IEEE英文论文模板

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Elsvier论文模板

Elsvier论文模板

[Title Page]Article TitleAuthorsAuthor affiliationsCorrespondence information: Corresponding author name, affiliation, detailed permanent address, email address, telephone number(Check the Guide for authors to see the required information on the title page)Put the title of your abstract here using both upper and lower case letters, Times New Roman, 12 pts, bold, centered, double spacedA. Author a,B. Author b,C. Author a,*a Department, University, Street, Postal-Code City, Countryb Laboratory, Institute, Street, Postal-Code City, CountryAbstractThis general template helps you on preparing manuscript for part of Elsevier Journals. Use this document as a template if you are using Microsoft Word 6.0 or later. Here comes self-contained abstract. Please read the Guide for Authors of your target journal for the requirements of Abstract. Pay special attention to the word count.PACS(optional, as per journal): 75.40.-s; 71.20.LPKeywords:Keyword 1.D; Keyword 2.B (Read the Guide for Authors for the requirements for Keywords, including number, thesaurus, and classification indications)*Correspondingauthor.Tel.:+xxxxxxxxx;fax:+xxxxxxxxx.E-mailaddress:************1. IntroductionThe manuscript should be prepared and submitted according to the Guide for Authors of your target journal. For your convenience, brief instructions on manuscript preparation are recorded below.Please DO consult a recent journal paper for style and conventions. You may find samples on ScienceDirect. You need to check your manuscript carefully before you submit it. The editor reserves the right to return manuscripts that do not conform to the instructions for manuscript preparation.2. General remarks on manuscript preparationGenerally, double line spacing, 12 pts font, and Times New Roman are preferred when you type the manuscript for review. This text formatting is provided in order to facilitate referee process and is also required for proper calculation of your manuscript length. Typing your manuscript follows the order: Title, Authors, Affiliations, Abstract, Keywords, Main text, Acknowledgements (optional), References (optional), Figure captions, Figures and Tables. Please consult the Guide for Authors for the proper organization of the main text. Ensure that each new paragraph is clearly indicated. Some journals also require lines to be numbered throughout the manuscript. You will usually want to divide your article into numbered sections and subsections. Present figures and tables at the right places mentioned in the Guide for Authors.Most formatting codes are removed or replaced while processing your article so there is no need for you to use excessive layout styling. Please do not use options suchas automatic word breaking, double columns or automatic paragraph numbering (especially for numbered references). Do use bold face, italic, subscripts, superscripts, etc., as appropriate.2.1 IllustrationsMany journals required that figures and tables to be presented on separate pages at the end of the manuscript. The preferable file formats are: EPS (for vector graphics) and TIF (for bitmaps). However, PDF and MS Office (Word, Excel, Powerpoint figures) files are also acceptable. Use file names that enable to identify their contents in terms of figure number and format (e.g. fig1.tif, fig2.eps, fig3.pdf). All artwork has to be numbered according to its sequence in the text. All of them should have captions. Colour figures in printed version require an extra fee for most journals. Generally, no vertical rules (lines) should be used in tables. Illustrations should not duplicate descriptions that appear elsewhere in the manuscript.Please look at /wps/find/authors.authors/authorartworkinstructions for more detailed instructions on artwork preparations.2.2 EquationsConventionally, in mathematical equations variables and anything thatrepresents a value appear in italics. You are encouraged to use equation-editing tools such as mathtype to edit equations. Please make use of the numbering and referencing functions.2.3 CitationsThere are different styles of in-text citations and reference lists. DO consult the Guide for Authors to see the given examples. Pay special attention to the format of author names, journal names, publication year, volume and page span.AcknowledgementsThis section is optional.ReferencesFigure CaptionsFig.1 Put at this page the collected figure captions. The figure captions should be as brief as possible. It should also contain sufficient information that readers do not need to refer to the main text.Fig.2 Put here the figure caption of figure 2 (also the legend to figure 2).Fig. 3Fig. 1. Sample figure. Do not reduce or enlarge any images after placement in an MS Office application as this can lead to loss of image quality. While inserting vector graphics ensure that you use only true type fonts. These should preferably be in one, or a combination, of the following fonts: Arial, Courier, Helvetica, Symbol, Times.Table 1Sample table: (使用三线表)Parameter Compound 1 Compound 2 a (Å) 4.5832 4.9365Δ E a (eV) 1.745 1.592 ………………a This is an example of a table footnote.。

