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Article Structure consists of the following components:
The minimum number of pages for each article is eight (8). Every article published in the Jurnal Ilmiah M-PROGRESS of Universitas Dirgantara Marsekal Suryadarma must follow this structure, which refers to formatting standards adopted from Elsevier (www.sciencedirect.com). The article template can be downloaded from the journal's website.
The title must be concise and informative, reflecting the core findings and relationships between variables. The title should not exceed 15 words.
The abstract must be written in both Bahasa Indonesia and English. It should include the research urgency, objectives, methods, main results, and conclusion. The abstract should be eye-catching to attract reader interest. Below the abstract, include keywords (maximum of 6) that are specific and relevant for indexing.
This section presents the background, problem formulation, research objectives, and structure of the paper. It should be written without subheadings.
This section may use theory names or methods. It provides a theoretical basis for the methodology used in the study.
This section explains the research steps systematically and concisely. If data collection is conducted, explain the sampling techniques and analysis methods used.
Present the findings clearly and succinctly, supported by scientific analysis. Avoid presenting data in tables or figures alone without any discussion.
Conclusions must be written in paragraph form without numbering. This section should include implications and limitations of the research.
All references must be consistently cited according to the in-text citations and listed alphabetically by the last name of the author. Referencing must follow the Jurnal Ilmiah M-PROGRESS Author Guidelines.
Journal Articles:
Awaludin, Muryan., RS, Wahono. (2015). Penerapan Metode Distance Transform Pada Linear Discriminant Analysis Untuk Kemunculan Kulit Pada Deteksi Kulit.
Kakumanu, P., Makrogiannis, S., & Bourbakis, N. (2007). A survey of skin-color modeling and detection methods. Pattern Recognition, 40(3), 1106–1122.
Books:
Christensen, C.M. (1998). The Innovator’s Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail. Harvard Business School Press, Boston, MA.
Deming, W.E. (1986). Out of Crisis. MIT Center for Advanced Engineering Study, Cambridge, MA.
Edited Books (Book Chapters):
Duncan, R.B. (1976). The ambidextrous organization: designing dual structures for innovation. In: Kilmann, R.H., Pondy, L.R., Slevin, D. (Eds.), The Management of Organization, Vol. 1. North-Holland, New York, NY, 167–188.
Conference Proceedings:
Clare, L., Pottie, G., & Agre, J. (1999). Self-organizing distributed sensor networks. Proceedings SPIE Conference Unattended Ground Sensor Technologies and Applications, Vol. 3713, Orlando, April 8, 229–237.
Theses/Dissertations:
Heinzelman, W. (2000). Application-specific protocol architectures for wireless networks. Ph.D. dissertation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge.
Internet Sources:
Honeycutt, H. (2011). Communication and Design Course, 1998. Website: http://dcr.rpi.edu/commdesign/class1.html, accessed March 3.