1.General information

The manuscript should be prepared with an MS-word program with maximum one page. One-page paper (Paper) must be submitted by the presenting author in one of 14 topics. The number of submitted Paper is not limited to an author. The accepted Paper(s) will be published in the official proceedings of AAAP 2026 Congress.

Authors are required to select one of the two presentation types (Oral or Poster). Please note that only selecting an oral does not guarantee you an oral as unfortunately not everyone will be accepted for an oral. The Conference Organising Committee will make the final decision regarding the mode of presentation. Papers, which are not accepted for an oral, will need to prepare a physical poster.

All one-page papers are double-blind peer reviewed. The reviewing process is confidential and decisions are final.

The invitation to submit an abstract does not constitute an offer to pay travel, accommodation or registration cost associated with the Congress.

2. Who can submit one-page paper

All AAAP members, affiliates and any professional working related to animal science are welcome to submit One-page paper.

3. How to prepare one-page paper

General Requirements: The entire manuscript should be written in English. Medical terminology should be written based on the most recent edition of Dorland’s Illustrated Medical Dictionary. The manuscript should be organized in the following order: Title, Author(s) and Author(s) Affiliation, Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results (table and figure are not accepted) Discussion, Conclusion, Acknowledgements, References.

The manuscript should be formatted in single spacing using Times New Roman font in one A4 page with all margins of 2 cm. Use size 14 for the title, size 10 for the main text, and size 9 for author(s), author affiliation, acknowledgements, and references. All abbreviations must be spelled out in the first appearance in Paper, respectively and then use abbreviations thereafter. Use the Congress template for preparing your manuscript (download here).

Weights and measures must be expressed in the SI unit (metric) system and temperatures in the Celsius (centigrade) scale. The names of manufacturers of equipment and non-generic drugs should be given. Name for microorganism is fully stated at the first appearance (e.g., Escherichia coli), then the abbreviation for the genus is used (e.g., E. coli). Scientific name of species is italicized. Do not italicize if the calling of a species is not a scientific name (e.g., E. Coli, Papovaviridae, Hepadnavirus, streptococci, coagulase negative staphylococci, Epstein-Barr virus, hepatitis B virus, herpes simplex virus). Gene nomenclature is written in italics, whereas protein product of certain genes is not italicized (e.g., BCR-ABL mutations, HER2 gene, BCR-ABL kinase domain, HER2-positive). P-value from statistical testing is expressed as lower case p.

Authors whose native language is not English are strongly encouraged to have their manuscripts proofread prior to the submission.

Title: The title should be as brief as possible, but it is recommended to include the animal species involved in the research when applicable. Abbreviations are not permitted in the title.

Author(s): Naming an author on a paper implies that the person named is aware of the research reported and agrees with and accepts responsibility for any results or conclusions reported. Indications of professorial rank or other professional titles should not be used. The presenting author is considered as the first author. The email address of presenting and corresponding authors should be indicated after author affiliation.

Author(s) affiliation: The address of the institution where the research was conducted should include the name of the institution, city, and country. If the affiliation is different from the first author, the authors should be marked “1,” “2,” “3,” and so forth in Arabic numerals, which should appear in superscript at the top right-hand corner of the author’s name and at the beginning of each affiliation.

Introduction: Briefly justifies the research and specifies the hypotheses to be tested. Discussion of relevant literature should be included in the discussion of results, not in the introduction.

Materials and Methods: For statistics, please refer to the following article for statistical guidelines: Guidelines for experimental design and statistical analyses in animal studies submitted for publication in the AJAS. Asian-Australasian J Anim Sci 2018;31(9):1381-1386. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5713/ajas.18.0468.

Results: Table and Figure are not accepted. Emphasize or summarize only the most important observations.

Discussion: The discussion should interpret the results clearly and concisely in terms of biological mechanisms and should integrate with the research findings of other studies to provide the readers with a broad base for understanding whether the hypotheses tested were accepted or rejected. Implications (optional) should be included in this section.

Acknowledgments: Authors may list contributors who do not meet authorship criteria, such as those providing technical help, writing assistance, or general support.