ieee英文论文格式.doc

ieee英文论文格式.doc

ieee 英文论文格式【篇一:ieee 英文论文格式模板】preparation of papers for ieee transactions and journals (march2005)first a. author, second b. author, jr., and third c. author,member, ieee?abstract —these instructions give you guidelines for preparingpapers for ieee transactions and journals. use this documentas a template if you are using microsoft word 6.0 or later.otherwise, use this document as an instruction set. theelectronic file of your paper will be formatted further at ieee.define all symbols used in the abstract. do not cite referencesin the abstract. do not delete the blank line immediately abovethe abstract; it sets the footnote at the bottom of this column.point and either use insert | picture | from file or copy theimage to the windows clipboard and then edit | paste special |picture (with ―float over text ‖unchecked).ieee will do the final formatting of your paper. if your paper isintended for a conference, please observe the conference pagelimits.ii. procedure for paper submission a. review stageplease check with your editor on whether to submit yourmanuscript by hard copy or electronically for review. if hardcopy, submit photocopies such that only one column appearsper page. this will give your referees plenty of room to writecomments. send the number of copies specified by your editor(typically four). if submitted electronically, find out if youreditor prefers submissions on disk or as e-mail attachments. ifyou want to submit your file with one column electronically,please do the following:--first, click on the view menu and choose print layout. --second, place your cursor in the first paragraph. go to theformat menu, choose columns, choose one column layout, andchoose ―apply to whole document ‖from the dropdown menu.--third, click and drag the right margin bar to just over 4inches in width.the graphics will stay in the ―second‖column, but you can drag them to the first column. make the graphic wider to pushout any text that may try to fill in next to the graphic.b. final stagewhen you submit your final version, after your paper has been accepted, print it in two-column format, including figures andtables. send three prints of the paper; two will go to ieee andone will be retained by the editor-in-chief or conferencepublications chair.you must also send your final manuscript on a disk, whichieee will use to prepare your paper for publication. write theauthors ’names on the disk la bel. if you are using a macintosh, please save your file on a pc formatted disk, if possible. youmay use zip or cd-rom disks for large files, or compress filesusing compress, pkzip, stuffit, or gzip.also send a sheet of paper with complete contact informationfor all authors. include full mailing addresses, telephonenumbers, fax numbers, and e-mail addresses. this informationwill be used to send each author a complimentary copy of the1index terms —about four key words or phrases in alphabetical order, separated by commas. for a list of suggested keywords,send a blank e-mail to or visit the ieee web site ati. introduction this document is a template for microsoft word versions 6.0 orlater. if you are reading a paper version of this document,please download the electronic file, trans-jour.doc, from soyou can use it to prepare your manuscript. if you would preferto use latex, download ieee ’s latex style and sample files from the same web page. use these latex files for formatting, butplease follow the instructions in trans-jour.doc or trans-jour.pdf.if your paper is intended for a conference, please contact your conference editor concerning acceptable word processorformats for your particular conference.when you open trans-jour.doc, se lect ―page layout ‖from the ―view ‖menu in the menu bar (view | page layout), which allows you to see the footnotes. then type over sections oftrans-jour.doc or cut and paste from another document andthen use markup styles. the pull-down style menu is at the leftof the formatting toolbar at the top of your word window (forexample, the style at this point in the document is ―text ‖). highlight a section that you want to designate with a certainstyle, then select the appropriate name on the style menu. thestyle will adjust your fonts and line spacing. do not change thefont sizes or line spacing to squeeze more text into a limitednumber of pages. use italics for emphasis; do not underline.to insert images in word, position the cursor at the insertionthis work was supported by national science council, taipei,taiwan, r.o.c. project no. nsc xx-xxxx-x-xxx-xxx..journal in which the paper appears. in addition, designate oneauthor as the ―corresponding author. ‖this is the author towhom proofs of the paper will be sent. proofs are sent to thecorresponding author only.fonts when creating your figures, if possible.4) other ways: experienced computer users can convertfigures and tables from their original format to tiff. some usefulimage converters are adobe photoshop, corel draw, andmicrosoft photo editor, an application that is part of microsoftc. figuresoffice 97 and office 2000 (look for c:program filescommonall tables and figures will be processed as images. however,files microsoft shared photoed photoed.exe. (you may ieeecannot extract the tables and figures embedded in have tocustom-install photo editor from your original office yourdocument. (the figures and tables you insert in your disk.)document are only to help you gauge the size of your paper,for here is a way to make tiff image files of tables. first, createthe convenience of the referees, and to make it easy for you toyour table in word. use horizontal lines but no vertical lines.distribute preprints.) therefore, submit, on separate sheets ofhide gridlines (table | hide gridlines). spell check the table topaper, enlarged versions of the tables and figures that removeany red underlines that indicate spelling errors. adjust appearin your document. these are the images ieee will magnification(view | zoom) such that you can view the entire scan andpublish with your paper. table at maximum area when youselect view | full screen.move the cursor so that it is out of the way. press ―print screen ‖ d. electronic image files (optional)you will have the greatest control over the appearance of onyour keyboard; this copies the screen image to the windowsyour figures if you are able to prepare electronic image files. ifclipboard. open microsoft photo editor and click edit | paste asyou do not have the required computer skills, just submitpaper new image. crop the table image (click select button;select thepart you want, then image | crop). adjust the properties of theprints as described above and skip this section.1) easiest way: if you have a scanner, the best and quickestimage (file | properties) to monochrome (1 bit) and 600 pixelsway to prepare noncolor figure files is to print your tables andper inch. resize the image (image | resize) to a width of 3.45figures on paper exactly as you want them to appear, scanthem, inches. save the file (file | save as) in tiff with no andthen save them to a file in postscript (ps) or encapsulatedcompression (click ―more‖button).most graphing programs allow you to save graphs in tiff;postscript (eps) formats. use a separate file for each image.however, you often have no control over compression or filenames should be of the form ―fig1.ps ‖or ―fig2.eps. ‖2) slightly harder way: using a scanner as above, save thenumber of bits per pixel. you should open these image files ina images in tiff format. high-contrast line figures and tablesprogram such as microsoft photo editor and re-save themusing should be prepared with 600 dpi resolution and savedwith no no compression, either 1 or 8 bits, and either 600 or220 dpi compression, 1 bit per pixel (monochrome), with filenames of resolution (file | properties; image | resize). seesection ii- d2 the form ―fig3.tif ‖or ―table1.tif. ‖to obtain a 3.45-in figure for an explanation of number of bits andresolution. if your (one-column width) at 600 dpi, the figurerequires a horizontal graphing program cannot export to tiff,you can use the same size of 2070 pixels. typical file sizes willbe on the order of 0.5 technique described for tables in theprevious paragraph.a way to convert a figure from windows metafile (wmf) to mb.photographs and grayscale figures should be prepared withtiff is to paste it into microsoft powerpoint, save it in jpg 220dpi resolution and saved with no compression, 8 bits performat, open it with microsoft photo editor or similar converter,pixel (grayscale). to obtain a 3.45-in figure (one-column width)and re-save it as tiff.microsoft excel allows you to save spreadsheet charts in at220 dpi, the figure should have a horizontal size of 759 pixels.color figures should be prepared with 400 dpi resolution andgraphics interchange format (gif). to get good resolution,saved with no compression, 8 bits per pixel (palette or 256make the excel charts very large. then use the ―save ascolor). to obtain a 3.45-in figure (one column width) at 400 dpi,the figure should have a horizontal size of 1380 pixels.for more information on tiff files, please go to and click on thelink ―guidelines for author supplied electronic text andgraphics. ‖3) somewhat harder way: if you do not have a scanner, youmay create noncolor postscript figures by ―printing ‖them to files. first, download a postscript printer driver from (forwindows) or from (for macintosh) and install the ―generic postscript printer ‖definition. in word, paste your figure into anew document. print to a file using the postscript printer driver.file names should be of the form ―fig5.ps. ‖use adobe type 1 2fig. 1. magnetization as a function of applied field. notethat ―fig. ‖is abbreviated. there is a period after the figure number, followed by two spaces. it is good practice to explainthe significance of the figure in the caption.html ‖feature (see ). you can then convert from gif to tiff usingmicrosoft photo editor, for example.no matter how you convert your images, it is a good idea toprint the tiff files to make sure nothing was lost in theconversion.if you modify this document for use with other ieee journals or conferences, you should save it as type ―w o r d-2907006.0/95- rtf (*.doc) ‖so that it can be opened by any version of word.e. copyright forman ieee copyright form should accompany your finalsubmission. you can get a .pdf, .html, or .doc version at orfrom the first issues in each volume of the ieee transactionsand journals. authors are responsible for obtaining anysecurity clearances.iii. mathif you are using word, use either the microsoft equation editoror the mathtype add-on () for equations in your paper (insert |object | create new | microsoft equation or mathtypeequation). ―float over text ‖should not be selected.iv. unitsuse either si (mks) or cgs as primary units. (si units arestrongly encouraged.) english units may be used as secondaryunits (in parentheses). this applies to papers in data storage.for example, write ―15 gb/cm2 (100 gb/in2). ‖an exception is when engli sh units are used as identifiers in trade, such as ―3? in disk drive. ‖avoid combining si and cgs units, such ascurrent in amperes and magnetic field in oersteds. this oftenleads to confusion because equations do not balance3units for each quantity in an equation.v. helpful hintsa. figures and tablesbecause ieee will do the final formatting of your paper, you donot need to position figures and tables at the top and bottomof each column. in fact, all figures, figure captions, and tablescan be at the end of the paper. large figures and tables mayspan both columns. place figure captions below the figures;place table titles above the tables. if your figure has two parts,include the labels ―(a) ‖and ―(b) ‖as part of the artwork. please verify that the figures and tables you mention in the textactually exist. please do not include captions as part of thefigures. do not put captions in “text boxes ”linked to the figures. do not put borders around the outside of your figures.use the abbreviation ―fig. ‖even at the beginning of a sentence. do not abbreviate ―table. ‖tables are numbered with roman numerals.color printing of figures is available, but is billed to theauthors (approximately $1300, depending on the number offigures and number of pages containing color). include a notewith your final paper indicating that you request color printing.do not use color unless it is necessary for the proper interpretation of your figures. if youwant reprints of your colorarticle, the reprint order should be submitted promptly. there isan additional charge of $81 per 100 for color reprints. figureaxis labels are often a source of confusion. use words ratherthan symbols. as an example, write thequantity ―magnetization, ‖ or ―magnetization m, ‖ notjust ―m.‖ put units in parentheses. do not label axes only withunits. as in fig. 1, for example, write ―magnetization (a/m) ‖or ―magnetization (a?m?1), ‖ not just ―a/m. ‖ do not label axeswith a ratio of quantities and units. for example,write ―temperature (k), ‖ not ―temperature/k. ‖multipliers can be especially confusing. write ―magnetization(ka/m) ‖ or ―magnetization (103 a/m). ‖ do notwrite ―magnetization (a/m) ? 