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A Sample Article Title: Name1 Surname1, Name2 Surname2 and Name3 Surname3

This document is a template for preparing a properly formatted LATEX manuscript for submission to Statistical Science. It includes guidelines for structuring the paper, writing the abstract, using lists, citations, fonts, and formatting equations, tables, and figures. Additionally, it provides sections for acknowledgments, funding, supplementary material, and references.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views4 pages

A Sample Article Title: Name1 Surname1, Name2 Surname2 and Name3 Surname3

This document is a template for preparing a properly formatted LATEX manuscript for submission to Statistical Science. It includes guidelines for structuring the paper, writing the abstract, using lists, citations, fonts, and formatting equations, tables, and figures. Additionally, it provides sections for acknowledgments, funding, supplementary material, and references.

Uploaded by

investorbb50
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Submitted to Statistical Science

A Sample Article Title


Name1 Surname11 * , Name2 Surname2 and Name3 Surname3

Abstract. The abstract should summarize the contents of the paper. It should
be clear, descriptive, self-explanatory and not longer than 200 words. It
should also be suitable for publication in abstracting services. Formulas
should be used as sparingly as possible within the abstract. The abstract
should not make reference to results, bibliography or formulas in the body
of the paper—it should be self-contained.
This is a sample input file. Comparing it with the output it generates can
show you how to produce a simple document of your own.
Key words and phrases: First keyword, second keyword.

1. INTRODUCTION • This is the second item of the list. It contains an-


other list nested inside it.
This template helps you to create a properly formatted
– This is the first item of an itemized list that is
LATEX 2ε manuscript. Prepare your paper in the same style
nested within the itemized list.
as used in this sample .pdf file. Try to avoid excessive use
– This is the second item of the inner list. LATEX
of italics and bold face. Please do not use any LATEX 2ε
allows you to nest lists deeper than you really
or TEX commands that affect the layout or formatting
should.
of your document (i.e., commands like \textheight,
This is the rest of the second item of the outer list.
\textwidth, etc.).
• This is the third item of the list.
2. SECTION HEADINGS The following is an example of an enumerated list of
Here are some sub-sections: one level.

2.1 A Sub-section i) This is the first item of an enumerated list.


ii) This is the second item of an enumerated list.
Regular text.
The following is an example of an enumerated list, two
2.1.1 A sub-sub-section Regular text. levels deep.

3. TEXT 1. This is the first item of an enumerated list. Each


item in the list is marked with a “tick.” The document
3.1 Lists style determines what kind of tick mark is used.
The following is an example of an itemized list, two 2. This is the second item of the list. It contains an-
levels deep. other list nested inside of it.

• This is the first item of an itemized list. Each item i) This is the first item of an enumerated list that is
in the list is marked with a “tick.” The document nested within.
style determines what kind of tick mark is used. ii) This is the second item of the inner list. LATEX al-
lows you to nest lists deeper than you really should.
Name1 Surname1 is Professor Emeritus, Department, This is the rest of the second item of the outer list.
University or Company Name, City, Country (e-mail: 3. This is the third item of the list.
[email protected]). Name2 Surname2 is Professor,
Department, University or Company Name, City, Country 3.2 Punctuation
(e-mail: [email protected]). Name3 Surname3 is
Distinguished Professor, Department, University or Company Dashes come in three sizes: a hyphen, an intra-word
Name, City, Country (e-mail: [email protected]; URL: dash like “U -statistics” or “the time-homogeneous
www.foo.com). model”; a medium dash (also called an “en-dash”) for
* [Corresponding author indication should be put in the Ac- number ranges or between two equal entities like “1–2”
knowledgment section if necessary.] or “Cauchy–Schwarz inequality”; and a punctuation dash
1
Some comment

