For Author

Computational Discovery and Intelligent Systems (CDIS) accepts a range of manuscript types that support its mission: advancing knowledge in computational modeling, artificial intelligence, machine learning, optimization, data analytics, and intelligent systems across scientific, engineering, and applied domains. Authors may request a preferred manuscript category during submission; however, the Editor-in-Chief and Associate Editors reserve the right to determine the final classification. The chosen category will appear above the manuscript title in the published version.

Plagiarism: Manuscript Duplicity is a crime; thus Plagiarism should be completely avoided. Figures and Tables extracted from any sources are considered malpractice. The Data extracted must be cited, and this journal does not encourage the exact reproduction of any content. 

Article Publication Charges

Computational Discovery and Intelligent Systems (CDIS) ISSN (Online): 3070-5037 is an Open Access publisher and the standard charge for publishing is FREE, payable on acceptance of each manuscript. If you have issues, Please contact the editors for further information through the given email: (production@pub.scientificirg.com).

Article Types: Computational Discovery and Intelligent Systems (CDIS) accepts:-

Original Articles, Review, Mini Review, Case Reports, Editorial, Letter to the Editor, Commentary, Rapid Communications and Perspectives, and Conference Proceedings.

1. Research Articles

Research Articles report original findings based on computational experiments, algorithmic development, simulations, modeling frameworks, data-driven analyses, or applied implementations of intelligent systems. Submissions may involve empirical evaluation, benchmarking, experimental datasets, statistical analysis, or domain-specific validation. Articles must demonstrate methodological rigor, reproducibility, and clear scientific contribution.

Word limit: up to 8000 words.

Format: Must follow the CDIS structured template (Word OR Latex).

2. Review Articles

Review Articles provide comprehensive overviews of existing literature and state-of-the-art developments in areas related to computational discovery, AI methodologies, machine learning architectures, optimization strategies, or intelligent system applications. Reviews should synthesize past work, identify current gaps, and propose future research directions.

Word limit: up to 6000 words.

3. Short Communications

Short Communications present concise findings, preliminary results, novel computational insights, or brief discussions of emerging concepts in intelligent systems. These articles may highlight innovative ideas, early-stage implementations, or focused observations without requiring full methodological elaboration.

Word limit: approximately 800 words.

4. Editorial Articles

Editorial Articles are invited contributions from experts reflecting on current trends, challenges, technological developments, or research priorities within computational discovery and intelligent systems. These pieces provide authoritative perspectives for the journal readership.

Word limit: up to 800 words.

5. Letters to the Editor

Letters provide scholarly commentary on articles published in CDIS. They may raise questions, offer alternative interpretations, propose clarifications, or highlight theoretical or methodological considerations. Letters must be professional, evidence-based, and directly related to prior publications in the journal.

Word limit: 400–500 words.

6. Perspectives

Perspectives offer expert reflections on computational or technological policies, emerging AI trends, evolving methodologies, or societal impacts of intelligent systems. These articles present reasoned viewpoints informed by domain expertise rather than original experimental data.

Word limit: up to 1000 words.

7. Proceedings

Proceedings consist of curated abstracts or extended summaries presented at scientific conferences, workshops, or symposia aligned with the journal’s scope. Inclusion ensures visibility, indexing, and citation recognition for contributing authors.

8. General Manuscript Classification Policy

Manuscripts submitted to CDIS are classified into the categories above based on research depth, structure, and relevance to journal standards. While authors may indicate their preferred classification in the cover letter, the editorial team determines the final category to ensure consistency and quality across publications. The assigned classification will be displayed above the title in the published manuscript.

Note: Authors must prepare and submit a cover letter with their manuscript

Manuscript Formatting Guidelines

Manuscript Title: The title should be limited to 25 words or less and should not contain abbreviations. The title should be a brief phrase describing the contents of the paper.