1000 ‖ because the reader wouldnot know whether the top axis label in fig. 1 meant 16000 a/mor 0.016 a/m. figure labels should be legible, approximately 8 to12 point type.b. referencesnumber footnotes separately in superscripts (insert | footnote).1 place the actual footnoteat the bottom of thecolumn in which it is cited; do not put footnotes in the reference list (endnotes). useletters for table footnotes (seetable i). please note that the references at the end of thisdocument are in the preferred referencing style. give allauthors ’ names; do not use ―et al. ‖ unless there are sixauthors or more. use a space after authors initials. papers thathave not been published should be cited as ―unpublished ‖ [4].papers that have been submitted for publication should becited as ―submitted for publication ‖ [5]. papers that have been accepted for publication, but not yet specified for anissue should be cited as ―to be published ‖ [6]. please give affiliations and addresses for private communications [7].capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for propernouns and element symbols. for papers published in translation journals, please give theenglish citation first,followed by the original foreign-language citation [8].c. abbreviations and acronymsdefine abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are usedin the text, even after they have already been defined in theabstract. abbreviations such as ieee, si, ac, and dc do not haveto be defined. abbreviations that incorporate periods shouldnot have spaces: write ―c.n.r.s., ‖ not ―c. n. r. s. ‖ do not use abbreviations in the title unless they are unavoidable (forexample, ―ieee ‖ in the title of this article).d. equationsnumber equations consecutively with equation numbers inparentheses flush with the right margin, as in (1). first use theequation editor to create the equation. then selectthe ―equation ‖ markup style. press the tab key and write theequation number in parentheses. to make your equations morecompact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, orappropriate exponents. use parentheses to avoid ambiguitiesin denominators. punctuate equations when they are part of asentence, as in?r20f(r,?)drd??[?r2/(2?0)]?? ?0 (1)exp(??|zj?zi|)??1j1(?r2)j0(?ri)d?.be sure that the symbols in your equation have been definedbefore the equation appears or immediately following. italicizesymbols (t might refer to temperature, but t is the unit tesla).refer to ―(1), ‖ not ―eq. (1) ‖ or ―equation (1), ‖ except at the beginning of a sentence: ―equation (1) is ... . ‖e. other recommendationsuse one space after periods and colons. hyphenate complexmodifiers: ―zero-fi e ld- cooled magnetization. ‖ avoid dangling participles, such as, ―using (1), the potential was calculated. ‖[it is not clear who or what used (1).] write instead, ―the potential was calculated by using ( 1), ‖o r ―using (1), wecalculated the potential. ‖use a zero before decimal points: ―0.25, ‖n ot ―.25. ‖use ―cm3,‖ not ―cc. ‖ indicate sample dimensions as ―0.1cm ? 0.2 cm, ‖ not ―0.1 ? 0.2 cm2. ‖ the abbreviationfor ―seconds ‖ is ―s, ‖ not ―sec. ‖ do n o c o t mpi x l e t espellings and abbreviations of units: use ―wb/m2‖or ―webers per square meter, ‖ not ―webers/m2. ‖ whenexpressing a range of values, write ―7 to 9 ‖- 9o,r‖―7not ―7~9. ‖a parenthetical statement at the end of a sentence is punctuated outside of the closing parenthesis (like this). (aparenthetical sentence is punctuated within the parentheses.)in american english, periods and commas are within quotationmarks, like ―this period. ‖ other punctuationis ―outside ‖!avoid contractions; for example, wri te ―do not ‖i nsteadof ―don’t. ‖ the serial comma is preferred: ―a, b, andc ‖instead of ―a, b and c. ‖if you wish, you may write in the first person singular or pluraland use the active voice ( ―i observed that ... ‖ or ―we observed that ... ‖ instead of ―it was observed that ... ‖). remember to check spelling. if your native language is notenglish, please get a native english-speaking colleague toproofread your paper.it is recommended that footnotes be avoided (except for theunnumbered footnote with the receipt date on the first page).instead, try to integrate the footnote information into the text.1 4vi. some common mistakesbe aware of the different meanings of thehomophones ―affect ‖ (usually a verb) and ―effect ‖ (usually a noun), ―complement ‖ and ―compliment, ‖―discreet ‖and ―discrete, ‖―principal ‖ (e.g., ―principal investigator ‖) and ―principle ‖ (e.g., ―principle of measurement ‖). do not confuse ―imply ‖ and ―infer. ‖prefixes such as ―non, ‖―sub, ‖―micro, ‖―multi, ‖and ―ultra ‖ are not independent words; they should be joinedto the words they modify, usually without a hyphen. there is noperiod after the ―et ‖i n the latin abbreviation ―et al. ‖(it isalso italicized). the abbreviation ―i.e., ‖ means ―that is, ‖ and the abbreviation ―e.g., ‖ means ―for example ‖ (these abbreviations are not italicized).an excellent style manual and source of information forscience writers is [9]. a general ieee style guide, informationfor authors, is available atvii. editorial policysubmission of a manuscript is not required for participation ina conference. do not submit a reworked version of a paper youhave submitted or published elsewhere. do notpublish ―preliminary ‖data or results. the submitting author is responsible for obtaining agreement of all coauthors and anyconsent required from sponsors before submitting a paper.ieee transactions and journals strongly discourage courtesyauthorship. it is the obligation of the authors to cite relevantprior work.the transactions and journals department does not publishconference records or proceedings. the transactions doespublish papers related to conferences that have beenrecommended for publication on the basis of peer review. as amatter of convenience and service to the technical community,these topical papers are collected and published in one issueof the transactions.at least two reviews are required for every paper submitted. for conference-related papers, the decision to accept or rejecta5paper is made by the conference editors and publicationscommittee; the recommendations of the referees are advisoryonly. undecipherable english is a valid reason for rejection.authors of rejected papers may revise and resubmit them tothe transactions as regular papers, whereupon they will bereviewed by two new referees.viii. publication principlesthe contents of ieee transactions and journals are peer-reviewed and archival. the transactions publishes scholarlyarticles of archival value as well as tutorial expositions andcritical reviews of classical subjects and topics of currentinterest.authors should consider the following points:1) technical papers submitted for publication must advancethe state of knowledge and must cite relevant prior work. 2)the length of a submitted paper should be commensuratewith the importance, or appropriate to the complexity, of thework. for example, an obvious extension of previouslypublished work might not be appropriate for publication ormight be adequately treated in just a few pages.3) authors must convince both peer reviewers and the editorsof the scientific and technical merit of a paper; the standardsof proof are higher when extraordinary or unexpected resultsare reported.4) because replication is required for scientific progress,papers submitted for publication must provide sufficientinformation to allow readers to perform similar experiments orcalculations and use the reported results. although noteverything need be disclosed, a paper must contain new,useable, and fully described information. for example, aspecimens chemical composition need not be reported if themain purpose of a paper is to introduce a new measurementtechnique. authors should expect to be challenged byreviewers if the results are not supported by adequate dataand critical details.5) papers that describe ongoing work or announce the latesttechnical achievement, which are suitable for presentation at aprofessional conference, may not be appropriate forpublication in a transactions or journal.ix. conclusiona conclusion section is not required. although a conclusionmay review the main points of the paper, do not replicate theabstract as the conclusion. a conclusion might elaborate onthe importance of the work or suggest applications andextensions.appendixappendixes, if needed, appear before the acknowledgment.acknowledgmentthe preferred spelling of the word ―acknowledgment ‖in american english is without an ―e‖after the ―g. ‖use the【篇二:英文论文格式(参考ieee 会议论文格式)】paper titlesubtitle as neededauthors name/s per 1stline 1 (of affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name ofuniversity line 3: city, countryabstract —this electronic document is a “live ”template. the various components of your paper re already defined on thestyle sheet, as illustrated by the portions given in thisdocument.keywords-keyword1; keyword2; keyword3; keyword4i. introductionall manuscripts must be in english. these guidelines includecomplete descriptions of the fonts, spacing, and relatedinformation for producing your proceedings manuscripts.ii. type style and fontswherever times is specified, times roman or times new romanmay be used. if neither is available on your word processor,please use the font closest in appearance to times. avoid usingbit-mapped fonts if possible. true-type 1 or open type fonts arepreferred. please embed symbol fonts, as well, for math, etc.iii. ease of usea. selecting a templatefirst, confirm that you have the correct template for your papersize. this template has been tailored for output on the us-letterpaper size. if you are using a4-sized paper, please close thistemplate and download the file for a4 paper format called“cps_a4_format ”.b. maintaining the integrity of the specificationsthe template is used to format your paper and style the text. allmargins, column widths, line spaces, and text fonts areprescribed; please do not alter them. you may notepeculiarities. for example, the head margin in this templatemeasures proportionately more than is customary. thismeasurement and others are deliberate, using specificationsthat anticipate your paper as one part of the entire proceedings,and not as an independent document. please do not revise anyof the current designations.authors name/s per 2ndline 1 (of affiliation): dept. name of organizationiv. figure and tablev. conclusionacknowledgmentamerica the preferred spelling of the word “acknowledgment ”in is without an “e” after the “g”. avoid the x s p t i r l e t e s d s i e o n,“one of us (r.b.g.) thanks . . . ”instead, try “r.b.g. thanks ”applicable sponsor acknowledgments here; do not place themon the first page of your paper or as a footnote.references[1] g. eason, b. noble, and i. n. sneddon, “on certain integrals oflipschitz- hankel type involving products of bessel functions, ”phil. trans. roy. soc. london, vol. a247, pp. 529 –551, april 1955. (references)[2] j. clerk maxwell, a treatise on electricity and magnetism,3rd ed.,vol. 2. oxford: clarendon, 1892, pp.68 –73.[3] i. s. jacobs and c. p. bean, “fine particles, thin films andexchangeanisotropy, ”i n magnetism, vol. iii, g. t. rado and h. suhl, eds.new york: academic, 1963, pp. 271 –350.[4] k. elissa, “title of paper if known, ”u npublished.[5] r. nicole, “title of paper with only first word capitalized, ”j namestand. abbrev., in press.[6] y. yorozu, m. hirano, k. oka, and y. tagawa, “electronspectroscopy studies on magneto-optical media and plasticsubstrate interface, ” ieee transl. j. magn. japan, vol. 2, pp. 740741, august 1987 [digests 9th annual conf. magnetics japan, p.301, 1982].[7] m. young, the technical writer ’s handbook. mill valley, ca: university science, 1989.[8] electronic publication: digital object identifiers (dois):article in a journal:[9] d. kornack and p. rakic, “cell proliferation without neurogenesis inadult primate neocortex, ”s cience, vol. 294, dec. 2001, pp.2127-2130, doi:10.1126/science.1065467. article in a conferenceproceedings:[10] h. goto, y. hasegawa, and m. tanaka, “efficient schedulingfocusing on the duality of mpl representatives, ”p roc. ieeesymp. computational intelligence in scheduling (scis 07), ieeepress, dec. 2007, pp. 57-64, doi:10.1109/scis.2007.357670.table i.table type stylesfigure 1. example of a one-column figure caption.figure 2. example of a two-column figure caption: (a) this isthe format for referencing parts of a figure.【篇三:ieee 论文专用格式】paper title (use style: paper title) subtitle as needed(paper subtitle)authors name/s per 1st affiliation (author)line 1 (of affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name oforganization, acronyms acceptableline 3: city, countryline 4: e-mail address if desiredauthors name/s per 2nd affiliation (author)line 1 (of affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name oforganization, acronyms acceptableline 3: city, country line 4: e-mail address if desiredabstract —this e lectronic document is a “live ”template. the various components of your paper [title, text, heads, etc.] arealready defined on the style sheet, as illustrated by theportions given in this document. (abstract)keywords-component; formatting; style; styling; insert (keywords)i. 中文正文标题一在引言部分,可以采用中文书写。

