Style Guide

All submissions should contain following parts:

  • Title.
  • Author(s)’ information.
  • Abstract.
  • Key words.
  • Main text.
  • Bibliography (“References”).

The following requirements should be fulfilled:

  1. Authors’ details should contain: last name, first name, academic degree, position, affiliation, postal address of your organization, personal e-mail address.
  2. ORCID
  3. The abstract should not exceed 200-250 words.
  4. It must be provided up to 6-8 keywords.
  5. The main text should not exceed 12.000 words.
  6. References to all used quotations, numbers and other data should be provided. Sources are referenced within the body of the text and enclosed in parentheses. First the author’s surname is indicated, followed by the publication date after a comma and number of cited page after a colon. For example: (Arendt, 2013: 105), (Garfinkel, 2002: 156-157), (Heath, Hindmarsh, Luff, 2010). If there are references to the several works of one author that are published in the same year, the year of publication should be followed by letters a, b, c, d… For example: (Arendt, 2000b). The references to different works of one author are separated by a comma. For example: (Gallagher, 2000, 2008).
  7. Footnotes should be indicated consecutively in Arabic numerals.
  8. Abbreviations should be explained in footnotes.
  9. Bibliography should appear at the end of the article.

It is necessary to specify translators and editors in bibliography. 

 

General rules for the References

Book

Levy N. Hard Luck : How Luck Undermines Free Will and Moral Responsibility. — New York : Oxford University Press, 2011.

Book chapter

Savitz J. B., Simpson J. R., Drevets W. C. Neuroimaging in Affective Disorders : Applications in Clinical Research and Forensic Psychiatry // Neuroimaging in Forensich Psychiatry : From the Clinic to the Courtroom / ed. by J. B. Savitz, J. R. Simpson, W.C. Drevets. — New Jersey : Wiley-Blackwell, 2012. — P. 131-143.

Farah M. J. Neuroscience and Neuroethics in the 21st Century // Oxford Handbook of Neuroethics / ed. by J. Illes, J. Sahakian. — New York : Oxford University Press, 2012. — P. 761-782.

Collection or a handbook

Clausen J., Levy N. Handbook of Neuroethics. — Dordrecht : Springer, 2009.

Alexander J. Durkheimian Sociology and Cultural Studies. — Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988.

Journal article

Nishimoto S., Naselaris T., Benjamini Y. Reconstructing Visual Experiences from Brain Activity Evoked by Natural Movies // Current Biology. — 2001. — Vol. 21, no. 19. — P. 1641-1646

Webpage

Christen M. The Neuroethical Challenges of Brain Simulations / Meeting of IACP, University of Maryland at College Park. — 2013. — URL: https://www.encyclog.com/_upl/files/2013_Christen_IACAP.pdf (visited on Mar. 22, 2020).