Pragmatics & Cognition special issue on

FACIAL INFORMATION PROCESSING:
A MULTIDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVE


Guidelines for Contributors


1. Contributions should be in English. If not written by a native speaker of English it is advisable to have the paper checked by a native speaker.

2. All manuscripts should be accompanied by a biographical note (50-75 words) and an abstract (100-150 words).

3. MANUSCRIPTS should be submitted in quintuplicate, double spaced, with margins of 3 cm all round. Upon acceptance the author will be requested to send the final version on disk (IBM compatible, in ASCII, as well as formatted - preferably in WordPerfect), accompanied by four print-outs of the text.

4. Papers should be reasonably divided into sections and, if necessary, sub-sections.

5. SPELLING should be either British or American English consistently throughout.

6. Line drawings (FIGURES) and photographs (PLATES) should be submitted in camera-ready form. They should be numbered consecutively, with appropriate captions. Reference to any Figures of Plates should be made in the main text and their desired position should be indicated on the printout.

7. TABLES should be numbered consecutively and provided with appropriate captions. They should be referred to in the main text and their desired position should be indicated on the printout.

8. QUOTATIONS should be given in double quotation marks. Quotations longer than 4 lines should be indented with one line space above and below the quoted text.

9. EXAMPLES should be numbered with Arabic numerals in parentheses and set apart from the main body of the text with one line space above and below. Examples from languages other than English should be underlined (or italicized) and there should be a translation in single quotes immediately below each such example. If necessary, a word-by-word gloss (without quotes) may be provided between the example phrase and the translation.

10. FOOTNOTES should be kept to a minimum. They should be numbered consecutively throughout the text in square brackets or superscript. They should be listed in a section 'Notes' following the main text. They should start on a new page. The Notes should not contain reference material if this can be absorbed in the text and References list.

11. REFERENCES: References in the text should be as precise as possible, giving page references where necessary; for example; (Brown 1989: 252). All references in the text should appear in the List of References.

12. The LIST OF REFERENCES should follow the NOTES and should start on a new page. References should be listed (1) alphabetically and (2) chronologically. Names of Journals should be given in full with page references. Please pay special attention to the use of capitals, italics and punctuation marks given in the following examples:

Books
D'Agostino, F. and Jarvie, I.C. (eds). 1989. Freedom and Rationality: Essays in Honour of John Wilkins (Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 117). Dordrecht: Kluwer.
Schauer, F. 1991. Playing by the Rules. Oxford: Clarendon.

Article in book/journal
Grice, H.P. 1975. "Logic and Conversation". In P. Cole and J.L. Morgan (eds), Syntax and Semantics, Vol. 3: Speech Acts. New York: Academic Press, 41-58.
Mounin, C. 1976. "Language, communication, chimpanzees". Current Anthropology 17(1): 1-21.

13. Authors are kindly requested to check their manuscripts very carefully before submission in order to avoid delays and extra costs at the proof stage. Once a paper is accepted for publication, it will be allocated to a forthcoming issue and the author will receive two copies of page proofs of his/her contribution for final correction. These must be returned with corrections by the dates determined by the publication schedule. Any author's alterations other than typographical corrections in the page proofs may be charged to the author at the Publisher's discretion.

14. Authors of main articles will receive 30 offprints of the contribution. (In the case of multiple authors, the offprints will be sent to the first named author.)

15. Submissions for the special issue on Facial Information Processing: A multidisciplinary Perspective should be sent to either Dr. Itiel Dror (e-mail: dror@coglab.psy.soton.ac.uk) or:
Dr. Sarah Stevenage (e-mail: svs1@soton.ac.uk)
Dept. of Psychology
Southampton University
Highfield, Southampton SO17 1BJ
England

16. General Editor of Pragmatics & Cognition: Marcelo Dascal
Office of the Dean
Faculty of Humanities
Tel-Aviv University
Ramat-Aviv, Tel-Aviv
Israel, 69978

17. Subscription and other information about John Benjamins Publishing.