In the text, references should be cited with Arabic numerals in brackets, numbered in the order cited. No more than three (03) references should be cited to support a specific concept. In the references section, the references should be numbered and listed in order of appearance in the text. If a cited work has six or fewer authors, they should all be listed. The first three authors should be listed, followed by “et al.” if there are more than six authors. Examples of AB references style are listed below (more detail https://www.animbiosci.org/authors/authors.php)

Journal articles

  1. Lee SA, Lopez DA, Stein HH. Invited review: mineral composition and phosphorus digestibility in feed phosphates fed to pigs and poultry. Anim Biosci 2023;36:167-74. https://dx.doi.org/10.5713/ab.22.0322
  2. Du J, Zhao H, Song G, et al. Overexpression of cholinergic receptor nicotinic gamma subunit inhibits proliferation and differentiation of bovine preadipocytes. Anim Biosci 2022 Sep 7 [Epub]. https://dx.doi.org/10.5713/ab.22.0144
  3. Krehbiel CR, Cranston JJ, McCurdy MP. An upper limit for caloric density of finishing diets. J Anim Sci 2006;84 Suppl:E34-49.
  4. Mahan DC, Weaver EM, Russell LE. Improved postweaning pig performance by adding NaCl or HCl to diets containing animal plasma [abstract]. J Anim Sci 1996;74(Suppl 1):58.

Books and book chapters

  1. Field TG, Taylor RE. Scientific farm animal production: an introduction to animal science. 11th ed. Pearson Prentice Hall; 2015.
  2. Committee on Nutrient Requirements of Swine, National Research Council. Nutrient requirements of swine. 11th ed. National Academy Press; 2012.
  3. Latimer GW; AOAC International. Official methods of analysis of AOAC International. 19th ed. AOAC International; 2012.
  4. Preston ND, Daszak P, Colwell RR. The human environment interface: applying ecosystem concepts to health. In: Mackenzie JS, Jeggo M, Daszak P, Richt JA, editors. One health: the human-animal-environment interfaces in emerging infectious diseases. Springer-Verlag; 2013. p. 83-100. https://doi.org/10.1007/82_2013_317

Online sources

  1. Raosoft. Sample size calculator [Internet]. Raosoft Inc.; c2004 [cited 2016 Apr 1]. Available from: http://www.raosoft.com/samplesize.html
  2. Metagenomics: sequences from the environment [Internet]. National Center for Biomedical Information; 2006 [cited 2016 Feb 20]. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=metagenomics.TOC

Dissertations and theses

  1. Ha JK. Studies on beneficial and adverse effects of dietary buffers for lambs [dissertation]. South Dakota State University; 1981.
  2. Yoon CH. Effects of lysine and sodium levels on growth performance, acid-base balance and lysine-arginine antagonism in broiler chicks [master’s thesis]. Seoul National University; 1991.

Conference papers

  1. Moss KJ, Greening L. The effect of age and gender on the time taken for horses to learn an operant task. In: Proceedings of the British Society of Animal Science 2009; 2009 Mar 30-Apr 1; Southport, UK. British Society of Animal Science; 2009. p. 1.
  2. Patrias K. Computer-compatible writing and editing. Interacting with the digital environment: modern scientific publishing. 46th Annual Meeting of the Council of Science Editors; 2003 May 3-6; Pittsburgh, PA.

– Research Reports

  1. Page E, Harney JM. Health hazard evaluation report. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health; 2001. Report No.: HETA2000-0139-2824.

More detail: Please go to section “For Authors and Reviewers” of Animal Bioscience (AB) at https://www.animbiosci.org/authors/authors.php.

 4. How to submit your one-page paper

Account: If you do not have an account, please go to Registration page to create your account. If you have already your account, please go to Submission page

Topics: You can select one of the 14 following topics to submit your Paper

Type of Presentation: You can select the presentation type (Oral or Poster)

Submission: Fill out all required fields in the submission form and attached your Paper in MS Word format before submitting (click here to download the template)

Confirmation of received submission: You will receive an email after your successful submission