊名称:STOCHASTIC ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND RISK ASSESSMENT

ISSN:1436-3240
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Bi-monthly
出版社:SPRINGER, ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600 , NEW YORK, United States, NY, 10004
  出版社网址:http://www.springer-ny.com/
期刊网址:http://www.springeronline.com/sgw/cda/frontpage/0,10735,5-0-70-1093450-detailsPage%253Djournal%257Cdescription%257Cdescription,00.html
影响因子:3.379
主题范畴:ENGINEERING, ENVIRONMENTAL;    ENGINEERING, CIVIL;    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES;    STATISTICS & PROBABILITY;    WATER RESOURCES

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

 

Stochastic Environmental Research and Risk Assessment (SERRA) will publish research papers, reviews and technical notes on stochastic and probabilistic approaches to environmental sciences and engineering, including interactions of earth and atmospheric environments with people and ecosystems. The basic idea is to bring together research papers on stochastic modelling in various fields of environmental sciences and to provide an interdisciplinary forum for the exchange of ideas, for communicating on issues that cut across disciplinary barriers, and for the dissemination of stochastic techniques used in different fields to the community of interested researchers. Original contributions will be condisered dealing with modelling (theoretical and computational), measurements and instrumentation in one or more of the following topical areas:

- Spatiotemporal analysis and mapping of natural processes.

- Enviroinformatics.

- Environmental risk assessment, reliability analysis and decision making.

- Surface and subsurface hydrology and hydraulics.

- Multiphase porous media domains and contaminant transport modelling.

- Hazardous waste site characterization.

- Stochastic turbulence and random hydrodynamic fields.

- Chaotic and fractal systems.

- Random waves and seafloor morphology.

- Stochastic atmospheric and climate processes.

- Air pollution and quality assessment research.

- Modern geostatistics.

- Mechanisms of pollutant formation, emission, exposure and absorption.

- Physical, chemical and biological analysis of human exposure from single and multiple media and routes; control and protection.

- Bioinformatics.

- Probabilistic methods in ecology and population biology.

- Epidemiological investigations.

- Models using stochastic differential equations stochastic or partial differential equations.

- Hazardous waste site characterization.

 

 


Instructions to Authors

 

PREPARING A MANUSCRIPT

After the publishing agreement is signed, please consult this section for detailed instructions on the preparation of the text and illustrations. Preparation of materials for publication differs significantly from the preparation of materials for the Internet, display presentations, or other media. Although the emphasis during this stage is on content, it is useful for the publisher to review samples of electronic files for text and graphics early in the writing process to ensure that the files are in a proper and usable format.

 

UNFORMATTED FILES

By providing the publisher with word-processed files, the author may eliminate the need for the entire book to be rekeyed at the typesetting house. However, if electronic submission is to be more time and cost effective than a traditional manuscript, the guidelines below should be followed.

Preferred Formats

Microsoft Word (Windows, Macintosh, DOS)

RTF (Rich Text Format)

SGML or XML

HTML

ASCII

Keying the Manuscript

Type the manuscript using minimal formatting. Do not try to make the print-out look like a typeset page. The more codes and formatting you insert into the files, the more the typesetter will have to delete before the actual design of the book can be applied. Please submit a sample file to your acquisitions editor for evaluation early in the writing process.

Double space the entire manuscript, including the references and captions.

Submit the manuscript on disk, along with a single-sided paper copy. The printout should match the disk files exactly. If a change is made to the disk files at the last minute, print out a new copy of the page or file affected.

Font: Use Times Roman or a similar serif typeface throughout.

Use the same typeface for all heads, lists, and other elements of the text.

Heads:

Avoid the use of boldface or italics.

Use upper- and lowercase letters for all heads; do not type any heads in all capital letters.

Maintain consistency throughout the manuscript in the presentation of the different levels of heads. A main level head should appear the same in all chapters. The same applies to subheads and further divisions.

Do not use hard carriage returns (the enter key) to double space the manuscript.

Do not indent paragraphs; instead, use two carriage returns at the end of a paragraph.

If material needs to be indented, use only one tab (not hard spaces created by pressing the space bar). Use the same tab setting consistently throughout the text.

Do not justify the text or force hyphenation. Let the text run ragged right.

Use two or three hyphens for an en or em dash with no space before or after them.

Distinguish between the number one (1) and a lowercase letter "el" (l), as well as between the number zero (0) and a capital "oh" (O). Even if they appear the same on the screen and on the print-out, they will appear differently when typeset.

Use only one space after a period.

