Innovation article

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Originality and Innovation

The article should present novel ideas, processes, or products that represent a significant contribution.
Applied creativity and the ability to generate solutions distinct from existing ones are valued.
It must demonstrate a clear advancement over the state of the art.

Relevance and Applicability

The innovation should have potential impact in social, economic, cultural, or environmental spheres.
Practical applicability is prioritized: projects that can be transferred to industry, education, or the community.
Including implementation examples or pilot tests is recommended.

Methodological Rigor

Detailed description of the innovation process: design, development, validation, and evaluation.
Verifiable evidence: data, prototypes, diagrams, simulations, or case studies.
Clarity in the success criteria and impact indicators.

Manuscript Structure

Title: clear, concise, and representative of the innovation.
Bilingual abstract (Spanish and English), maximum 250 words, with keywords in both languages. Introduction: Contextualization of the problem and review of the state of the art.
Methodology: Explanation of the innovative process.
Results and discussion: Evidence, critical analysis, and comparison with previous solutions.
Conclusions: Contributions, limitations, and future projections.
References: Updated and in standardized format (APA, IEEE, Chicago, depending on the journal).

Social and technological impact

Contributions to sustainability, social inclusion, and the improvement of production processes are valued.

The article should demonstrate how innovation can transform existing practices or open new possibilities.

Ethical and legal standards

Declaration of originality and absence of plagiarism.
Compliance with intellectual property regulations (patents, licenses, copyrights).
Transparency in funding and potential conflicts of interest.

Peer review

The manuscript will undergo double-blind peer review.

Evaluation criteria include:
Degree of innovation.
Relevance and applicability.
Methodological rigor.
Clarity of presentation. Potential impact on the discipline and society.

Length and format
Generally between 5,000 and 8,000 words.
Numbered figures and tables with explanatory titles.
Use of style guidelines defined by the journal (APA, IEEE, or other).

In summary, an innovation article should be original, applicable, methodologically sound, and socially relevant, with a clear structure focused on demonstrating the impact of the proposal.

All Items

Nothing has been published in this category yet.