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Manuscript Formatting Guidelines

Computational Discovery and Intelligent Systems (CDIS)

Publisher: Scientific Innovation Research Group (SIRG)

Authors submitting manuscripts to Computational Discovery and Intelligent Systems (CDIS) must prepare their papers according to the formatting rules below. All manuscripts must be uploaded using the official CDIS template and adhere strictly to the typography, structure, image/table placement, and referencing requirements provided.

These guidelines ensure uniformity, professional presentation, and compliance with international indexing standards.

1. General Formatting Requirements

1.1 Document Setup

  • File format: Microsoft Word (.docx) OR (Latex) download from (link - Template Download)

  • Paper size: A4

  • Margins: 1.27 cm on all sides

  • Line spacing: Single (1.0)

  • Paragraphs: Justified alignment; no indentation

  • Font: Arial (mandatory)

  • Header/Footer: Do not include personal headers or footers — the journal adds them during production.

1.2 Font Specifications

Section Font Size Style
Title Times New Roman 15 pt Bold
Authors Times New Roman 12 pt Bold
Affiliations Times New Roman 9 pt Italic
Corresponding author line Times New Roman 9 pt Italic
Abstract Times New Roman 10 pt Normal
Keywords Times New Roman 10 pt Normal
Main Text Times New Roman 10 pt Normal
Section Headings Times New Roman 14 pt Bold
Figure & Table Captions Times New Roman 10 pt Bold
References Times New Roman 9 pt Normal
Sub Section Heading Times New Roman 12 pt Bold and Italic        

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2. Manuscript Structure

All manuscripts must follow the CDIS structure in this exact order:

  1. Title

  2. Authors’ Names

  3. Affiliations (Alph-bit) as  (a, b, c,...)

  4. Corresponding Author Information

    • Mark with as :  1

    • Email (Mandatory)

    • telephone, fax (if applicable)

  5. Abstract

    • Maximum 350 words

    • No figures, tables, equations, or citations

  6. Keywords

    • 3 to 5 keywords

  7. Main Sections (example structure)

    • Introduction

    • Materials and Methods

    • Results and Discussion

    • Conclusion

  8. Acknowledgements

  9. Disclosure statement

  10. References and Notes (IEEE format) see section 6 below.

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3. Abstract and Keywords

3.1 Abstract

  • Maximum 350 words

  • Should briefly state:

    • Aim of the study

    • Methods

    • Main findings

    • Conclusions

  • Must be written in Times New Roman 10 pt, single-spaced

  • Must not contain:

    • Citations

    • Figures/tables

    • Special formatting or equations

3.2 Keywords

  • Add 3 to 5 keywords after the abstract

  • Each keyword begins with a capital letter

  • Listed one per line (according to template)


4. Figures, Tables, Schemes

4.1 Figures

  • Number sequentially (Figure. 1, Figure 2…) must be Bold inside the text and in its Captions .

  • Placed as close as possible to their first mention

  • Centered on the page

  • Captions placed below the figure (the word Figure 1 is bold) and the text is Normal

4.2 Tables

  • Number sequentially (Table 1, Table 2…) must be Bold inside the text and in its Captions.

  • Captions are placed above the table. ((the word Table 1 is bold) and the text is Normal)

  • Avoid vertical lines; horizontal lines only where necessary

4.3 Schemes

  • Used for chemical or computational workflows or processes

  • Numbered as Scheme 1, Scheme 2…

  • Caption placed below

4.4 Citation

  • Every figure/table/scheme must be cited in the text in correct numerical order.


5. Equations

  • Use the built-in MS Word equation editor

  • Equations should be centered

  • Equation numbers must be in parentheses, right-aligned:

     
    E = mc² (1)

6. References Format (IEEE Style)

Follow the numbering style shown in the PDF template:

6.1 In-Text Citation

Use square brackets:

  • Example: as shown in [1]

  • Multiple sources: [1–3] or [2, 5]

6.2 Reference List Examples

  1. Examples of citations for different materials:

    Material Type

    Works Cited

    Book in print

    [1] D. Sarunyagate, Ed., Lasers. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1996.

