When to Include a Proposed Method Section in a CLS Manuscript
In modern scientific publishing especially in AI, software engineering, and emerging technologies, the proposed method section is often the core innovation of a manuscript. However, not every paper requires a standalone “Proposed Method” section.
Understanding when to explicitly include it, how to structure it, and how it differs from a standard methodology section is critical for authors submitting to Crosslink Studies (CLS)and UTJ.
CLS emphasize that methodological clarity directly influences reviewer confidence, reproducibility, and acceptance decisions, making this section a strategic component rather than a formatting choice.
What is a “Proposed Method” Section?
A proposed method section presents a novel technique, model, system, or framework introduced by the authors. Unlike a traditional methodology section which describes how experiments were conducted the proposed method section explains:
- What new approach is introduced?
- How it works conceptually and technically
- Why it is better than existing methods
In many engineering and AI papers, this section is the main contribution of the research.

When You Must Include a Proposed Method Section
✔ When Your Paper Introduces a Novel Algorithm or Model
If your research proposes anew AI architecture, a machine learning optimization technique and a computational framework. A dedicated “Proposed Method” section is essential. UTJ require that new methods demonstrate a clear advancement over existing techniques.
✔ When Developing a New System or Architecture
For CLS-focused domains such as IoT systems, Cyber-physical systems, Smart environments, you must describe system design, components and workflow and integration strategy. This cannot be fully captured in a standard methods section alone.
✔ When Your Contribution is Methodological Innovation
If your primary contribution is a new procedure, an improved version of an existing method and a hybrid or optimized approach. A proposed method section becomes the centerpiece of the paper.
✔ When You Need to Explain Complex Technical Flow
If your work involves multi-stage pipelines, deep learning workflows and system architectures. Use diagrams + structured explanation in a dedicated section
When a Separate Proposed Method Section is NOT Required
❌ Pure Experimental or Comparative Studies
If your paper only evaluates existing models, compares algorithms and uses standard methods. Use a Methods/Methodology section only.
❌ Review or Survey Papers
No new method is introduced; focus is on literature synthesis. No proposed method section needed.
❌ Incremental Improvements Without Structural Change
If changes are minor (e.g., parameter tuning): Integrate within methodology instead of creating a separate section.
Difference Between “Methodology” and “Proposed Method”
| Aspect | Methodology Section | Proposed Method Section |
| Purpose | Describe how study was conducted | Present new technique/system |
| Focus | Experimental process | Innovation and design |
| Content | Data, tools, procedures | Model, architecture, algorithm |
| Role | Supports results | Defines main contribution |
A strong paper often includes both sections:
- Proposed Method → What is new
- Methodology → How it was tested
Recommended Structure (CLS & UTJ Aligned)
1. Placement
Typically placed after Introduction:
Introduction → Proposed Method → Methodology → Results
2. Internal Structure
A high-quality proposed method section should include:
Concept Overview
- Problem being addressed
- High-level idea
System/Model Design
- Architecture diagram
- Components and flow
Mathematical or Algorithmic Formulation
- Equations, logic, or pseudocode
Working Mechanism
- Step-by-step explanation
Advantages Over Existing Methods
- Efficiency, accuracy, scalability
Writing Best Practices
Be Technically Precise
Avoid vague explanations clearly define every component
Use Visual Support
- Flowcharts, architecture diagrams
Maintain Logical Flow
Ensure alignment with objectives, Results
Ensure Reproducibility
Your method must be detailed enough for others to replicate. A well-written methods description allows others to verify and reproduce results, which is a core requirement of scientific publishing.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
❌ Mixing Proposed Method with Results
- Keep design separate from evaluation
❌ Lack of Novelty Explanation
- Always compare with existing methods
❌ Overly Complex Without Clarity
- Simplicity improves reviewer understanding
❌ Missing Technical Detail
- Weakens credibility and reproducibility
CLS-Oriented Example (AI System Paper)
Scenario
Smart traffic prediction system
Structure
Introduction:
Identifies traffic prediction challenges
Proposed Method:
- Hybrid deep learning + IoT data fusion model
- Architecture diagram
- Algorithm flow
Methodology:
- Dataset description, experimental setup
Results:
- Accuracy comparison
This separation improves clarity, readability, and reviewer evaluation
Why This Matters for CLS & UTJ?
For Crosslink Studies (CLS) and UTJ, including a proposed method section when appropriate ensures clear presentation of innovation, improved peer-review understanding, stronger scientific contribution visibility, and higher acceptance probability. Because reviewers primarily assess: What is new and how well it is explained
For authors targeting Crosslink Studies (CLS)and UTJ, a well-structured proposed method section can transform a manuscript from technically sound to clear, impactful, and publishable.
