Abstract Submissions

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Abstract Submission Instructions

POPULATION ANALYSIS OF PLANKTONIC LARVAE USING NEXT GENERATION SEQUENCING
ABSmith1, NQ Patel*2, and ZY Han1
1Dept. of Biology, University of Excellence, Beijing, China and 2Dept. of - Chem., Institute of Science, Delhi, India
E-mail to contact authors: ngpatel@uexc.in

Background - This section is an example of the format of the body of an abstract. With this format we can fit two abstracts per page in the Conference program. To do this, please limit your abstracts to no more than 1800 characters (including spaces) in length. Do not include title and author information as part of the abstract body.

Methods - The abstract may be prepared with any word processing program. Use HTML tags, as shown here with <> and </> surrounding the special text, for <sub>subscript</sub>,<sup>superscript</sup>, <b>bold</b>, or <em>italics</em>. Graphics (graphs, pictures, etc.) are not accepted. Your abstract should have a logical progression of ideas and be an accurate summary of what you intend to present at the Conference.

Results - The usual progression of ideas in a scientific abstract, which may vary according to the needs of the topic, is to present an introduction or background describing a problem or hypothesis under investigation. Next you would want to give a brief description of the experimental methods or protocols used to accomplish the research. Then you should describe your results, highlighting the key points derived from experiments. Data should be summarized and adequately presented to enable readers to understand what you have discovered. Generalizations such as “data will be discussed” or “will be presented” are not acceptable. Finally, a brief discussion or conclusions to be drawn from your experiments should be given. If needed, and if you have room (remember the limit of 1800 characters), you can give credit to source of funding of your research.

Conclusion - If you follow this format, your abstract will be an accurate and informative introduction to your research. By the way, this example is written to be exactly 1800 characters.