OIC-CERT Journal of Cyber Security(11italic)

Paper title (14 Times New Roman Bold)

First A. Author1, Second B. Author2 and Third C. Author3 (12 Times New Roman)

1Faculty of Information and Communication Technology (12 Times New Roman Italic Centered)

UniversitiTeknikal Malaysia Melaka, Malaysia

E-mail:

2, 3Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering

UniversitiTeknikal Malaysia Melaka, Malaysia

E-mail: ,

ABSTRACT (9Bold): The abstract should summarize the content of the paper. Try to keep the abstract below 100 words. The aim is to provide a concise overview of your paper. Do not make references nor display equations in the abstract. The journal will be printed from the same-sized copy prepared by you. Your manuscript should be printed on A4 paper (21.0 cm x 29.7 cm). It is imperative that the margins and style described below be adhered to carefully. This will enable us to keep uniformity in the final printed copies of the Journal. Please keep in mind that the manuscript you prepare will be photographed and printed as it is received. Readability of copy is of paramount importance.(9 Italic)

KEYWORDS (9Bold)-About five key words in alphabetical order, separated by comma and Each Significant Word (other than prepositions, articles, and coordinating conjunctions) Should Begin with a Capital Letter(9 Italic)

INTRODUCTION (12 Bold)

The introduction of the paper should explain the nature of the problem, previous work, purpose, and the contribution of the paper. The contents of each section may be provided to understand easily about the paper.

Papers (title. Abstract, main text) should normally not exceed 6000 words in length. Longer papers may be rejected.(10)

HEADINGS(12 Bold)

Sub Headings (10 Bold)

Each Minor section of your paper should be in Times New Roman 10pt, bold typeface. Capitalize only the first letter of the first word in the heading and any proper nouns, acronyms, etc; and text should be written in the third person.

The HEADINGSand Sub Headings, starting with "INTRODUCTION", appear in Title Case letterswhile Sub Headings in Sentence case each and should be set in bold. All regular text is to be left and right justified. Graphics (tables, diagrams, figures, etc.) and their labels should be centred.

The paragraphs should have a single 10pt blank line between them. New sections should have a single 10pt blank line between them. Do not indent paragraphs. Do not number sections.

INDENTATIONS AND EQUATIONS (12 Bold)

The first paragraph under each heading or subheading should be flush left, and subsequent paragraphs should have a five-space indentation. A colon is inserted before an equation is presented, but there is no punctuation following the equation. All equations are numbered and referred to in the text solely by a number enclosed in a round bracket (i.e., (3) reads as "equation 3"). Ensure that any miscellaneous numbering system you use in your paper cannot be confused with a reference [4] or an equation (3) designation.(10)

FIGURES AND TABLES (12 Bold)

Use diagrams only where necessary. Please embed the graphics into the document. Any exhibits (tables, figures, illustrations, etc.) should be placed as close as possible to the first reference made to it. Each captions to a figure or table should use bold for the type of graphic and number: Figure 1 represents . . . .

Exhibits should be numbered and identified by a brief description in Times New Roman 10 pt, such as ‘Figure 1: Web portal development analysis’. This identification should appear below the actual figure. From the “Home”’ tab, select “Paragraph”; select “Indents and Spacing”. Set “Before” to 3 pt. Leave a single 10pt blank line before figures and tables; use a 3 pt spacing before the label for the table or figure; leave a single 10pt blank line between the label and the text of the paper.

Do not forget to label all diagrams. Make sure that diagrams will print clearly in black and white. Please ensure diagrams are scalable, that is, can be resized. Please do not include scanned images from other publications.(10)

CONCLUSION(12bold)

A conclusion section must be included and should indicate clearly the advantages, limitations, and possible applications of the paper. Although a conclusion may review the main points of the paper, do not replicate the abstract as the conclusion. A conclusion might elaborate on the importance of the work or suggest applications and extentions.(10)

IN-TEXT CITATIONS (12 Bold)

IEEE in-text citations consist of numbers provided in square brackets, which correspond to the appropriate sources in the reference list at the end of the paper. The in-text citations numbers start at [1], and continue in ascending order throughout the paper – unless you are referring to a source you have already cited in your text, in which case you can use the previously assigned number.