1
2

(also called an “em-dash”) in place of a comma, semi- 7. ENVIRONMENTS


colon, colon or parentheses—like this.
7.1 Examples for Plain-Style Environments
Generating an ellipsis . . . with the right spacing around
the periods requires a special command. A XIOM 1. This is the body of Axiom 1.
3.3 Citation
P ROOF. This is the body of the proof of the axiom
Only include in the reference list entries for which there above.
are text citations, and make sure all citations are included
in the reference list. Simple cite: [1]. Multiple bibliogra- C LAIM 2. This is the body of Claim 2. Claim 2 is
phy items cite: [1–4]. Citing bibliography with object: [1], numbered after Axiom 1 because we used [axiom] in
Theorem 1. \newtheorem.
4. FONTS
T HEOREM 7.1. This is the body of Theorem 7.1. The-
Please use text fonts in text mode, e.g.: orem 7.1 numbering is dependent on section because we
Roman used [section] after \newtheorem.
Italic
Bold T HEOREM 7.2 (Title of the theorem). This is the body
S MALL C APS of Theorem 7.2. Theorem 7.2 has additional title.
Sans serif
Typewriter L EMMA 7.3. This is the body of Lemma 7.3. Lemma
7.3 is numbered after Theorem 7.2 because we used
Please use mathematical fonts in mathematical mode, [theorem] in \newtheorem.
e.g.:
ABCabc123 P ROOF OF L EMMA 7.3. This is the body of the proof
ABCabc123 of Lemma 7.3.
ABCabc123
ABCabc123αβγ 7.2 Examples for Definition-Style Environments
ABC
ABC D EFINITION 7.4. This is the body of Definition 7.4.
ABCabc123 Definition 7.4 is numbered after Lemma 7.3 because we
ABCabc123 used [theorem] in \newtheorem.
ABCabc123
E XAMPLE . This is the body of the example. Exam-
Note that \mathcal, \mathbb belongs to capital ple is unnumbered because we used \newtheorem* in-
letters-only font typefaces. stead of \newtheorem.
5. NOTES
FACT. This is the body of the fact. Fact is unnum-
Footnotes1 pose no problem.2 bered because we used \newtheorem* instead of
\newtheorem.
6. QUOTATIONS
Text is displayed by indenting it from the left margin. 8. TABLES AND FIGURES
There are short quotations
Sample of cross-reference to figure. Figure 1 shows that
This is a short quotation. It consists of a single it is not easy to get something on paper.
paragraph of text. There is no paragraph inden- Cross-references to labeled tables: As you can see in
tation. Table 1 and also in Table 2.
and longer ones.
9. EQUATIONS AND THE LIKE
This is a longer quotation. It consists of two
paragraphs of text. The beginning of each para- Two equations:
graph is indicated by an extra indentation. µ/µx
This is the second paragraph of the quota- (1) Cs = KM
1 − µ/µx
tion. It is just as dull as the first paragraph.
and
1
This is an example of a footnote. Popt − Pref
2
Note that footnote number is after punctuation. (2) G= 100(%).
Pref
A SAMPLE RUNNING HEAD TITLE 3

TABLE 1
The spherical case (I1 = 0, I2 = 0)

Equil.
points x y z C S

L1 −2.485252241 0.000000000 0.017100631 8.230711648 U


L2 0.000000000 0.000000000 3.068883732 0.000000000 S
L3 0.009869059 0.000000000 4.756386544 −0.000057922 U
L4 0.210589855 0.000000000 −0.007021459 9.440510897 U
L5 0.455926604 0.000000000 −0.212446624 7.586126667 U
L6 0.667031314 0.000000000 0.529879957 3.497660052 U
L7 2.164386674 0.000000000 −0.169308438 6.866562449 U
L8 0.560414471 0.421735658 −0.093667445 9.241525367 U
L9 0.560414471 −0.421735658 −0.093667445 9.241525367 U
L10 1.472523232 1.393484549 −0.083801333 6.733436505 U
L11 1.472523232 −1.393484549 −0.083801333 6.733436505 U

TABLE 2 dP
Sample posterior estimates for each model (5) = πX − kh P,
dt
Quantile dV
(6) = F.
Model Parameter Mean Std. dev. 2.5% 50% 97.5% dt
Model 0 β0 −12.29 2.29 −18.04 −11.99 −8.56 One long equation:
β1 0.10 0.07 −0.05 0.10 0.26 Cs
β2 0.01 0.09 −0.22 0.02 0.16 µnormal = µx
Kx Cx + Cs
Model 1 β0 −4.58 3.04 −11.00 −4.44 1.06 
β1 0.79 0.21 0.38 0.78 1.20 (7) = µnormal − Yx/s 1 − H(Cs ) (ms + π/Yp/s )
β2 −0.28 0.10 −0.48 −0.28 −0.07
= µnormal /Yx/s + H(Cs )(ms + π/Yp/s ).
Model 2 β0 −11.85 2.24 −17.34 −11.60 −7.85
β1 0.73 0.21 0.32 0.73 1.16 TITLE
β2 −0.60 0.14 −0.88 −0.60 −0.34
β3 0.22 0.17 −0.10 0.22 0.55 Appendices should be provided in {appendix} envi-
ronment, before Acknowledgements.
If there is only one appendix, then please refer to it in
Equation arrays: text as . . . in the Appendix.
dS
(3) = −σX + sF F, APPENDIX A: TITLE OF THE FIRST APPENDIX
dt
dX If there are more than one appendix, then please refer
(4) = µX, to it as . . . in Appendix A, Appendix B, etc.
dt
APPENDIX B: TITLE OF THE SECOND APPENDIX
B.1 First Subsection of Appendix B
Use the standard LATEX commands for headings in
{appendix}. Headings and other objects will be num-
bered automatically.
(8) P = (jk,1 , jk,2 , . . . , jk,m(k) ).
Sample of cross-reference to the formula (8) in Ap-
pendix B.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors would like to thank the anonymous refer-
F IG 1. Pathway of the penicillin G biosynthesis. ees, an Associate Editor and the Editor for their construc-
tive comments that improved the quality of this paper.
4

FUNDING
The first author was supported by NSF Grant DMS-??-
??????.
The second author was supported in part by NIH Grant
???????????.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL
Title of Supplement A
Short description of Supplement A.
Title of Supplement B
Short description of Supplement B.

REFERENCES
[1] B ILLINGSLEY, P. (1999). Convergence of Probability Measures,
2nd ed. Wiley, New York.
[2] B OURBAKI , N. (1966). General Topology 1. Addison–Wesley,
Reading, MA.
[3] E THIER , S. N. and K URTZ , T. G. (1985). Markov Processes:
Characterization and Convergence. Wiley, New York.
[4] P ROKHOROV, Y U . (1956). Convergence of random processes and
limit theorems in probability theory. Theory Probab. Appl. 1 157–
214.

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