If the text contains a lot of mathematics, consult your acquisitions editor about providing FORMATTED FILES. Math does not convert easily into typesetting systems and will have to be rekeyed.

Creating Files

Put the text of each chapter in its own file without references, tables, captions, room for illustrations, or markers for illustration placement. Simply cite the illustration, table, or footnote in the appropriate paragraphs of the text.

Illustration captions and references should be placed at the end of a file or in separate files.

Tables: Place tables in a separate file from the text.

Remember to number the pages in each file in the lower right-hand corner.

Give files simple and easily recognizable names. Be sure that the book author's/editor's name and the title of the book are on the disk label, along with the chapter author's name or the chapter number, the chapter title, and the software (including version number) that was used to create the files.

In an authored book, use the chapter number plus the word "txt" for text, "ref" for references, "tab" for table, and "cap" for captions. Thus, chapter 1 could have four files:
chap1txt
chap1ref
chap1tab
chap1cap

In an edited book, use the author's name (instead of the chapter number). Thus, a chapter by John Smith could have four files:
Smithtxt
Smithref
Smithtab
Smithcap

 

EDITORIAL STYLE

General: Please follow discipline-specific guidelines, as detailed in the manuals published by the professional organization for the discipline of the book, such as the American Chemical Society, the American Mathematical Society, the American Institute of Physics, the American Medical Association, the American Psychological Association, and the College of Biology Editors. For a more general resource, please consult the most recent edition of The Chicago Manual of Style.

Abstracts: Should not be included in book chapters.

Chapter titles:

Chapter titles should be parallel in structure and consistent in style. In edited works, this is the responsibility of the book editor because it requires an overview of the entire manuscript:

Correct:

 

Breast Cancer: Causes and Treatment
Colon Cancer: Causes and Treatment

Incorrect:

 

Breast Cancer: Causes and Treatment
The Causes and Treatment of Colon Cancer

If a book has parts, the part title should not be repeated in the chapter titles, particularly if the part title appears in the running head. Thus, if a part is entitled Pediatric Medicine, each chapter does not have to include the word Pediatric; the titles can simply read: Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, etc.

Diacritical marks: Characters with diacritical marks should be selected from the symbol chart available in each word processor. If all symbols are not available, write the correct character in the margin of the appropriate line. Check that diacritical marks are printed properly in the final print-out.

Heads:

It is unnecessary to use the word Introduction as the first section head in a chapter, since the first paragraphs clearly present introductory material.

Keep heads parallel from one chapter to another, particularly in edited books. One chapter should not end with a Summary, another with a Conclusion, and a third with Summary and Conclusions. As with consistency in chapter titles, this is the responsibility of the book editor.

For keying heads so that the levels are clearly differentiated, see KEYING THE MANUSCRIPT: HEADS

Italics:

Use italics for variables in math, for prefixes in chemistry, to identify genera and species, and for foreign words (as identified by Webster's New International Dictionary, 4th edition).

Commonly used Latin abbreviations and phrases, such as e.g., i.e., in vitro, and in vivo, should not be italicized.

Avoid using italics for emphasis.

Lists:

Leave a blank space above and below lists.

Indent items one tab.

If the text runs more than one line, subsequent lines should run flush left; do not insert spaces, tabs or line returns to force them to indent.

Numbers: Follow discipline-specific guidelines, but note:

Spell out numbers 1 to 9 unless followed by a unit of measure or a decimal.

Spell out a number at the beginning of a sentence.

Numbers smaller than 1.0 with decimals should include a zero before the decimal point in text, tables, and illustrations.

Spelling: Consult Webster's and use American spelling throughout. For the spelling of technical terms, consult a discipline-specific dictionary.

Symbols: Be sure symbols are clear. Distinguish between the number one and the lowercase "el," and between the number zero (0) and the capital "oh" (O). Use the Greek characters from the symbol chart available in each word processor to avoid confusion with American lowercase letters. As with diacritical marks, check the print-out to confirm that symbols have printed correctly.

Trademark symbol: Delete if used for a pharmaceutical. Retain if it applies to a new procedure or piece of equipment.

Units of measurement: Use SI units wherever possible.


The following sites can be clicked on to provide additional information: http://www.hlalapansi.demon.co.uk/Metric/index.html#units or http://www.bipm.org/enus/welcome.html

 

FINAL CHECK

Proofreading

Use the word processor's spell checker to catch obvious errors in the manuscript.

In addition, print out the entire manuscript and proofread word for word.

Be sure that all special symbols, such as mathematical symbols and diacritical marks, have printed properly.

References

Every reference cited in the text must appear in the reference list, and every reference in the list must be cited in the text. However, a book may have both a reference list and a separate list of further readings.