Each in-text citation number should be enclosed by square brackets and appear on the text line, inside sentence punctuation, with a space before the bracket.

Example:Thevenin’s and Norton’s theorems are widely used for circuit analysis simplification [13].

Citations of references may be given simply as “in [1]...”, rather than as “in reference [1] ...”.

REFERENCES(12 Bold)

The References’ list should appear at the end of the article and, using the IEEE style of documentation, should provide sufficient description to enable the reader to locate all publications referred to in the text.

  • The first reference should appear immediately beneath the References heading (no line space);
  • A numbered list of references must be provided at the end of the paper. The reference list contains full details of all sources cited in-text. Reference list entries should appear in the order the sources are cited in the text of the paper, beginning with [1], and continuing in consecutive numerical order, from the lowest number to the highest. Reference list entries do not follow an alphabetical order by author or title of sources;
  • References to government or corporate entities as authors should appear and be alphabetised on the reference list by full title (such as “National Security Agency”) but be followed by abbreviations, acronyms, etc., if applicable “(NSA)”;
  • Unpublished works or private communications are to be mentioned within the text, but may be omitted from the reference list;
  • References to electronic documents should include an appropriate Universal Resource Locater (URL) and date viewed; and
  • Please ensure that all the references in the text are in the list of references at the end (and vice versa).

A reference list MUST be included using the following information as a guide. Only cited text references are included. Each reference is referred to in the text by a number enclosed in a square bracket (i.e., [3]). References must be numbered and ordered according to where they are first mentioned in the paper, NOT alphabetically.

Examples follow:

Journal Papers:

[#]A. A. Author of article. "Title of article,"Title of Journal, vol. #, no. #, pp. page number/s, Month year.(9)

[1]M Ozaki, Y. Adachi, Y. Iwahori, and N. Ishii, “Application of fuzzy theory to writer recognition of Chinese characters”, International Journal of Modelling and Simulation, 18(2), 1998, 112-116.

Note that the journal title, volume number and issue number are set in italics.

Books:

[#] A. A. Author, Title: Subtitle (in italics), Edition(if not the first), Vol.(if a multivolume work). Place of publication: Publisher, Year, page number(s) (if appropriate). (9)

[2]R.E. Moore, Interval analysis (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1966).

Note that the title of the book is in lower case letters and italicized. There is no comma following the title. Place of publication and publisher are given.

Chapters in Books:

[#] A. A. Author of Part, "Title of chapter or part," inTitle: Subtitle of book, Edition, Vol., A. Editor, Ed. Place of publication: Publisher, Year, pp. inclusive page numbers.(9)

[3]P.O. Bishop, “Neurophysiology of binocular vision”, in J.Houseman (Ed.), Handbook of physiology, 4 (New York: Springer-Verlag, 1970) 342-366.

Note that the place of publication, publisher, and year of publication are enclosed in brackets. Editor of book is listed before book title.

Theses:

[#] A. A. Author,Title of Thesis: Subtitle. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.(9)

[4]D.S. Chan, Theory and implementation of multidimensional discrete systems for signal processing, doctoral diss., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, 1978.

Note that thesis title is set in italics and the university that granted the degree is listed along with location information

Proceedings Papers:

[#] A. Editorand B. Editor, Eds.,Title of Conf.: Subtitle of conference, Month Date, Year,Location (optional). Place of publication: Name of Publisher, Year. (9)

[5]W.J. Book, Modelling design and control of flexible manipulator arms: A tutorial review, Proc. 29th IEEE Conf. on Decision and Control, San Francisco, CA, 500-506 ,1990.