    Chapter in book

    [2] G. O. Young, "Synthetic structure of industrial plastics," in Plastics, 2nd ed., vol. 3, J. Peters, Ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964, pp. 15-64.

    eBook

    [3] L. Bass, P. Clements, and R. Kazman, Software Architecture in Practice, 2nd ed. Reading, MA: Addison Wesley, 2003. [E-book] Available: Safari e-book.

    Journal article

    [4] G. Liu, K. Y. Lee, and H. F. Jordan, "TDM and TWDM de Bruijn networks and shufflenets for optical communications," IEEE Trans. Comp., vol. 46, pp. 695-701, June 1997.

    E-Journal (from database)

    [5] H. Ayasso and A. Mohammad-Djafari, "Joint NDT Image Restoration and Segmentation Using Gauss–Markov–Potts Prior Models and Variational Bayesian Computation," IEEE Transactions on Image Processing, vol. 19, no. 9, pp. 2265-77, 2010. [Online]. Available: IEEE Xplore, http://www.ieee.org. [Accessed Sept. 10, 2010]. 

    E-Journal (from internet)

    [6] A. Altun, “Understanding hypertext in the context of reading on the web: Language learners’ experience,” Current Issues in Education, vol. 6, no. 12, July, 2005. [Online serial]. Available: http://cie.ed.asu.edu/volume6/number12/. [Accessed Dec. 2, 2007].

    Conference paper

    [7] L. Liu and H. Miao, "A specification based approach to testing polymorphic attributes," in Formal Methods and Software Engineering: Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Formal Engineering Methods, ICFEM 2004, Seattle, WA, USA, November 8-12, 2004, J. Davies, W. Schulte, M. Barnett, Eds. Berlin: Springer, 2004. pp. 306-19.

    Conference proceedings

    [8] T. J. van Weert and R. K. Munro, Eds., Informatics and the Digital Society: Social, ethical and cognitive issues: IFIP TC3/WG3.1&3.2 Open Conference on Social, Ethical and Cognitive Issues of Informatics and ICT, July 22-26, 2002, Dortmund, Germany. Boston: Kluwer Academic, 2003.

    Newspaper article (from database)

    [9] J. Riley, "Call for new look at skilled migrants," The Australian, p. 35, May 31, 2005. [Online]. Available: Factiva, http://global.factiva.com. [Accessed May 31, 2005].

    Technical report

    [10] K. E. Elliott and C.M. Greene, "A local adaptive protocol," Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, France, Tech. Rep. 916-1010-BB, 1997.

    Patent

    [11] J. P. Wilkinson, “Nonlinear resonant circuit devices,” U.S. Patent 3 624 125, Jul. 16, 1990.

    Standard

    [12] IEEE Criteria for Class IE Electric Systems, IEEE Standard 308, 1969.

    Thesis/Dissertation

    [1] J. O. Williams, “Narrow-band analyzer,” Ph.D. dissertation, Dept. Elect. Eng., Harvard Univ., Cambridge, MA, 1993.


7. Manuscript Length Requirements

  • Research Articles: up to 8000 words

  • Review Articles: up to 6000 words

  • Short Communications: ~800 words

  • Editorials: up to 800 words

  • Letters to the Editor: 400–500 words

  • Perspectives: up to 1000 words

  • Proceedings: structured abstracts


8. Ethical Compliance

Authors must ensure:

  • Originality

  • No plagiarism

  • Accurate data reporting

  • Declaration of conflicts of interest

  • Ethical approval (if applicable)


9. Final Checks Before Submission

Use the official CDIS Word template OR (Latex)

✔ Ensure figures are high resolution (300 dpi)

✔ Verify all references follow IEEE formatting

✔ Ensure corresponding author is marked with 1 

✔ Manuscript classification is listed in the cover letter

✔ All authors approve the final version