IEEE会议模板

IEEE会议模板

Paper Title* (use style: paper title) Subtitle as needed (paper subtitle)Authors Name/s per 1st Affiliation (Author) line 1 (of Affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2-name of organization, acronyms acceptableline 3-City, Countryline 4-e-mail address if desired Authors Name/s per 2nd Affiliation (Author) line 1 (of Affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2-name of organization, acronyms acceptableline 3-City, Countryline 4-e-mail address if desiredAbstract—This electronic document i s a “live”template and already defines the components of your paper [title, text, heads, etc.] in its style sheet. *CRITICAL: Do Not Use Symbols, Special Characters, or Math in Paper Title or Abstract. (Abstract) Keywords—component; formatting; style; styling; insert (key words)I.I NTRODUCTION (H EADING 1)This template, modified in MS Word 2007 and saved as a “Word 97-2003 Document” for the PC, provides authors with most of the formatting specifications needed for preparing electronic versions of their papers. All standard paper components have been specified for three reasons: (1) ease of use when formatting individual papers, (2) automatic compliance to electronic requirements that facilitate the concurrent or later production of electronic products, and (3) conformity of style throughout a conference proceedings. Margins, column widths, line spacing, and type styles are built-in; examples of the type styles are provided throughout this document and are identified in italic type, within parentheses, following the example. Some components, such as multi-leveled equations, graphics, and tables are not prescribed, although the various table text styles are provided. The formatter will need to create these components, incorporating the applicable criteria that follow.II.E ASE OF U SEA.Selecting a Template (Heading 2)First, confirm that you have the correct template for your paper size. This template has been tailored for output on the A4 paper size. If you are using US letter-sized paper, please close this file and download the file “MSW_USltr_format”.B.Maintaining the Integrity of the SpecificationsThe template is used to format your paper and style the text. All margins, column widths, line spaces, and text fonts are prescribed; please do not alter them. You may note peculiarities. For example, the head margin in this template measures proportionately more than is customary. This measurement and others are deliberate, using specifications that anticipate your paper as one part of the entire proceedings, and not as an independent document. Please do not revise any of the current designations.III.P REPARE Y OUR P APER B EFORE S TYLING Before you begin to format your paper, first write and save the content as a separate text file. Keep your text and graphic files separate until after the text has been formatted and styled. Do not use hard tabs, and limit use of hard returns to only one return at the end of a paragraph. Do not add any kind of pagination anywhere in the paper. Do not number text heads-the template will do that for you.Finally, complete content and organizational editing before formatting. Please take note of the following items when proofreading spelling and grammar:A.Abbreviations and AcronymsDefine abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text, even after they have been defined in the abstract. Abbreviations such as IEEE, SI, MKS, CGS, sc, dc, and rms do not have to be defined. Do not use abbreviations in the title or heads unless they are unavoidable.B.Units∙Use either SI (MKS) or CGS as primary units. (SI units are encouraged.) English units may be used assecondary units (in parentheses). An exception wouldbe the use of English units as identifiers in trade, suchas “3.5-inch disk drive.”∙Avoid combining SI and CGS units, such as current in amperes and magnetic field in oersteds. This often leadsto confusion because equations do not balancedimensionally. If you must use mixed units, clearlystate the units for each quantity that you use in anequation.∙Do not mix complete spellings and abbreviations of units: “Wb/m2”or “webers per square meter,”not“webers/m2.” Spell units when they appear in text: “...afew henries,” not “...a few H.”∙Use a zero before decimal points: “0.25,” not “.25.” Use “cm3,” not “cc.” (bullet list)Identify applicable sponsor/s here. If no sponsors, delete this text box (sponsors).C. EquationsThe equations are an exception to the prescribed specifications of this template. You will need to determine whether or not your equation should be typed using either the Times New Roman or the Symbol font (please no other font). To create multileveled equations, it may be necessary to treat the equation as a graphic and insert it into the text after your paper is styled.Number equations consecutively. Equation numbers, within parentheses, are to position flush right, as in (1), using a right tab stop. To make your equations more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. Italicize Roman symbols for quantities and variables, but not Greek symbols. Use a long dash rather than a hyphen for a minus sign. Punctuate equations with commas or periods when they are part of a sentence, as ina +b = γ(1)α + β = χ. (1) (1) Note that the equation is centered using a center tab stop. Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before or immediately following the equation. Use “(1),” not “Eq. (1)” or “equation (1),” except at the beginning of a sentence: “Equation (1) is ...”D. Some Common Mistakes∙ The word “data ” is plural, not singular.∙ The subscript for the permeability of vacuum μ0, and other common scientific constants, is zero with subscript formatting, not a lowercase letter “o.” ∙ In American English, commas, semi-/colons, periods, question and exclamation marks are located within quotation marks only when a complete thought or name is cited, such as a title or full quotation. When quotation marks are used, instead of a bold or italic typeface, to highlight a word or phrase, punctuation should appear outside of the quotation marks. A parenthetical phrase or statement at the end of a sentence is punctuated outside of the closing parenthesis (like this). (A parenthetical sentence is punctuated within the parentheses.) ∙ A graph within a graph is an “inset,” not an “insert.” The word alternatively is preferred to the word “alternately ” (unless you really mean something that alternates). ∙ Do not use the word “essentially ” to mean “approximately ” or “effectively.” ∙ In your paper title, if the words “that uses ” can accurately replace the word using, capitalize the “u ”; if not, keep using lower-cased. ∙ Be aware of the different meanings of the homophones “affect ” and “effect,” “complement ” and “compliment,” “discreet ” and “discrete,” “principal ” and “principle.” ∙ Do not confuse “imply ” and “infer.”∙ The prefix “non ” is not a word; it should be joined to the word it modifies, usually without a hyphen. ∙ There is no period after the “et ” in the Latin abbreviation “et al.” ∙ The abbreviation “i.e.” means “that is,” and the abbreviation “e.g.” means “for example.” An excellent style manual for science writers is [7].IV. U SING THE T EMPLATEAfter the text edit has been completed, the paper is ready for the template. Duplicate the template file by using the Save As command, and use the naming convention prescribed by your conference for the name of your paper. In this newly created file, highlight all of the contents and import your prepared text file. You are now ready to style your paper; use the scroll down window on the left of the MS Word Formattingtoolbar.A. Authors and AffiliationsThe template is designed so that author affiliations are not repeated each time for multiple authors of the same affiliation. Please keep your affiliations as succinct as possible (for example, do not differentiate among departments of the same organization). This template was designed for two affiliations. 1) For author/s of only one affiliation (Heading 3): To change the default, adjust the template as follows.a) Selection (Heading 4): Highlight all author and affiliation lines.b) Change number of columns: Select the Columns icon from the MS Word Standard toolbar and then select “1 Column ” from the selection palette.c) Deletion: Delete the author and affiliation lines for the second affiliation.2) For author/s of more than two affiliations: To change the default, adjust the template as follows.a) Selection: Highlight all author and affiliation lines. b) Change number of columns: Select the “Columns ” icon from the MS Word Standard toolbar and then select “1 Column ” from the selection palette.c) Highlight author and affiliation lines of affiliation 1 and copy this selection.d) Formatting: Insert one hard return immediately after the last character of the last affiliation line. Then paste down the copy of affiliation 1. Repeat as necessary for each additional affiliation.e) Reassign number of columns: Place your cursor to the right of the last character of the last affiliation line of an even numbered affiliation (e.g., if there are five affiliations, place your cursor at end of fourth affiliation). Drag the cursor up to highlight all of the above author and affiliation lines. Go to Column icon and select “2 Columns ”. If you have an oddnumber of affiliations, the final affiliation will be centered on the page; all previous will be in two columns.B.Identify the HeadingsHeadings, or heads, are organizational devices that guide the reader through your paper. There are two types: component heads and text heads.Component heads identify the different components of your paper and are not topically subordinate to each other. Examples include ACKNOWLEDGMENTS and REFERENCES, and for these, the correct style to use is “Heading 5.”Use “figure caption”for your Figure captions, and “table head”for your table title. Run-in heads, such as “Abstract,” will require you to apply a style (in this case, italic) in addition to the style provided by the drop down menu to differentiate the head from the text.Text heads organize the topics on a relational, hierarchical basis. For example, the paper title is the primary text head because all subsequent material relates and elaborates on this one topic. If there are two or more sub-topics, the next level head (uppercase Roman numerals) should be used and, conversely, if there are not at least two sub-topics, then no subheads should be introduced. Styles named “Heading 1,”“Heading 2,”“Heading 3,” and “Heading 4” are prescribed. C.Figures and Tables1)Positioning Figures and Tables: Place figures and tables at the top and bottom of columns. Avoid placing them in the middle of columns. Large figures and tables may span across both columns. Figure captions should be below the figures; table heads should appear above the tables. Insert figures and tables after they are cited in the text. Use the abbreviation “Fig. 1,” even at the beginning of a sentence.TABLE I. T ABLE S TYLESSample of a Table footnote. (Table footnote)b.Figure Labels: Use 8 point Times New Roman for Figure labels. Use words rather than symbols or abbreviations when writing Figure axis labels to avoid confusing the reader. As an example, write the quantity “Magnetization,”or “Magnetization, M,”not just “M.”If including units in the label, present them within parentheses. Do not label axes only with units. In the example, write “Magnetization (A/m)”or “Magnetization (A ( m(1),” not just “A/m.” Do not label axes with a ratio of quantities and units. For example, write “Temperature (K),” not “Temperature/K.”A CKNOWLEDGMENT (Heading 5)The preferred spelling of the word “acknowledgment”in America is without an “e”after the “g.”Avoid the stilted expression “o n e of us (R. B. G.) thanks ...”. Instead, try “R. B.G. thanks...”. Put sponsor acknowledgments in the unnumbered footnote on the first page.R EFERENCESThe template will number citations consecutively within brackets [1]. The sentence punctuation follows the bracket [2]. Refer simply to the reference number, as in [3]—do not use “Ref. [3]”or “reference [3]”except at the beginning of a sentence: “Reference [3] was the first ...”Number footnotes separately in superscripts. Place the actual footnote at the bottom of the column in which it was cited. Do not put footnotes in the reference list. Use letters for table footnotes.Unless there are six a uthors or more give all authors’ names; do not use “et al.”. Papers that have not been published, even if they have been submitted for publication, should be cited as “unpublished”[4]. Papers that have been accepted for publication should be cited as “in press”[5]. Capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for proper nouns and element symbols.For papers published in translation journals, please give the English citation first, followed by the original foreign-language citation [6].[1]G. Eason, B. Noble, and I.N. Sneddon, “On certain integrals ofLipschitz-Hankel type involving products of Bessel functions,”Phil.Trans. Roy. Soc. London, vol. A247, pp. 529-551, April 1955.(references)[2]J. Clerk Maxwell, A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, 3rd ed., vol.2. Oxford: Clarendon, 1892, pp.68-73.[3]I.S. Jacobs and C.P. Bean, “Fine particles, thin films and exchangeanisotropy,” in Magnetism, vol. III, G.T. Rado and H. Suhl, Eds. New York: Academic, 1963, pp. 271-350.[4]K. Elissa, “Title of paper if known,” unpublished.[5]R. Nicole, “Title of paper with only first word capitalized,”J. NameStand. Abbrev., in press.[6]Y. Yorozu, M. Hirano, K. Oka, and Y. Tagawa, “Electron spectroscopystudies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate interface,” IEEE Transl. J. Magn. Japan, vol. 2, pp. 740-741, August 1987 [Digests 9th Annual Conf. Magnetics Japan, p. 301, 1982].[7]M. Young, The Technical Writer’s Handbook. Mill Valley, CA:University Science, 1989.。