Numbered References

The number of references cited in the text should match the number of references in the reference file.

References should be consistent and complete.

Check for errors in numbering, such as two references with the same number or a reference without a number.

References should be cited in numerical order in the text.

Author/Date References

Check that authors?names and dates of publication in the text match the reference list.

If an author has numerous publications with more than one coauthor, list at least the first three and no more than the first six before using "et al.".

The reference list should be alphabetical by author. If an author has numerous publications with and without coauthors, list the items in the following order:

Works by the author alone by date.

Works with coauthors listed alphabetically, first by the author's and then by the coauthor's name. If the same authors have more than one work, list those by date.

Works by three or more authors, list alphabetically by authors. If the same authors have written more than one publication, list them by date.

If an author or group of authors has more than one publication in the same year, differentiate them by adding a, b, etc., to the date. Remember to add the same letters to the citation in the text.

Example:
Smith J. 1968.
Smith J. 1972
Smith J. 1981a
Smith J. 1981b
Smith J and R. Jones. 1981
Smith J. and R. Jones. 1982
Smith J., R. Jones, and C. Adams. 1981
Smith J., R. Jones, and J. Kelly. 1979
Smith J., J. Kelley, and R. Jones. 1968

Tables and Illustrations

Check that:

The number of tables and figures cited in the text are correct.

Every caption has a figure and every figure has a caption.

All abbreviations appearing in figures are defined in the caption.

All abbreviations and superscripted footnote letters used in tables are explained at the bottom of the table.

All material reprinted from copyrighted sources should have a credit line (either in the caption or as a separate line) indicating the source.

Figures: Credit lines should be in parentheses after the caption.

Tables: Credit lines should appear at the bottom on the table (and not as part of the table title).

SUBMISSION CHECKLIST

When submitting the final manuscript, please provide:

For each chapter:

Separate files for the text, end-of-chapter references, tables, and captions

A double-spaced, single-sided print-out of all files

File and print-out for the front matter

Files and print-outs for any back matter: appendices, glossary, etc.

Copies of all letters of permission

Illustrations

Original hard copies

Original photographs

Electronic files and a high-quality print-out of each figure

For each disk submitted:

A directory of the disk

A disk label indicating:

The name of the author/editor of the book

The name of the book

Chapter number or author name (if an edited book)

Chapter title

Software (including version number) used to create the files

A list of any missing items

Completed Author/Editor Questionnaire

 

Please note that if you are submitting electronic files, Springer also needs a print-out of these files from you.

 


Editorial Board

 

G. Christakos, DESE, School of Public Health, 111 Rosenau Hall,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7
phone: (919) 966-1767, fax: (919) 966-7911, e-mail: george_christakos@unc.edu

 

Advisory board

J. M. Angulo, Granada, Spain
G. E. Baecher, College Park/MO, USA
G. Barenblatt, Berkeley/CA, USA
B. Bob¨¦e, St.-Foy/Quebec, Canada
P. Bogaert, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium (Book Review Editor)
R.L. Bras, Cambridge/MA, USA
G. Cassiani, Lancaster, UK
A. Chorin, Berkeley/CA, USA
Y. Chung, Seoul, Korea
D. Crawford-Brown, Chapel Hill/NC, USA
J.H. Cushman, West Lafayette/IN, USA
V.D. Cvetkovic, Stockholm, Sweden
T. Ginn, Davis/CA, USA
V. Gupta, Boulder/CO, USA
J.J. Harrington, Cambridge/MA, USA
K.W. Hipel, Waterloo/Ontario, Canada
D. Hristopulos, Chania/Crete, Greece
Z.J. Kabala, Duke/NC, USA
B. Kastenberg, Berkeley/CA, USA
P. Kitanidis, Stanford/CA, USA
R. Krzysztofowicz, Charlottesville/VA, USA
S. Lovejoy, Montreal/Quebec, Canada
G. de Marsily, Fontainebleau, France
T. McKone, Berkeley/CA, USA
D. McLaughlin, Cambridge/MA, USA
S.P. Neuman, Tucson/AZ, USA
E.K. Paleologos, Columbia/SC, USA
V. Pawlowsky Glahn, Barcelona, Spain
E. Plate, Karlsruhe, Germany
D. Posa, Lecce, Italy
Y. Rubin, Berkeley/CA, USA
D. Schertzer, Paris, France
C.D. Sherman, San Francisco/CA, USA
V.P. Singh, Baton Rouge/LA, USA
P. Switzer, Stanford/CA, USA
D. Talay, Sophia Antipolis, France

 



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