Author Guidelines

The manuscript must be original, unpublished, and free from any form of plagiarism. Authors are required to upload a signed plagiarism declaration as a supplementary file (step 4), or alternatively, attach the plagiarism check result.

The manuscript should be written in a single-column format with justified alignment and a column spacing of 1 cm, using A4 paper size (21 x 29.7 cm). Page margins are set at 3 cm from the left and top, and 2 cm from the right and bottom. The manuscript must be prepared in Microsoft Word using single spacing, Times New Roman font size 10 pt, and a minimum of 6 pages. Paragraph formatting should apply 6 pt spacing after each paragraph and should not use a first line indent.

The title of the article should clearly describe the content using the fewest possible words. Avoid using phrases that make the title unnecessarily long, such as "A Study of...", "An Investigation on...", "The Implementation of...", "An Observation on...", "The Influence of...", "An Analysis of...", "The Design of...", and similar expressions. Article discoverability depends heavily on the accuracy of the title. In addition, keywords also support reference searches.

The introduction should provide a clear background, a well-defined statement of the problem, relevant literature related to the subject, the proposed approach or solution, and the novelty or innovative value of the research.

References should be managed and cited using the APA style (e.g., Sanjaya, Ramdhani, & Prasetio, 2016). Foreign terms or words must be written in italic font. The article should be structured into the following sections: Introduction – Research Method / Algorithm (optional) – Results and Discussion – Conclusion.

The literature review may be included by the author within the "Introduction" section to explain how the research differs from previous studies, demonstrating that the manuscript presents a new innovation.

If the research contains a high level of originality and proposes a new method or algorithm, an additional section may be included after the "Introduction" and before the "Research Method" to briefly describe the proposed method or algorithm. The Introduction section may also include supporting theories related to the proposed method for solving a problem and/or for method development, based on clearly cited references (books, journals, proceedings, and other scholarly articles).

Document Formatting

The abstract should be written in a single paragraph in both English. The English abstract must be justified (aligned left and right). The main manuscript, from the Introduction to the References section, should be written in a two-column format. Titles for tables and figures should be numbered sequentially, such as Table 1, Table 2, and so on, or Figure 1, Figure 2, and so on. Tables should use horizontal lines for subheadings and at the end of the data entries.

Research Methodology

This section should explain the research chronology, including the research design, research procedures (in the form of algorithms, pseudocode, or other formats), data testing, and data acquisition processes. The description of the research program must be supported by references, so that the explanation is scientifically acceptable.

Results and Discussion

This section presents the research findings along with a comprehensive discussion. The results may be displayed in figures, graphs, tables, or other formats that help readers easily understand the data. Emphasis should be placed on the novelty or innovative value of the research, as well as its implications. The discussion may be organized into several sub-sections if necessary.

Conclusion

This section should state that the expected outcomes described in the "Introduction" have been achieved through the "Results and Discussion," ensuring coherence and compatibility. It may also include prospects for the development of the research findings and the potential application for further studies. Avoid presenting statistical data in this section. Recommendations for future research should be provided based on credible sources.

References

The primary references should be international journals and nationally accredited journals. All references must be highly relevant and represent the most recent sources. References must be formatted in APA style using reference management software such as Mendeley. All citations should be listed in ascending alphabetical order (A–Z) and do not need to be grouped by source type (e.g., books, journals, etc.). References from websites or online sources must be obtained from credible and trustworthy sites.