ieee英文论文格式

ieee英文论文格式

ieee英文论文格式【篇一:ieee英文论文格式模板】preparation of papers for ieee transactionsand journals (march 2005)first a. author, second b. author, jr., and third c. author, member, ieee?abstract—these instructions give you guidelines for preparing papers for ieee transactions and journals. use this document as a template if you are using microsoft word 6.0 or later. otherwise, use this document as an instruction set. the electronic file of your paper will be formatted further at ieee. define all symbols used in the abstract. do not cite references in the abstract. do not delete the blank line immediately above the abstract; it sets the footnote at the bottom of this column. point and either use insert | picture | from file or copy the image to the windows clipboard and then edit | paste special | picture (with ―float over text‖ unchecked).ieee will do the final formatting of your paper. if your paper is intended for a conference, please observe the conference page limits.ii. procedure for paper submissiona. review stageplease check with your editor on whether to submit your manuscript by hard copy or electronically for review. if hard copy, submit photocopies such that only one column appears per page. this will give your referees plenty of room to write comments. send the number of copies specified by your editor (typically four). if submitted electronically, find out if your editor prefers submissions on disk or as e-mail attachments. if you want to submit your file with one column electronically, please do the following:--first, click on the view menu and choose print layout. --second, place your cursor in the first paragraph. go to the format menu, choose columns, choose one column layout, and choose ―apply to whole document‖ from the dropdown menu. --third, click and drag the right margin bar to just over 4 inches in width.the graphics will stay in the ―second‖ column, but you can drag them to the first column. make the graphic wider to push out any text that may try to fill in next to the graphic.b. final stagewhen you submit your final version, after your paper has been accepted, print it in two-column format, including figures and tables. send three prints of the paper; two will go to ieee and one will be retained by the editor-in-chief or conference publications chair.you must also send your final manuscript on a disk, which ieee will use to prepare your paper for publication. write the authors’ names on the disk la bel. if you are using a macintosh, please save your file on a pc formatted disk, if possible. you may use zip or cd-rom disks for large files, or compress files using compress, pkzip, stuffit, or gzip.also send a sheet of paper with complete contact information for all authors. include full mailing addresses, telephone numbers, fax numbers, and e-mail addresses. this information will be used to send each author a complimentary copy of the 1index terms—about four key words or phrases in alphabetical order, separated by commas. for a list of suggested keywords, send a blank e-mail to or visit the ieee web site ati. introductionthis document is a template for microsoft word versions 6.0 or later. if you are reading a paper version of this document, please download the electronic file, trans-jour.doc, from so you can use it to prepare your manuscript. if you would prefer to use latex, download ieee’s latex style and sample files from the same web page. use these latex files for formatting, but please follow the instructions in trans-jour.doc or trans-jour.pdf.if your paper is intended for a conference, please contact your conference editor concerning acceptable word processor formats for your particular conference.when you open trans-jour.doc, se lect ―page layout‖ fromthe ―view‖ menu in the menu bar (view | page layout), which allows you to see the footnotes. then type over sections of trans-jour.doc or cut and paste from another document andthen use markup styles. the pull-down style menu is at the left of the formatting toolbar at the top of your word window (for example, the style at this point in the document is ―text‖). highlight a section that you want to designate with a certain style, then select the appropriate name on the style menu. the style will adjust your fonts and line spacing. do not change the font sizes or line spacing to squeeze more text into a limited number of pages. use italics for emphasis; do not underline. to insert images in word, position the cursor at the insertion this work was supported by national science council, taipei, taiwan, r.o.c. project no. nsc xx-xxxx-x-xxx-xxx..journal in which the paper appears. in addition, designate one author as the ―corresponding author.‖ this is the author to whom proofs of the paper will be sent. proofs are sent to the corresponding author only.fonts when creating your figures, if possible.4) other ways: experienced computer users can convert figures and tables from their original format to tiff. some useful image converters are adobe photoshop, corel draw, and microsoft photo editor, an application that is part of microsoft c. figuresoffice 97 and office 2000 (look for c:program filescommonall tables and figures will be processed as images. however, files microsoft shared photoed photoed.exe. (you may ieee cannot extract the tables and figures embedded in have to custom-install photo editor from your original office your document. (the figures and tables you insert in your disk.) document are only to help you gauge the size of your paper, for here is a way to make tiff image files of tables. first, create the convenience of the referees, and to make it easy for you to your table in word. use horizontal lines but no vertical lines. distribute preprints.) therefore, submit, on separate sheets of hide gridlines (table | hide gridlines). spell check the table to paper, enlarged versions of the tables and figures that remove any red underlines that indicate spelling errors. adjust appear in your document. these are the images ieee will magnification (view | zoom) such that you can view the entire scan and publish with your paper. table at maximum area when you select view | full screen.move the cursor so that it is out of the way. press ―print screen‖ d. electronic image files (optional)you will have the greatest control over the appearance of on your keyboard; this copies the screen image to the windows your figures if you are able to prepare electronic image files. if clipboard. open microsoft photo editor and click edit | paste as you do not have the required computer skills, just submit paper new image. crop the table image (click select button; select thepart you want, then image | crop). adjust the properties of the prints as described above and skip this section.1) easiest way: if you have a scanner, the best and quickest image (file | properties) to monochrome (1 bit) and 600 pixels way to prepare noncolor figure files is to print your tables and per inch. resize the image (image | resize) to a width of 3.45 figures on paper exactly as you want them to appear, scan them, inches. save the file (file | save as) in tiff with no and then save them to a file in postscript (ps) or encapsulated compression (click ―more‖ button).most graphing programs allow you to save graphs in tiff; postscript (eps) formats. use a separate file for each image.however, you often have no control over compression or file names should be of the form ―fig1.ps‖ or ―fig2.eps.‖2) slightly harder way: using a scanner as above, save the number of bits per pixel. you should open these image files in a images in tiff format. high-contrast line figures and tables program such as microsoft photo editor and re-save them using should be prepared with 600 dpi resolution and saved with no no compression, either 1 or 8 bits, and either 600 or 220 dpi compression, 1 bit per pixel (monochrome), with file names of resolution (file | properties; image | resize). see section ii-d2 the form ―fig3.tif‖ or ―table1.tif.‖ to obtain a3.45-in figure for an explanation of number of bits and resolution. if your (one-column width) at 600 dpi, the figure requires a horizontal graphing program cannot export to tiff, you can use the same size of 2070 pixels. typical file sizes will be on the order of 0.5 technique described for tables in the previous paragraph.a way to convert a figure from windows metafile (wmf) to mb.photographs and grayscale figures should be prepared withtiff is to paste it into microsoft powerpoint, save it in jpg 220dpi resolution and saved with no compression, 8 bits per format, open it with microsoft photo editor or similar converter, pixel (grayscale). to obtain a 3.45-in figure (one-column width) and re-save it as tiff.microsoft excel allows you to save spreadsheet charts in at 220 dpi, the figure should have a horizontal size of 759 pixels.color figures should be prepared with 400 dpi resolution and graphics interchange format (gif). to get good resolution,saved with no compression, 8 bits per pixel (palette or 256 make the excel charts very large. then use the ―save ascolor). to obtain a 3.45-in figure (one column width) at 400 dpi, the figure should have a horizontal size of 1380 pixels.for more information on tiff files, please go to and click on the link ―guidelines for author supplied electronic text and graphics.‖3) somewhat harder way: if you do not have a scanner, you may create noncolor postscript figures by ―printing‖ them to files. first, download a postscript printer driver from (for windows) or from (for macintosh) and install the ―generic postscript printer‖ definition. in word, paste your figure into a new document. print to a file using the postscript printer driver. file names should be of the form ―fig5.ps.‖ use adobe type 12fig. 1. magnetization as a function of applied field. notethat ―fig.‖ is abbreviated. there is a period after the figure number, followed by two spaces. it is good practice to explain the significance of the figure in the caption.html‖feature (see ). you can then convert from gif to tiff using microsoft photo editor, for example.no matter how you convert your images, it is a good idea to print the tiff files to make sure nothing was lost in the conversion.if you modify this document for use with other ieee journals or conferences, you should save it as type ―word 97-2000 6.0/95 - rtf (*.doc)‖ so that it can be opened by any version of word.e. copyright forman ieee copyright form should accompany your final submission. you can get a .pdf, .html, or .doc version at orfrom the first issues in each volume of the ieee transactionsand journals. authors are responsible for obtaining anysecurity clearances.iii. mathif you are using word, use either the microsoft equation editor or the mathtype add-on () for equations in your paper (insert | object | create new | microsoft equation or mathtype equation). ―float over text‖ should not be selected.iv. unitsuse either si (mks) or cgs as primary units. (si units are strongly encouraged.) english units may be used as secondary units (in parentheses). this applies to papers in data storage.for example, write ―15 gb/cm2 (100 gb/in2).‖ an exception is when engli sh units are used as identifiers in trade, such as ―3? in disk drive.‖ avoid combining si and cgs units, such as current in amperes and magnetic field in oersteds. this often leads to confusion because equations do not balance3units for each quantity in an equation.v. helpful hintsa. figures and tablesbecause ieee will do the final formatting of your paper, you do not need to position figures and tables at the top and bottomof each column. in fact, all figures, figure captions, and tables can be at the end of the paper. large figures and tables may span both columns. place figure captions below the figures; place table titles above the tables. if your figure has two parts, include the labels ―(a)‖ and ―(b)‖ as part of the artwork. please verify that the figures and tables you mention in the text actually exist. please do not include captions as part of the figures. do not put captions in “text boxes” linked to the figures. do not put borders around the outside of your figures. use the abbreviation ―fig.‖ even at the beginning of a sentence. do not abbreviate ―table.‖ tables are numbered with roman numerals.color printing of figures is available, but is billed to theauthors (approximately $1300, depending on the number of figures and number of pages containing color). include a notewith your final paper indicating that you request color printing. do not use color unless it is necessary for the proper interpretation of your figures. if you want reprints of your color article, the reprint order should be submitted promptly. there is an additional charge of $81 per 100 for color reprints. figure axis labels are often a source of confusion. use words rather than symbols. as an example, write thequantity ―magnetization,‖ or ―magnetization m,‖ notjust ―m.‖ put units in parentheses. do not label axes only with units. as in fig. 1, for example, write ―magnetization (a/m)‖or ―magnetization (a?m?1),‖ not just ―a/m.‖ do not label axes with a ratio of quantities and units. for example,write ―temperature (k),‖ not ―temperature/k.‖multipliers can be especially confusing. write ―magnetization (ka/m)‖ or ―magnetization (103 a/m).‖ do notwrite ―magnetization (a/m) ? 1000‖ because the reader would not know whether the top axis label in fig. 1 meant 16000 a/mor 0.016 a/m. figure labels should be legible, approximately 8 to12 point type.b. referencesnumber footnotes separately in superscripts (insert | footnote).1 place the actual footnote at the bottom of the column in which it is cited; do not put footnotes in the reference list (endnotes). use letters for table footnotes (see table i). please note that the references at the end of this document are in the preferred referencing style. give all authors’ names; do not use ―et al.‖ unless there are six authors or more. use a space after authors initials. papers that have not been published should be cited as ―unpublished‖ [4]. papers that have been submitted for publication should be cited as ―submitted for publication‖ [5]. papers that havebeen accepted for publication, but not yet specified for an issue should be cited as ―to be published‖ [6]. please give affiliations and addresses for private communications [7].capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for proper nouns and element symbols. for papers published in translation journals, please give the english citation first, followed by the original foreign-language citation [8].c. abbreviations and acronymsdefine abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text, even after they have already been defined in the abstract. abbreviations such as ieee, si, ac, and dc do not have to be defined. abbreviations that incorporate periods should not have spaces: write ―c.n.r.s.,‖ not ―c. n. r. s.‖ do not use abbreviations in the title unless they are unavoidable (for example, ―ieee‖ in the title of this article).d. equationsnumber equations consecutively with equation numbers in parentheses flush with the right margin, as in (1). first use the equation editor to create the equation. then selectthe ―equation‖ markup style. press the tab key and write the equation number in parentheses. to make your equations more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. use parentheses to avoid ambiguities in denominators. punctuate equations when they are part of a sentence, as in?r20f(r,?)drd??[?r2/(2?0)]???0(1)exp(??|zj?zi|)??1j1(?r2)j0(?ri)d?.be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before the equation appears or immediately following. italicize symbols (t might refer to temperature, but t is the unit tesla). refer to ―(1),‖ not ―eq. (1)‖ or ―equation (1),‖ except at the beginning of a sentence: ―equation (1) is ... .‖e. other recommendationsuse one space after periods and colons. hyphenate complex modifiers: ―zero-field-cooled magnetization.‖ avoid dangling participles, such as, ―using (1), the potential was calculated.‖ [it is not clear who or what used (1).] write instead, ―the potential was calculated by using (1),‖ or ―using (1), we calculated the potential.‖use a zero before decimal points: ―0.25,‖ not ―.25.‖use ―cm3,‖ not ―cc.‖ indicate sample dimensions as ―0.1 cm ? 0.2 cm,‖ not ―0.1 ? 0.2 cm2.‖ the abbreviationfor ―seconds‖ is ―s,‖ not ―sec.‖ do not mix complete spellings and abbreviations of units: use ―wb/m2‖or ―webers per square meter,‖ not ―webers/m2.‖ when expressing a range of values, write ―7 to 9‖ or ―7-9,‖not ―7~9.‖a parenthetical statement at the end of a sentence is punctuated outside of the closing parenthesis (like this). (a parenthetical sentence is punctuated within the parentheses.) in american english, periods and commas are within quotation marks, like ―this period.‖ other punctuation is ―outside‖! avoid contractions; for example, wri te ―do not‖ insteadof ―don’t.‖ the serial comma is preferred: ―a, b, and c‖ instead of ―a, b and c.‖if you wish, you may write in the first person singular or plural and use the active voice (―i observed that ...‖ or ―we observed that ...‖ instead of ―it was observed that ...‖). remember to check spelling. if your native language is not english, please get a native english-speaking colleague to proofread your paper.it is recommended that footnotes be avoided (except for the unnumbered footnote with the receipt date on the first page). instead, try to integrate the footnote information into the text. 14vi. some common mistakesbe aware of the different meanings of thehomophones ―affect‖ (usually a verb) and ―effect‖ (usually a noun), ―complement‖ and ―compliment,‖ ―discreet‖and ―discrete,‖ ―principal‖ (e.g., ―principal investigator‖) and ―principle‖ (e.g., ―principle of measurement‖). do not confuse ―imply‖ and ―infer.‖prefixes such as ―non,‖ ―sub,‖ ―micro,‖ ―multi,‖and ―ultra‖ are not independent words; they should be joined to the words they modify, usually without a hyphen. there is no period after the ―et‖ in the latin abbreviation ―et al.‖ (it is also italicized). the abbreviation ―i.e.,‖ means ―that is,‖ and the abbreviation ―e.g.,‖ means ―for example‖ (these abbreviations are not italicized).an excellent style manual and source of information for science writers is [9]. a general ieee style guide, information for authors, is available atvii. editorial policysubmission of a manuscript is not required for participation in a conference. do not submit a reworked version of a paper you have submitted or published elsewhere. do notpublish ―preliminary‖ data or results. the submitting author is responsible for obtaining agreement of all coauthors and any consent required from sponsors before submitting a paper. ieee transactions and journals strongly discourage courtesy authorship. it is the obligation of the authors to cite relevant prior work.the transactions and journals department does not publish conference records or proceedings. the transactions does publish papers related to conferences that have been recommended for publication on the basis of peer review. as a matter of convenience and service to the technical community, these topical papers are collected and published in one issue of the transactions.at least two reviews are required for every paper submitted. for conference-related papers, the decision to accept or reject a5paper is made by the conference editors and publications committee; the recommendations of the referees are advisory only. undecipherable english is a valid reason for rejection. authors of rejected papers may revise and resubmit them to the transactions as regular papers, whereupon they will be reviewed by two new referees.viii. publication principlesthe contents of ieee transactions and journals are peer-reviewed and archival. the transactions publishes scholarly articles of archival value as well as tutorial expositions and critical reviews of classical subjects and topics of current interest.authors should consider the following points:1) technical papers submitted for publication must advancethe state of knowledge and must cite relevant prior work. 2) the length of a submitted paper should be commensuratewith the importance, or appropriate to the complexity, of the work. for example, an obvious extension of previously published work might not be appropriate for publication or might be adequately treated in just a few pages.3) authors must convince both peer reviewers and the editors of the scientific and technical merit of a paper; the standards of proof are higher when extraordinary or unexpected results are reported.4) because replication is required for scientific progress,papers submitted for publication must provide sufficient information to allow readers to perform similar experiments or calculations and use the reported results. although not everything need be disclosed, a paper must contain new, useable, and fully described information. for example, a specimens chemical composition need not be reported if the main purpose of a paper is to introduce a new measurement technique. authors should expect to be challenged by reviewers if the results are not supported by adequate data and critical details.5) papers that describe ongoing work or announce the latesttechnical achievement, which are suitable for presentation at a professional conference, may not be appropriate for publication in a transactions or journal.ix. conclusiona conclusion section is not required. although a conclusion 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.appendixappendixes, if needed, appear before the acknowledgment.acknowledgmentthe preferred spelling of the word ―acknowledgment‖ in american english is without an ―e‖ after the ―g.‖ use the 【篇二:英文论文格式(参考ieee会议论文格式)】paper titlesubtitle as neededauthors name/s per 1stline 1 (of affiliation): dept. name of organizationline 2: name of university line 3: city, countryabstract—this electronic document is a “live” template. the various components of your paper re already defined on thestyle sheet, as illustrated by the portions given in this document.keywords-keyword1; keyword2; keyword3; keyword4i. introductionall manuscripts must be in english. these guidelines include complete descriptions of the fonts, spacing, and related information for producing your proceedings manuscripts.ii. type style and fontswherever times is specified, times roman or times new roman may be used. if neither is available on your word processor, please use the font closest in appearance to times. avoid using bit-mapped fonts if possible. true-type 1 or open type fonts are preferred. please embed symbol fonts, as well, for math, etc.iii. ease of usea. selecting a templatefirst, confirm that you have the correct template for your paper size. this template has been tailored for output on the us-letter paper size. if you are using a4-sized paper, please close this template and download the file for a4 paper format called“cps_a4_format”.b. maintaining the integrity of the specificationsthe template is used to format your paper and style the text. all margins, column widths, line spaces, and text fonts are prescribed; please do not alter them. you may note peculiarities. for example, the head margin in this template measures proportionately more than is customary. this measurement and others are deliberate, using specifications that anticipate your paper as one part of the entire proceedings, and not as an independent document. please do not revise any of the current designations.authors name/s per 2ndline 1 (of affiliation): dept. name of organizationiv. figure and tablev.conclusionacknowledgmentamerica the preferred spelling of the word “acknowledgment” in is without an “e” after the “g”. avoid the stilted e xpression, “one of us (r.b.g.) thanks . . .” instead, try “r.b.g. thanks”. putapplicable sponsor acknowledgments here; do not place them on the first page of your paper or as a footnote.references[1] g. eason, b. noble, and i. n. sneddon, “on certain integrals oflipschitz-hankel type involving products of bessel functions,” phil. trans. roy. soc. london, vol. a247, pp. 529–551, april 1955. (references)[2] j. clerk maxwell, a treatise on electricity and magnetism,3rd ed.,vol. 2. oxford: clarendon, 1892, pp.68–73.[3] i. s. jacobs and c. p. bean, “fine particles, thin films and exchangeanisotropy,” in magnetism, vol. iii, g. t. rado and h. suhl, eds. new york: academic, 1963, pp. 271–350.[4] k. elissa, “title of paper if known,” unpublished.[5] r. nicole, “title of paper with only first word capitalized,” j. namestand. abbrev., in press.[6] y. yorozu, m. hirano, k. oka, and y. tagawa, “electronspectroscopy studies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate interface,” ieee transl. j. magn. japan, vol. 2, pp. 740–741, august 1987 [digests 9th annual conf. magnetics japan, p. 301, 1982].[7] m. young, the technical writer’s handbook. mill valley, ca:university science, 1989.[8] electronic publication: digital object identifiers (dois): article in a journal:[9] d. kornack and p. rakic, “cell proliferation without neurogenesis inadult primate neocortex,” science, vol. 294, dec. 2001, pp. 2127-2130, doi:10.1126/science.1065467. article in a conference proceedings:[10] h. goto, y. hasegawa, and m. tanaka, “efficient scheduling focusing on the duality of mpl representatives,” proc. ieee symp. computational intelligence in scheduling (scis 07), ieee press, dec. 2007, pp. 57-64, doi:10.1109/scis.2007.357670.table i.table type stylesfigure 1. example of a one-column figure caption.figure 2. example of a two-column figure caption: (a) this is the format for referencing parts of a figure.【篇三:ieee论文专用格式】paper title (use style: paper title)subtitle as needed (paper subtitle)authors name/s per 1st affiliation (author)line 1 (of affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name of organization, acronyms acceptableline 3: city, countryline 4: e-mail address if desiredauthors name/s per 2nd affiliation (author)line 1 (of affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name of organization, acronyms acceptableline 3: city, country line 4: e-mail address if desiredabstract—this e lectronic document is a “live” template. the various components of your paper [title, text, heads, etc.] are already defined on the style sheet, as illustrated by the portions given in this document. (abstract)keywords-component; formatting; style; styling; insert (key words)i. 中文正文标题一在引言部分,可以采用中文书写。

