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Call
for Abstracts
DEADLINE:
Friday, June 15, 2007
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
- Registration form and fee
must accompany all abstract submission (Online registration is being
handled by Sainte-Justine. Please click here
to reigster).
- Use the electronic form below
to prepare and submit your abstract.
- Please
do not use any codes for styling in the text, e.g. no hyphens, bold
or italics.
- The abstracts should include
a maximum of 250 words. Title and affiliations do not count for the
word count.
- All abstracts must be written
in English. Identical abstracts submitted to other national or international
meetings will not be accepted. Re-submission of a corrected abstract
is not permitted.
- The abstracts should be organized
as follows:
Background/Aims: begin with the purpose of the study contained
in one sentence, followed by the Methods used, and Results
of the study in sufficient detail to support the Conclusions.
Conclusions should be limited to one or two sentences. Footnotes and
references should be avoided.
ABSTRACT FORMAT
Abstract Title: use CAPITAL
LETTERS
example: THE ROLE OF INTERLEUKINS IN HYPOTHALAMIC
Authors'
Names: start new line, first initial(s)
precedes last name, separate names with a comma; to indicate different
affiliations use number in parentheses
after the last name.
example: J.H.
Smith(1), K. Gates(2)
Institute:
start new line, name, location, country (no postal codes); separate
institutes with a semicolon; precede institute name with number in parentheses
to correspond
to author affiliation when necessary.
example: "Department of Psychology, University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA(1); Department of Chemistry, UCLA, Los
Angeles, CA, USA(2)
Abstract Text: one
line space and start new line
Abstract should be no more than 250 words. Footnotes and references
should be avoided. When needed. 'Supported by...' text should be at the
end of the abstract on a new line.
SAMPLE ABSTRACT
THE ROLE OF INTERLEUKINS
IN HYPOTHALAMIC
J.H. Smith(1), K. Gates(2)
Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC,
USA(1);
Department of Chemistry, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA(2)
Background/Aims: The role of
interleukin-1 (IL-1) inxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxMethods:xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Results xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxx Conclusion xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
and no more than 250 words.
Supported by xxx.
*Sample text used for title,
authors, institutes, etc. is fictitious.
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