TYPE THE TITLE OF YOUR PAPER (Uppercase letters, Cambria font, 16 pt letter size, centered)

First Authora, Second Authorb, Third Authorb,[*](Cambria14 pt, bold, centered)

aUniversity of Economics in Bratislava, Slovakia (an example of author’s affiliation)

bUniversity of Belgrade, Faculty of Transport and Traffic Engineering, Serbia (an example of author’s affiliation)

Abstract:This template describes the formatting requirements for the 3rd Logistics International Conference, to be held in Belgrade, Serbia from 25-27May 2017. Please follow instructions in this document to provide appropriate formatting of text, tables’ captions, references, and indexing information. An abstract not exceeding 150 words should appear at the top of the first page, after the title of the paper in a section titled "abstract" (without section number), after the names of the authors. Do not use “first person” writing style; do not include mathematical expressions; do not refer to the reference and try to avoid acronyms. Use this document as a template for MS Word, version 2003 or later. For authors who use MS Word in versions later than MS Word 2007, note that, because of frequent compatibility issues, papers should be saved as MS Word 2007 document. (Cambria11 pt, Italic).

Keywords: 3-5 keywords, align left (Cambria11 pt, Italic).

1. FIRST LEVEL HEADING (Capital letters, Cambria11pt, Bold, Align left, 18pt before and 12 pt after spacing)

This template has been prepared using the required format. The paper should be written in correct English, which means that text proofread has been done before paper submission.

To be published in the book of proceedings, all accepted papers should be print-ready formatted in the following way:

  • The maximum allowed number of pages is 6;
  • Paper size A4 (left, right and bottom margins are 2.5cm, top margin is 3.0cm);
  • For body text useCambriafont with 11 pt letter size, justified, single spaced;
  • All paragraphs must have 6 pt after spacing.

We recommend starting your paper with an introduction where you should formulate observed problem or task, presenting the state-of-the-art, defining objective and emphasizing author(s) contribution.

Please use this document as a template to prepare your manuscript. Please do not insert page numbers.

2. FIRST LEVEL HEADING

Avoid leaving a heading at the bottom of a page, with the subsequent text starting at the top of the next page. Please organize your paper using the first and second level headings. Avoid headings of third or higher levels, third level headings (2.1.1) should be used only exceptionally.

2.1 Second level heading (Cambria11 pt, Bold, Align left, 12 pt after and before spacing)

Use MS Word Equation editor to type all equations. Mathematical formulas should be centered and should be numbered consecutively from 1 in parentheses on the far right margin of the column, as in the following example of equation (1):

(1)

All variables: a, b, ... , x, y, z, should be set in italic. Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before the equation appears, or immediately following.

2.2 Second level heading

Restrict figures to the page borders, with center alignment, 12pt before and 6pt after spacing.

Figure 1. Cambria font, 11 pt letter size, centered, 6pt before and 12pt after spacing

If possible, do not assemble figures at the back of your article, but place them as close as possible to where they are mentioned in the main text. The figures should be numbered consecutively with captions (in Arabic numbers).

The captions should appear below graphical objects. The captions are the part of the text and not of the figures. The figures are to be inserted in their proper place throughout the paper and not to be grouped together. Please use only drawings and photographs of reasonable quality.

2.3 Second level heading

All tables should be incorporated into main body of the text and must be centered in the page and numbered consecutively (in Arabic numbers). Place the tables as close as possible to where they are mentioned in the main text.

The table headings should be placed above the table, as shown in this template. The width of all lines in tables including all borders should be 1/2 pt. Text and numbers in tables should be typewritten in Cambria font, with letter size not smaller than 8 pt and not larger than 11 pt.

Table 1. Cambria font, 11 pt letter size, centered, 12pt before and 6pt after

Logistics provider / Key Performance Indicator
KPI 1 / KPI 2 / KPI 3 / KPI 4
LP1 / 45.5 / 28.1 / 1.2 / 3.7
LP2 / 62.2 / 3.1 / 1.2 / 1.1

It is recommended to avoid footnotes. Instead, try to integrate the footnote information into the text. Define abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text. Do not use abbreviations in the title unless they are unavoidable. The SI units are strongly encouraged.

The references to relevant literature must be consistent with the examples at the end of these instructions. The references should be listed in alphabetical order and numbered. Authors should ensure that every reference in the text appears in the list of references and vice versa. Indicate references in the text by Coelho et al. (2014) if there are three or more authors, or Gillet and Miller (1974) if there are two authors, or Harris (1915) if there is only one author. Some examples of how your references should be listed are given at the end of this template in the ‘References’ section, which will allow you to assemble your reference list according to the correct format and font size.

Please note that all references listed here must be directly cited in the body of the text. Please give the proper reference to relevant related work.

3. CONCLUSION

Conclusions may review the main points of the paper, do not replicate the abstract as the conclusion. A conclusion might elaborate on the importance of the work or suggest applications and extensions.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

A short acknowledgement section can be written between the conclusion and the references. Sponsorship and financial support acknowledgments should be included here. If no acknowledgement is necessary, this section should not appear in the paper.

REFERENCES

[1]Coelho, L.C., Cordeau, J.-F., Laporte, G. (2014). Thirty Years of Inventory-Routing. Transportation Science, 48(1), 1-19.

[2]Frazelle, E., (2002). Supply Chain Strategy: the logistics and supply chain management, McGraw-Hill, New York.

[3]Gillet, B.E., Miller, L.R., (1974). A heuristic Algorithm for the Vehicle - Dispatch Problem. Operations Reserch, 22 (2), 340-349.

[4]Golden, B., Raghavan, S., Wasil, E., (2008). The Vehicle Routing Problem: Latest Advances and New Challenges, Springer.

[5]Harris, F., (1915). Operations and Costs. Factory Management Series, Chicago: A.W. Shaw.

[*] Corresponding author’s e-mail