ei会议论文格式英文

ei会议论文格式英文

ei会议论文格式英文【篇一:ei论文模板格式】paper title (use style: paper title)subtitle as needed (paper subtitle)authors name/s per 1st affiliation (author)line 1 (of affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name of organization, acronyms acceptableline 3: city, countryline 4: e-mail address if desiredauthors name/s per 2nd affiliation (author)line 1 (of affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name of organization, acronyms acceptableline 3: city, country line 4: e-mail address if desiredabstract—this electronic document is a “live” template. the various components of your paper [title, text, heads, etc.] are already defined on the style sheet, as illustrated by the portions given in this document. do not use special characters, symbols, or math in your title or abstract. (abstract) keywords-component; formatting; style; styling; insert (key words)标题副标题第一作者1,第二作者21.单位,城市,国家,邮编2.单位,城市,国家,邮编 1. e-mail address, 2. e-mail address【摘要】本电子文档定义了由ieee出版的各种中文学术会议论文集的标准文章格式。

ieee英文论文格式.doc

ieee英文论文格式.doc

ieee 英文论文格式【篇一:ieee 英文论文格式模板】preparation of papers for ieee transactions and journals (march2005)first a. author, second b. author, jr., and third c. author,member, ieee?abstract —these instructions give you guidelines for preparingpapers for ieee transactions and journals. use this documentas a template if you are using microsoft word 6.0 or later.otherwise, use this document as an instruction set. theelectronic file of your paper will be formatted further at ieee.define all symbols used in the abstract. do not cite referencesin the abstract. do not delete the blank line immediately abovethe abstract; it sets the footnote at the bottom of this column.point and either use insert | picture | from file or copy theimage to the windows clipboard and then edit | paste special |picture (with ―float over text ‖unchecked).ieee will do the final formatting of your paper. if your paper isintended for a conference, please observe the conference pagelimits.ii. procedure for paper submission a. review stageplease check with your editor on whether to submit yourmanuscript by hard copy or electronically for review. if hardcopy, submit photocopies such that only one column appearsper page. this will give your referees plenty of room to writecomments. send the number of copies specified by your editor(typically four). if submitted electronically, find out if youreditor prefers submissions on disk or as e-mail attachments. ifyou want to submit your file with one column electronically,please do the following:--first, click on the view menu and choose print layout. --second, place your cursor in the first paragraph. go to theformat menu, choose columns, choose one column layout, andchoose ―apply to whole document ‖from the dropdown menu.--third, click and drag the right margin bar to just over 4inches in width.the graphics will stay in the ―second‖column, but you can drag them to the first column. make the graphic wider to pushout any text that may try to fill in next to the graphic.b. final stagewhen you submit your final version, after your paper has been accepted, print it in two-column format, including figures andtables. send three prints of the paper; two will go to ieee andone will be retained by the editor-in-chief or conferencepublications chair.you must also send your final manuscript on a disk, whichieee will use to prepare your paper for publication. write theauthors ’names on the disk la bel. if you are using a macintosh, please save your file on a pc formatted disk, if possible. youmay use zip or cd-rom disks for large files, or compress filesusing compress, pkzip, stuffit, or gzip.also send a sheet of paper with complete contact informationfor all authors. include full mailing addresses, telephonenumbers, fax numbers, and e-mail addresses. this informationwill be used to send each author a complimentary copy of the1index terms —about four key words or phrases in alphabetical order, separated by commas. for a list of suggested keywords,send a blank e-mail to or visit the ieee web site ati. introduction this document is a template for microsoft word versions 6.0 orlater. if you are reading a paper version of this document,please download the electronic file, trans-jour.doc, from soyou can use it to prepare your manuscript. if you would preferto use latex, download ieee ’s latex style and sample files from the same web page. use these latex files for formatting, butplease follow the instructions in trans-jour.doc or trans-jour.pdf.if your paper is intended for a conference, please contact your conference editor concerning acceptable word processorformats for your particular conference.when you open trans-jour.doc, se lect ―page layout ‖from the ―view ‖menu in the menu bar (view | page layout), which allows you to see the footnotes. then type over sections oftrans-jour.doc or cut and paste from another document andthen use markup styles. the pull-down style menu is at the leftof the formatting toolbar at the top of your word window (forexample, the style at this point in the document is ―text ‖). highlight a section that you want to designate with a certainstyle, then select the appropriate name on the style menu. thestyle will adjust your fonts and line spacing. do not change thefont sizes or line spacing to squeeze more text into a limitednumber of pages. use italics for emphasis; do not underline.to insert images in word, position the cursor at the insertionthis work was supported by national science council, taipei,taiwan, r.o.c. project no. nsc xx-xxxx-x-xxx-xxx..journal in which the paper appears. in addition, designate oneauthor as the ―corresponding author. ‖this is the author towhom proofs of the paper will be sent. proofs are sent to thecorresponding author only.fonts when creating your figures, if possible.4) other ways: experienced computer users can convertfigures and tables from their original format to tiff. some usefulimage converters are adobe photoshop, corel draw, andmicrosoft photo editor, an application that is part of microsoftc. figuresoffice 97 and office 2000 (look for c:program filescommonall tables and figures will be processed as images. however,files microsoft shared photoed photoed.exe. (you may ieeecannot extract the tables and figures embedded in have tocustom-install photo editor from your original office yourdocument. (the figures and tables you insert in your disk.)document are only to help you gauge the size of your paper,for here is a way to make tiff image files of tables. first, createthe convenience of the referees, and to make it easy for you toyour table in word. use horizontal lines but no vertical lines.distribute preprints.) therefore, submit, on separate sheets ofhide gridlines (table | hide gridlines). spell check the table topaper, enlarged versions of the tables and figures that removeany red underlines that indicate spelling errors. adjust appearin your document. these are the images ieee will magnification(view | zoom) such that you can view the entire scan andpublish with your paper. table at maximum area when youselect view | full screen.move the cursor so that it is out of the way. press ―print screen ‖ d. electronic image files (optional)you will have the greatest control over the appearance of onyour keyboard; this copies the screen image to the windowsyour figures if you are able to prepare electronic image files. ifclipboard. open microsoft photo editor and click edit | paste asyou do not have the required computer skills, just submitpaper new image. crop the table image (click select button;select thepart you want, then image | crop). adjust the properties of theprints as described above and skip this section.1) easiest way: if you have a scanner, the best and quickestimage (file | properties) to monochrome (1 bit) and 600 pixelsway to prepare noncolor figure files is to print your tables andper inch. resize the image (image | resize) to a width of 3.45figures on paper exactly as you want them to appear, scanthem, inches. save the file (file | save as) in tiff with no andthen save them to a file in postscript (ps) or encapsulatedcompression (click ―more‖button).most graphing programs allow you to save graphs in tiff;postscript (eps) formats. use a separate file for each image.however, you often have no control over compression or filenames should be of the form ―fig1.ps ‖or ―fig2.eps. ‖2) slightly harder way: using a scanner as above, save thenumber of bits per pixel. you should open these image files ina images in tiff format. high-contrast line figures and tablesprogram such as microsoft photo editor and re-save themusing should be prepared with 600 dpi resolution and savedwith no no compression, either 1 or 8 bits, and either 600 or220 dpi compression, 1 bit per pixel (monochrome), with filenames of resolution (file | properties; image | resize). seesection ii- d2 the form ―fig3.tif ‖or ―table1.tif. ‖to obtain a 3.45-in figure for an explanation of number of bits andresolution. if your (one-column width) at 600 dpi, the figurerequires a horizontal graphing program cannot export to tiff,you can use the same size of 2070 pixels. typical file sizes willbe on the order of 0.5 technique described for tables in theprevious paragraph.a way to convert a figure from windows metafile (wmf) to mb.photographs and grayscale figures should be prepared withtiff is to paste it into microsoft powerpoint, save it in jpg 220dpi resolution and saved with no compression, 8 bits performat, open it with microsoft photo editor or similar converter,pixel (grayscale). to obtain a 3.45-in figure (one-column width)and re-save it as tiff.microsoft excel allows you to save spreadsheet charts in at220 dpi, the figure should have a horizontal size of 759 pixels.color figures should be prepared with 400 dpi resolution andgraphics interchange format (gif). to get good resolution,saved with no compression, 8 bits per pixel (palette or 256make the excel charts very large. then use the ―save ascolor). to obtain a 3.45-in figure (one column width) at 400 dpi,the figure should have a horizontal size of 1380 pixels.for more information on tiff files, please go to and click on thelink ―guidelines for author supplied electronic text andgraphics. ‖3) somewhat harder way: if you do not have a scanner, youmay create noncolor postscript figures by ―printing ‖them to files. first, download a postscript printer driver from (forwindows) or from (for macintosh) and install the ―generic postscript printer ‖definition. in word, paste your figure into anew document. print to a file using the postscript printer driver.file names should be of the form ―fig5.ps. ‖use adobe type 1 2fig. 1. magnetization as a function of applied field. notethat ―fig. ‖is abbreviated. there is a period after the figure number, followed by two spaces. it is good practice to explainthe significance of the figure in the caption.html ‖feature (see ). you can then convert from gif to tiff usingmicrosoft photo editor, for example.no matter how you convert your images, it is a good idea toprint the tiff files to make sure nothing was lost in theconversion.if you modify this document for use with other ieee journals or conferences, you should save it as type ―w o r d-2907006.0/95- rtf (*.doc) ‖so that it can be opened by any version of word.e. copyright forman ieee copyright form should accompany your finalsubmission. you can get a .pdf, .html, or .doc version at orfrom the first issues in each volume of the ieee transactionsand journals. authors are responsible for obtaining anysecurity clearances.iii. mathif you are using word, use either the microsoft equation editoror the mathtype add-on () for equations in your paper (insert |object | create new | microsoft equation or mathtypeequation). ―float over text ‖should not be selected.iv. unitsuse either si (mks) or cgs as primary units. (si units arestrongly encouraged.) english units may be used as secondaryunits (in parentheses). this applies to papers in data storage.for example, write ―15 gb/cm2 (100 gb/in2). ‖an exception is when engli sh units are used as identifiers in trade, such as ―3? in disk drive. ‖avoid combining si and cgs units, such ascurrent in amperes and magnetic field in oersteds. this oftenleads to confusion because equations do not balance3units for each quantity in an equation.v. helpful hintsa. figures and tablesbecause ieee will do the final formatting of your paper, you donot need to position figures and tables at the top and bottomof each column. in fact, all figures, figure captions, and tablescan be at the end of the paper. large figures and tables mayspan both columns. place figure captions below the figures;place table titles above the tables. if your figure has two parts,include the labels ―(a) ‖and ―(b) ‖as part of the artwork. please verify that the figures and tables you mention in the textactually exist. please do not include captions as part of thefigures. do not put captions in “text boxes ”linked to the figures. do not put borders around the outside of your figures.use the abbreviation ―fig. ‖even at the beginning of a sentence. do not abbreviate ―table. ‖tables are numbered with roman numerals.color printing of figures is available, but is billed to theauthors (approximately $1300, depending on the number offigures and number of pages containing color). include a note。

EEET英文论文原文

EEET英文论文原文
CIHSPSZ004 - IEEE International Conference on Computational Intelligence for Homeland Security and Personal Safety
Vring Liveness in Biometric Identity Authentication by Real-time Face Tracking
Person - and especially face tracking is beneficial in various situations where the gap between an advanced security level and minimum client interference has to be bridged. An example scenario would be a doctor trying to enter the surgery room. In that case one or more cameras could track an approaching person and the machine supervisor would try to determine whether the person is authorized to enter the restricted area. At best the doctor can pass without any further system interaction. In case no clear decision can be made based on the response of the first assessment, a second machine expert, which is specialized in another recognition trait, can be included in the process. For this purpose a fingerprint sensor, either stationary or embedded in a mobile device carried by the client, is applied to decide on access authorization. This second modality is activated depending on the response of the first one. The benefit of this process is the enhanced authenticity of the fingerprint, since it implies a high degree of certainty that the fingerprint was taken from a real person, because the fingerprint signal channel is opened only if the face channel signals an alive person. This aspect, directly mapped to a surveillance application would imply that a forged fingerprint, whether accepted or not, could be connected to the impostor’s face and length of body parts that can be obtained from a designated camera system. A related system could also be adapted in the event, where people should be protected from entering certain premises. An example for this would be an area that is only innocuous for humans when protective clothing is worn. In this situation, the

IEEE英文论文格式模板

IEEE英文论文格式模板

IEEE英文论文格式模板Title: A Template for IEEE Format of Research PapersAbstract:This sample paper serves as a template for authors looking to submit their research papers to the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). The document includes guidelines for paper organization, citation style, andformatting instructions. By adhering to these instructions, authors can ensure their papers are well-structured and meet the requirements set forth by the IEEE.1. Introduction:In this section, briefly describe the topic of the research paper, provide context, and state the objectives andsignificance of the study. It is important to engage the readers and highlight the relevance of the research being conducted.2. Literature Review:3. Methodology:Explain the research design, methodology, and the techniques employed in the study. Clearly outline the steps followed in data collection, data analysis, and any experiments or simulations conducted. Provide enough detail for readers to replicate the study and assess its validity.4. Results and Discussion:5. Conclusion:Summarize the main findings of the study and link them back to the initial research objectives. Address any limitations or potential areas for further investigation. Emphasize the significance of the research and its potential impact.6. References:List all sources cited in the paper following the IEEE citation style. Ensure that each reference includes all necessary information, such as the author(s), title, source, volume, page numbers, and publication year. Use consistent formatting throughout the references section.7. Formatting Guidelines:Follow the formatting guidelines provided by the IEEE. Use a standard font, such as Times New Roman, with a font size of 10-12 points. Set page margins to 1 inch on all sides. Title of the paper should be in bold, centered, and in title case.8. Citations and References:Citations in the text should be indicated by numbers in square brackets, such as [1]. The corresponding reference number should be listed at the end of the paper, in the order they appear in the text. For example, [1] J. Doe et al., "Title of the Article," Journal Name, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 1-10, Year.Conclusion:。

ieee format 英文paper格式

ieee format 英文paper格式

ieee format 英文paper格式
IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) 格式是一种常用的学术论文格式,尤其在电气工程和计算机科学领域。

以下是一个基本的IEEE英文论文格式模板:
Title Page
标题:简短、明确,反映论文主题。

作者:所有作者的全名和所属单位。

所属单位:作者的学校或工作单位。

摘要:简短地概括论文的主要内容和结果。

关键词:列出3-5个关键词,反映论文主题。

Main Body
1. Introduction
研究背景
研究目的和问题陈述
研究范围和限制
2. Related Work
回顾相关研究和背景知识
当前研究的起点和位置
3. Methodology
描述研究方法或技术路径
详细解释实验设计或实施过程
4. Results and Discussion
呈现实验结果或研究数据
结果分析和讨论
5. Conclusion
总结研究成果和发现
指出研究局限性和未来工作方向References
按照IEEE的引用格式列出所有参考的文献。

