%% Full length research paper template
%% Created by Simon Hengchen and Nilo Pedrazzini for the Journal of Open Humanities Data (https://openhumanitiesdata.metajnl.com)
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage[english]{babel}
\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
\usepackage{johd}
\title{Title of your discussion paper}
\author{First Author Name$^{a}$$^{*}$, Second Author Name$^{b}$$^{c}$, etc.$^{a}$$^{c}$ \\
\small $^{a}$Department, University, City, Country \\
\small $^{b}$Department, University, City, Country \\
\small $^{c}$Department, University, City, Country \\\\
\small $^{*}$Corresponding author: first name, initials, surname; \tt{email.address}
}
\date{} %leave blank
\begin{document}
\maketitle
\begin{abstract}
\noindent A short (up to 250 words) summary of the main contributions of the paper and the context of the research. \end{abstract}
\noindent\keywords{keyword 1; keyword 2; lower case except names, max 6 }\\
\noindent\authorroles{For determining author roles, please use following taxonomy: \url{https://credit.niso.org/}. Please list the roles for each author.}\\
\noindent{Discussion papers illustrate methods, challenges, and limitations in the creation, collection, management, access, processing, or analysis of data in humanities research, including standards and formats. These aspects must not necessarily be discussed with reference to a specific dataset (or collection thereof) but, if your paper focusses on particular datasets, we advise to add the dataset metadata under the section ‘Dataset description’. Discussion papers have a word limit of 3,000-5,000 words, excluding title, author affiliations, abstract, Tables/Figures and references, but including Tables/Figures captions and footnotes.
This template provides a general outline for discussion papers and authors can adapt the headings and include subheadings as they find appropriate. Please delete or replace the text not given in bold with your own text.}
\section{Context and motivation}
Describe the context and motivation of your paper.
\subsection{In-text citations}
This journal uses a style based on the APA system (see \href{https://openhumanitiesdata.metajnl.com/about/submissions/#References}{here}). \\
The following are some basic citation commands in \LaTeX: \\
\noindent
\verb|\citet| $\rightarrow$ \citet{jenset&mcgil}\\
\verb|\citet| $\rightarrow$ \citet{australiashealth}\\
\verb|\citet| $\rightarrow$ \citet{shree-a}\\
\verb|\citep| $\rightarrow$ \citep{fabricius-hansen2012b}\\
\verb|\citealp| $\rightarrow$ (\citealp{eckhoff2018a})\\
\verb|\citealp| $\rightarrow$ (\citealp{eckhoff2018a}; \citealp{fabricius-hansen2012b}; \citealp{shree-a})\\
\subsubsection{Other simple functions}
To add bullet points:
\begin{itemize}
\item Some point
\item Another point
\end{itemize}
\noindent Or numbered points:
\begin{itemize}
\item[1.] Some numbered point
\item[2.] Another numbered point
\end{itemize}
\noindent This is an example of footnote\footnote{This is a footnote}. \\
\noindent This is a simple table:
\begin{table}[H]
\centering % Label your table accordingly
\caption{\label{tab1} A caption.}
\begin{tabular}{cccc}
\hline
1 & 2 & 3 & 4 \\
\hline
a & b & c & d\\
e & f & g & h\\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\end{table}
\noindent Please refer to your table using: Table \ref{tab1}.\\
\noindent To add a figure, upload the figure into the \texttt{images} folder, and then embed it:
\begin{figure}[H]
\centering
\includegraphics{images/image.jpeg}
\caption{\label{fig1}JOHD's logo.}
\end{figure}
\noindent To resize the figure:
\begin{figure}[H]
\centering
\includegraphics[width=0.2\textwidth]{images/image.jpeg}
\caption{\label{fig2}JOHD's logo.}
\end{figure}
\begin{figure}[H]
\centering
\includegraphics[width=0.8\textwidth]{images/image.jpeg}
\caption{\label{fig3}JOHD's logo.}
\end{figure}
\noindent Please refer to your figures as: Figure \ref{fig1}, Figure \ref{fig2}, etc.
\section{Dataset description}
Here you can provide, if applicable, information about the dataset(s) whose creation, collection, management, access, processing or analysis have been discussed in this paper, following this schema:
\paragraph{Repository location} A DOI of the openly available dataset being described is required.
\paragraph{Repository name} The name of the repository to which the data is uploaded. E.g., Figshare, Dataverse, etc.
\paragraph{Object name} Typically the name of the file or file set in the repository.
\paragraph{Format names and versions} E.g., ASCII, CSV, Autocad, EPS, JPEG, Excel, SQL, etc.
\paragraph{Creation dates} The start and end dates of when the data was created (YYYY-MM-DD).
\paragraph{Dataset creators} Please list anyone who helped to create the dataset (who may or may not be an author of the data paper), including their roles (using and affiliations).
\paragraph{Language} Languages used in the dataset (i.e., for variable names etc.).
\paragraph{License} The open license under which the data has been deposited (e.g., CC0).
\paragraph{Publication date} If already known, the date in which the dataset was published in the repository (YYYY-MM-DD).
\section{Method}
Describe the methods used in the study.
\section{Results and discussion}
Describe and discuss the results of the study.
\section{Implications/Applications}
Provide information about the implications of this research and/or how it can be applied.
\section*{Acknowledgements}
Please add any relevant acknowledgements to anyone else that assisted with the project in which the data was created but did not work directly on the data itself.
\section*{Funding Statement}
If the research resulted from funded research please list the funder and grant number here.
\section*{Competing interests}
If any of the authors have any competing interests then these must be declared. If there are no competing interests to declare then the following statement should be present: The author(s) has/have no competing interests to declare.
\bibliographystyle{johd}
\bibliography{bib}
\section*{Supplementary Files (optional)}
Any supplementary/additional files that should link to the main publication must be listed, with a corresponding number, title and option description. Supplementary files should also be cited in the main text.
Note: supplementary files will not be typeset so they must be provided in their final form. They will be assigned a DOI and linked to from the publication.
\end{document}