Appendix (可选)
提供额外的数据、图表或详细信息。

每个部分都有其特定的格式要求,例如标题、作者、页码等。

在撰写论文时,请确保遵循IEEE的格式指南,并使用适当的引用格式。

IEEE论文格式模板

IEEE论文格式模板

Paper Title (use style: paper title)Subtitle as neededAuthors Name/s per 1st Affiliation (Author) line 1 (of Affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name of organization, acronyms acceptableline 3: City, Countryline4:e-mail:************Authors Name/s per 2nd Affiliation (Author) line 1 (of Affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name of organization, acronyms acceptableline 3: City, Countryline4:e-mail:************Abstract—This electronic document is a “live” template. T he various components of your paper [title, text, heads, etc.] are already defined on the style sheet, as illustrated by the portions given in this document. DO NOT USE SPECIAL CHARACTERS, SYMBOLS, OR MATH IN YOUR TITLE OR ABSTRACT. (Abstract)Keywords-component; formatting; style; styling; insert (key words)I.I NTRODUCTION (H EADING 1)All manuscripts must be in English. These guidelines include complete descriptions of the fonts, spacing, and related information for producing your proceedings manuscripts. Please follow them and if you have any questions, direct them to the production editor in charge of your proceedings at Conference Publishing Services (CPS): Phone +1 (714) 821-8380 or Fax +1 (714) 761-1784.This template provides authors with most of the formatting specifications needed for preparing electronic versions of their papers. All standard paper components have been specified for three reasons: (1) ease of use when formatting individual papers, (2) automatic compliance to electronic requirements that facilitate the concurrent or later production of electronic products, and (3) conformity of style throughout a conference proceedings. Margins, column widths, line spacing, and type styles are built-in; examples of the type styles are provided throughout this document and are identified in italic type, within parentheses, following the example. PLEASE DO NOT RE-ADJUST THESE MARGINS. Some components, such as multi-leveled equations, graphics, and tables are not prescribed, although the various table text styles are provided. The formatter will need to create these components, incorporating the applicable criteria that follow.II.T YPE S TYLE AND F ONTSWherever Times is specified, Times Roman or Times New Roman may be used. If neither is available on your word processor, please use the font closest in appearance to Times. Avoid using bit-mapped fonts if possible. True-Type 1 or Open Type fonts are preferred. Please embed symbol fonts, as well, for math, etc.III.E ASE OF U SEA.Selecting a Template (Heading 2)First, confirm that you have the correct template for your paper size. This template has been tailored for output on the US-letter paper size. If you are using A4-sized paper, please close this template and download the file for A4 paper format called “CPS_A4_format”.B.Maintaining the Integrity of the SpecificationsThe template is used to format your paper and style the text. All margins, column widths, line spaces, and text fonts are prescribed; please do not alter them. You may note peculiarities. For example, the head margin in this template measures proportionately more than is customary. This measurement and others are deliberate, using specifications that anticipate your paper as one part of the entire proceedings, and not as an independent document. Please do not revise any of the current designations.IV.P REPARE Y OUR P APER B EFORE S TYLING Before you begin to format your paper, first write and save the content as a separate text file. Keep your text and graphic files separate until after the text has been formatted and styled. Do not use hard tabs, and limit use of hard returns to only one return at the end of a paragraph. Do not add any kind of pagination anywhere in the paper. Do not number text heads-the template will do that for you.Finally, complete content and organizational editing before formatting. Please take note of the following items when proofreading spelling and grammar:A.Abbreviations and AcronymsDefine abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text, even after they have been defined in the abstract. Abbreviations such as IEEE, SI, MKS, CGS, sc, dc, and rms do not have to be defined. Do not use abbreviations in the title or heads unless they are unavoidable.B.Units•Use either SI (MKS) or CGS as primary units. (SI units are encouraged.) English units may be used assecondary units (in parentheses). An exceptionwould be the use of English units as identifiers intrade, such as “3.5-inch disk drive”.•Avoid combining SI and CGS units, such as current in amperes and magnetic field in oersteds. This oftenleads to confusion because equations do not balancedimensionally. If you must use mixed units, clearlystate the units for each quantity that you use in anequation.•Do not mix complete spellings and abbreviations of units: “Wb/m2” or “webers per square meter”, not“webers/m2”. Spell out units when they appear intext: “. . . a few henries”, not “. . . a few H”.•Use a zero before dec imal points: “0.25”, not “.25”. C.EquationsThe equations are an exception to the prescribed specifications of this template. You will need to determine whether or not your equation should be typed using either the Times New Roman or the Symbol font (please no other font). To create multileveled equations, it may be necessary to treat the equation as a graphic and insert it into the text after your paper is styled.Number equations consecutively. Equation numbers, within parentheses, are to position flush right, as in (1), using a right tab stop. To make your equations more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. Italicize Roman symbols for quantities and variables, but not Greek symbols. Use a long dash rather than a hyphen for a minus sign. Punctuate equations with commas or periods when they are part of a sentence, as inα + β = χ. (1)Note that the equation is centered using a center tab stop. Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before or immediately following the equation. Use “(1)”, not “Eq. (1)” or “equation (1)”, except at the beginning of a sentence: “Equation (1) is . . .”D.Some Common Mistakes•The word “data” is plural, not singular.•The subscript for the permeability of vacuum μ0, and other common scientific constants, is zero withsubscript formatting, not a lowercase letter “o”.•In American English, commas, semi-/colons, periods, question and exclamation marks are located withinquotation marks only when a complete thought orname is cited, such as a title or full quotation. Whenquotation marks are used, instead of a bold or italictypeface, to highlight a word or phrase, punctuationshould appear outside of the quotation marks. Aparenthetical phrase or statement at the end of asentence is punctuated outside of the closingparenthesis (like this). (A parenthetical sentence ispunctuated within the parentheses.)• A graph within a graph is an “inset”, not an “insert”.The word alternatively is preferred to the word“alternately” (unless you really mean something thatalternates).•Do not use the word “essentially” to mean “approximately” or “effectively”.•In your paper title, if the words “that uses” can accurately replace the word “using”, capitalize the“u”; if not, keep using lower-cased.•Be aware of the different meanings of the homophones “affect” and “effect”, “complement”and “compliment”, “discreet” and “discrete”,“principal” and “principle”.•Do not confuse “imply” and “infer”.•The prefix “non” is not a word; it should be joined to the word it modifies, usually without a hyphen.•There is no period after the “et” in the Latin abbreviati on “et al.”.•The abbreviation “i.e.” means “that is”, and the abbreviation “e.g.” means “for example”.An excellent style manual for science writers is [7].V.U SING THE T EMPLATEAfter the text edit has been completed, the paper is ready for the template. Duplicate the template file by using the Save As command, and use the naming convention prescribed by your conference for the name of your paper. In this newly created file, highlight all of the contents and import your prepared text file. You are now ready to style your paper.A.Authors and AffiliationsThe template is designed so that author affiliations are not repeated each time for multiple authors of the same affiliation. Please keep your affiliations as succinct as possible (for example, do not differentiate among departments of the same organization). This template was designed for two affiliations.1)For author/s of only one affiliation (Heading 3): To change the default, adjust the template as follows.a)Selection (Heading 4): Highlight all author and affiliation lines.b)Change number of columns: Select Format > Columns >Presets > One Column.c)Deletion: Delete the author and affiliation lines for the second affiliation.d)For author/s of more than two affiliations: To change the default, adjust the template as follows.e)Selection: Highlight all author and affiliation lines.f)Change number of columns: Select Format > Columns > Presets > One Column.g)Highlight author and affiliation lines of affiliation 1 and copy this selection.h)Formatting: Insert one hard return immediately after the last character of the last affiliation line. Then paste the copy of affiliation 1. Repeat as necessary for each additional affiliation.i)Reassign number of columns: Place your cursor to the right of the last character of the last affiliation line of an even numbered affiliation (e.g., if there are five affiliations, place your cursor at end of fourth affiliation). Drag the cursor up to highlight all of the above author and affiliation lines. Go to Format > Columns and select “2 Columns”. I f you have an odd number of affiliations, the final affiliation will be centered on the page; all previous will be in two columns.B.Identify the HeadingsHeadings, or heads, are organizational devices that guide the reader through your paper. There are two types: component heads and text heads.Component heads identify the different components of your paper and are not topically subordinate to each other. Examples include Acknowledgments and References and, for these, the correct style to use is “Heading5”. Use “figurecaption” for your Figure captions, and “table head” for your table title. Run-in heads, such as “Abstract”, will require you to apply a style (in this case, italic) in addition to the style provided by the drop down menu to differentiate the head from the text.Text heads organize the topics on a relational, hierarchical basis. For example, the paper title is the primary text head because all subsequent material relates and elaborates on this one topic. If there are two or more sub-topics, the next level head (uppercase Roman numerals) should be used and, conversely, if there are not at least two sub-topics, then no subheads should be introduced. Styles named “Heading 1”, “Heading 2”, “Heading 3”, and “Heading 4” are prescribed.C.Figures and Tables1)Positioning Figures and Tables: Place figures and tables at the top and bottom of columns. Avoid placing them in the middle of columns. Large figures and tables may span across both columns. Figure captions should be below the figures; table heads should appear above the tables. Insert figures and tables after they are cited in the text. Use the abbreviation “Fig. 1”, even at the beginning of a sentence.TABLE I. T ABLE T YPE S TYLESa. Sample of a Table footnote. (Table footnote)Figure 1. Example of a ONE-COLUMN figure caption.Please see last page of this document for AN EXAMPLE of a 2-COLUMN Figure.Figure Labels: Use 8 point Times New Roman for Figure labels. Use words rather than symbols or abbreviations when writing Figure axis labels to avoid confusing the reader. As an example, write the quantity “Magnetization”, or“Magnetization, M”, not just “M”. If including units in the label, present them within parentheses. Do not label axes only with units. In the example, write “Magnetization (A/m)” or “Magnetization {A[m(1)]}”, not just “A/m”. Do not label axes with a ratio of quantities and units. For example, write “Temperature (K)”, not “Temperature/K”. D.FootnotesUse footnotes sparingly (or not at all) and place them at the bottom of the column on the page on which they are referenced. Use Times 8-point type, single-spaced. To help your readers, avoid using footnotes altogether and include necessary peripheral observations in the text (within parentheses, if you prefer, as in this sentence).VI.C OPYRIGHT F ORMS AND R EPRINT O RDERS You must submit the IEEE Electronic Copyright Form (ECF) per Step 7 of the CPS author kit’s web page. THIS FORM MUST BE SUBMITTED IN ORDER TO PUBLISH YOUR PAPER.Please see Step 9 for ordering reprints of your paper. Reprints may be ordered using the form provided as <reprint.doc> or <reprint.pdf>.A CKNOWLEDGMENTThe preferred spelling of the word “acknowledgment” in America is without an “e” after the “g”. Avoid the stilted expression, “One of us (R.B.G.) thanks . . .” Instead, try “R.B.G. thanks”. Put applicable sponsor acknowledgments here; DO NOT place them on the first page of your paper or as a footnote.R EFERENCESList and number all bibliographical references in 9-point Times, single-spaced, at the end of your paper. When referenced in the text, enclose the citation number in square brackets, for example [1]. Where appropriate, include the name(s) of editors of referenced books. The template will number citations consecutively within brackets [1]. The sentence punctuation follows the bracket [2]. Refer simply to the reference number, as in [3]—do not use “Ref. [3]” or “reference [3]” except at the beginning of a sentence: “Reference [3] was the first. . .”Number footnotes separately in superscripts. Place the actual footnote at the bottom of the column in which it was cited. Do not put footnotes in the reference list. Use letters for table footnotes.Unless there are six authors or more give all authors’names; do not use “et al.”. Papers that have not been published, even if they have been submitted for publication,should be cited as “unpublished” [4]. Papers that have been accepted for publication should be cited as “in press” [5]. Capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for proper nouns and element symbols.For papers published in translation journals, please give the English citation first, followed by the original foreign-language citation [6].[1]G. Eason, B. Noble, and I. N. Sned don, “On certain integrals ofLipschitz-Hankel type involving products of Bessel functions,” Phil.Trans. Roy. Soc. London, vol. A247, pp. 529–551, April 1955.(references)[2]J. Clerk Maxwell, A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, 3rd ed.,vol. 2. Oxford: Clarendon, 1892, pp.68–73.[3]I. S. Jacobs and C. P. Bean, “Fine particles, thin films and exchangeanisotropy,” in Magnetism, vol. III, G. T. Rado and H. Suhl, Eds.New York: Academic, 1963, pp. 271–350.[4]K. Elissa, “Title of paper if known,” unpublished.[5]R. Nicole, “Title of paper with only first word capitalized,” J. NameStand. Abbrev., in press.[6]Y. Yorozu, M. Hirano, K. Oka, and Y. Tagawa, “Electronspectroscopy studies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate interface,” IEEE Transl. J. Magn. Japan, vol. 2, pp. 740–741, August 1987 [Digests 9th Annual Conf. Magnetics Japan, p. 301, 1982]. [7]M. Young, The Technical Writer’s Handbook. Mill Valley, CA:University Science, 1989.[8]Electronic Publication: Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs):Article in a journal:[9] D. Kornack and P. Rakic, “Cell Proliferation without Neurogenesis inAdult Primate Neocortex,” Science, vol. 294, Dec. 2001, pp. 2127-2130, doi:10.1126/science.1065467.Article in a conference proceedings:[10]H. Goto, Y. Hasegawa, and M. Tanaka, “Efficien t SchedulingFocusing on the Duality of MPL Representatives,” Proc. IEEE Symp.Computational Intelligence in Scheduling (SCIS 07), IEEE Press, Dec.2007, pp. 57-64, doi:10.1109/SCIS.2007.357670.Figure 2. Example of a TWO-COLUMN figure caption: (a) this is the format for referencing parts of a figure.。

IEEE论文模板(官方版)

IEEE论文模板(官方版)

Paper Title (use style: paper title) Subtitle as needed (paper subtitle)Authors Name/s per 1st Affiliation(Author)Dept. name of organization (Line 1 of Affiliation - optional)Name of organization - acronymsacceptable (line 2)City, Country (line 3)************– optional (line 4)Authors Name/s per 2nd Affiliation(Author)Dept. name of organization (Line 1 of Affiliation - optional)Name of organization - acronymsacceptable (line 2)City, Country (line 3)************– optional (line 4)Abstract—This electronic document is a “live” template. The various components of your paper [title, text, heads, etc.] are already defined on the style sheet, as illustrated by the portions given in this document. DO NOT USE SPECIAL CHARACTERS, SYMBOLS, OR MATH IN YOUR TITLE OR ABSTRACT. (Abstract)Index Terms—Component, formatting, style, styling, insert. (key words)I.I NTRODUCTION (H EADING 1)All manuscripts must be in English. These guidelines include complete descriptions of the fonts, spacing, and related information for producing your proceedings manuscripts. Please follow them and if you have any questions, direct them to the production editor in charge of your proceedings (see author-kit message for contact info).This template provides authors with most of the formatting specifications needed for preparing electronic versions of their papers. All standard paper components have been specified for three reasons: (1) ease of use when formatting individual papers, (2) automatic compliance to electronic requirements that facilitate the concurrent or later production of electronic products, and (3) conformity of style throughout a conference proceedings. Margins, column widths, line spacing, and type styles are built-in; examples of the type styles are provided throughout this document and are identified in italic type, within parentheses, following the example. PLEASE DO NOT RE-ADJUST THESE MARGINS. Some components, such as multi-leveled equations, graphics, and tables are not prescribed, although the various table text styles are provided. The formatter will need to create these components, incorporating the applicable criteria that follow.II.T YPE S TYLE AND F ONTSWherever Times is specified, Times Roman or Times New Roman may be used. If neither is available on your word processor, please use the font closest in appearance to Times. Avoid using bit-mapped fonts. True Type 1 or Open Type fonts are required. Please embed all fonts, in particular symbol fonts, as well, for math, etc.III.E ASE OF U SEThe template is used to format your paper and style the text. All margins, column widths, line spaces, and text fonts are prescribed; please do not alter them. You may note peculiarities. For example, the head margin in this template measures proportionately more than is customary. This measurement and others are deliberate, using specifications that anticipate your paper as one part of the entire proceedings, and not as an independent document. Please do not revise any of the current designations.IV.P REPARE Y OUR P APER B EFORE S TYLING Before you begin to format your paper, first write and save the content as a separate text file. Keep your text and graphic files separate until after the text has been formatted and styled. Do not use hard tabs, and limit use of hard returns to only one return at the end of a paragraph. Do not add any kind of pagination anywhere in the paper. Do not number text heads—the template will do that for you.Finally, complete content and organizational editing before formatting. Please take note of the following items when proofreading spelling and grammar.A.Abbreviations and Acronyms (Heading2)Define abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text, even after they have been defined in the abstract. Abbreviations such as IEEE and SI do not have to be defined. Do not use abbreviations in the title or heads unless they are unavoidable. B.Units•Use either SI or CGS as primary units. (SI units are encouraged.)English units may be used assecondary units (in parentheses).An exception would be the use ofEnglish units as identifiers intrade, such as “3.5-inch diskdrive”.•Avoid combining SI and CGS units, such as current in amperes andmagnetic field in oersteds. Thisoften leads to confusion becauseequations do not balancedimensionally. If you must usemixed units, clearly state theunits for each quantity that youuse in an equation.•Do not mix complete spellings and abbreviations of units: “Wb/m2”or “webers per square meter”,not “webers/m2”. Spell outunits when they appear in text:“. . . a few henries”, not“. . . a few H”.•Use a zero before decimal points: “0.25”, not “.25”. Use “cm3”,not “cc”. (bullet list)C.EquationsThe equations are an exception to the prescribed specifications of this template. You will need to determine whether or not your equation should be typed using either the Times New Roman or the Symbol font (please no other font). To create multileveled equations, it may be necessary to treat the equation as a graphic and insert it into the text after your paper is styled.Number equations consecutively. Equation numbers, within parentheses, are to position flush right, as in Eq. 1, using a right tab stop. To make your equations more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. Italicize Roman symbols for quantities and variables, but not Greek symbols. Use a long dash rather than a hyphen for a minus sign. Punctuate equations with commas or periods when they are part of a sentence, as inNote that the equation is centered using a center tab stop. Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before or immediately following the equation. Use “Eq. 1” or “Equation 1”, not “(1)”, esp ecially at the beginning of a sentence: “Equation 1 is . . .”D.Some Common Mistakes•The word “data” is plural, not singular.•The subscript for the permeability of vacuum, and other common scientific constants, is zero withsubscript formatting, not alowercase letter “o”.•In American English, commas, semi-/colons, periods, question andexclamation marks are locatedwithin quotation marks only when acomplete thought or name is cited,such as a title or full quotation.When quotation marks are used,instead of a bold or italictypeface, to highlight a word orphrase, punctuation should appearoutside of the quotation marks. Aparenthetical phrase or statementat the end of a sentence ispunctuated outside of the closingparenthesis (like this). (Aparenthetical sentence ispunctuated within the parentheses.)• A graph within a graph is an “inset”, not an “insert”. Theword alternatively is preferred tothe word “alternately” (unlessyou really mean something thatalternates).•Do not use the word “essentially” to mean“approximately” or“effectively”.•In your paper title, if the words “that uses” can accuratelyreplace the word “using”,capitalize the “u”; if not, keepusing lower-cased.•Be aware of the different meanings of the homophones “affect” and“effect”, “complement” and“compliment”, “discreet” and“discrete”, “principal” and“principle”.•Do not confuse “imply” and “infer”.•The prefix “non” is not a word;it should be joined to the word itmodifies, usually without a hyphen.•There is no period after the “et” in the Latin abbreviation“et al.”.•The abbreviation “i.e.” means “that is”, and the abbreviation“e.g.” means “for example”.An excellent style manual for science writers is given by Young [7].V.U SING THE T EMPLATEAfter the text edit has been completed, the paper is ready for the template. Duplicate the template file by using the Save As command, and use the naming convention prescribed by your conference for the name of your paper. In this newly created file, highlight all of the contents and import your prepared text file. You are now ready to style your paper; use the scroll down window on the left of the MS Word Formatting toolbar.A.Authors and AffiliationsThe template is designed so that author affiliations are not repeated each time for multiple authors of the same affiliation. Please keep your affiliations as succinct as possible (for example, do not differentiate among departments of the same organization). This template was designed for two affiliations.1)For Author/s of Only One Affiliation (Heading 3): To change the default, adjust the template as follows.a)Selection (Heading 4): Highlight all author and affiliation lines.b)Change Number of Columns: Select Format > Columns >Presets > One Column.c)Deletion: Delete the author and affiliation lines for the second affiliation.2)For Authors of More than Two Affiliations: To change the default, adjust the template as follows.a)Selection: Highlight all author and affiliation lines.b)Change Number of Columns: Select Format > Columns > Presets > One Column.c)Highlight Author and Affiliation Lines of Affiliation 1 and Copy this Selection.d)Formatting: Insert one hard return immediately after the last character of the last affiliation line. Then paste down the copy of affiliation 1. Repeat as necessary for each additional affiliation.e)Reassign Number of Columns: Place your cursor to the right of the last character of the last affiliation line of an even numbered affiliation (e.g.,if there are five affiliations, place your cursor at end of fourth affiliation). Drag the cursor up to highlight all of the above author and affiliation lines. Go to Format > Columns and select “2 Columns”. If you have an odd number of affiliations, the final affiliation will be centered on the page; all previous will be in two columns.B.Identify the HeadingsHeadings, or heads, are organizational devices that guide the reader through your paper. There are two types: component heads and text heads.Component heads identify the different components of your paper and are not topically subordinate to each other. Examples include Acknowledgments and References and, for these, the correct style to use is “Heading 5”. Use “figure caption” for your Figure captions, and“table head”for your table title. Run-in heads, such as “Abstract”, will require you to apply a style (in this case, italic) in addition to the style provided by the drop down menu to differentiate the head from the text.Text heads organize the topics on a relational, hierarchical basis. For example, the paper title is the primary text head because all subsequent material relates and elaborates on this one topic. If there are two or more sub-topics, the next level head (uppercase Roman numerals) should be used and, conversely, if there are not at least two sub-topics, then no subheads should be introduced. Styles named “Heading 1”, “Heading 2”,“Heading 3”, and “Heading 4”are prescribed.C.Figures and TablesPlace figures and tables at the top and bottom of columns. Avoid placing them in the middle of columns. Large figures and tables may span across both columns. Figure captions should be below the figures; table captions should appear above the tables. Insert figures and tables after they are cited in the text. Use the abbreviation “Fig. 1” in the text, and “Figure 1” at the b eginning of a sentence.Use 8 point Times New Roman for figure labels. Use words rather than symbols or abbreviations when writing figure-axis labels to avoid confusing the reader. As an example, write the quantity “Magnetization”, or “Magnetization, M”, not just “M”.If including units in the label, present them within parentheses. Do not label axes only with units. In the example, write “Magnetization (A/m)” or “Magnetization {A[m(1)]}”, not just “A/m”. Do not label axes with a ratio of quantities and units. For example, write “Temperature (K)”, not “Temperature/K”.D.FootnotesUse footnotes sparingly (or not at all) and place them at the bottom of the column on the page on which theyare referenced. Use Times 8-point type, single-spaced.To help your readers, avoid using footnotes altogether and include necessary peripheral observations in the text (within parentheses, if you prefer, as in this sentence).Number footnotes separately from reference numbers, and in superscripts. Do not put footnotes in the reference list. Use letters for table footnotes.TABLE I. T ABLE T YPE S TYLESTab le Hea dTable Column HeadTable column subhead Subhe ad SubheadcopyMore table copy aa. Sample of a table footnote. (table footnote)Fig. 1. Example of a figure caption.(figure caption)VI. C OPYRIGHT F ORMSYou must submit the IEEE Electronic Copyright Form (ECF) as described in your author-kit message. THIS FORM MUST BE SUBMITTED IN ORDER TO PUBLISH YOUR PAPER.A CKNOWLEDGMENTThe preferred spelling of the word “acknowledgment” in America is without an “e” after the “g”. Avoid the stilted expression, “One of us (R. B. G.) thanks . . .” Instead, try “R. B. G. thanks”. Put applicable sponsor acknowledgments here; DO NOT place them on the first page of your paper or as a footnote.R EFERENCESList and number all bibliographical references in 9-point Times, single-spaced, at the end of your paper. Whenreferenced in the text, enclose thecitation number in square brackets, for example: [1]. Where appropriate,include the name(s) of editors ofreferenced books. The template will number citations consecutively withinbrackets [1]. The sentence punctuationfollows the bracket [2]. Refer simplyto the reference number, as in“[3]”—do not use “Ref. [3]” or“reference [3]”. Do not use referencecitations as nouns of a sentence (e.g., not: “as the writer explains in [1]”).Unless there are six authors or more give all authors’ names and do not use “et al.”. Papers that have not been published, even if they have been submitted for publication, should be cited as “unpublished” [4]. Papers that have been accepted for publicationshould be cited as “in press” [5].Capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for proper nouns and element symbols.For papers published in translation journals, please give the English citation first, followed by the original foreign-language citation [6].[1]G. Eason, B. Noble, and I. N.Sneddon, “On certain integrals of Lipschitz-Hankel type involving products of Bessel functions,”Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. London, vol.A247, pp. 529–551, April 1955.(references)[2]J. Clerk Maxwell, A Treatise onElectricity and Magnetism, 3rd ed., vol. 2. Oxford: Clarendon, 1892, pp.68–73.[3]I. S. Jacobs and C. P. Bean, “Fineparticles, thin films and exchange anisotropy,” in Magnetism, vol.III, G. T. Rado and H. Suhl, Eds.New York: Academic, 1963, pp. 271–350.[4]K. Elissa, “Title o f paper ifknown,” unpublished.[5]R. Nicole, “Title of paper withonly first word capitalized,” J.Name Stand. Abbrev., in press.[6]Y. Yorozu, M. Hirano, K. Oka, and Y.Tagawa, “Electron spectroscopy studies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate inter face,”IEEE Transl. J. Magn. Japan, vol. 2, pp. 740–741, August 1987 [Digests 9th Annual Conf. Magnetics Japan, p.301, 1982].[7]M. Young, The Technical Writer'sHandbook. Mill Valley, CA: University Science, 1989.。

IEEE英文论文模板

IEEE英文论文模板

Abstract—These instructions give you guidelines for preparing papers for IEEE T RANSACT IO NS and J O e this document as a template if you are using Microsoft Word6.0 or later. Otherwise, use this document as an instruction set. The electronic file of your paper will be formatted further at IEEE. Define all symbols used in the abstract. Do not cite references in the abstract. Do not delete the blank line immediately above the abstract; it sets the footnote at the bottom of this column.Index Terms—About four key words or phrases in alphabetical order, separated by commas. For a list of suggested keywords, send a blank e-mail to keywords@ or visit the IEEE web site at /organizations/pubs/ani_prod/keywrd98.txtI.I NTRODUCTIONHIS document is a template for Microsoft Word versions 6.0 or later. If you are reading a paper version of this document, please download the electronic file, TRANS-JOUR.DOC, from /organizations/pubs/transactions/styleshe ets.htm so you can use it to prepare your manuscript. If you would prefer to use LATEX, download IEEE’s LATEX style and sample files from the same Web page. Use these LATEX files for formatting, but please follow the instructions in TRANS-JOUR.DOC or TRANS-JOUR.PDF.If your paper is intended for a conference, please contact your conference editor concerning acceptable word processor Manuscript received October 9, 2001. (Write the date on which you submitted your paper for review.) This work was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Commerce under Grant BS123456 (sponsor and financial support acknowledgment goes here). Paper titles should be written in uppercase and lowercase letters, not all uppercase. Avoid writing long formulas with subscripts in the title; short formulas that identify the elements are fine (e.g., "Nd–Fe–B"). Do not write "(Invited)" in the title. Full names of authors are preferred in the author field, but are not required. Put a space between authors' initials.F. A. Author is with the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, CO 80305 USA (corresponding author to provide phone: 303-555-5555; fax: 303-555-5555; e-mail: author@ ).S. B. Author, Jr., was with Rice University, Houston, TX 77005 USA. He is now with the Department of Physics, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523 USA (e-mail: author@lamar. ).T. C. Author is with the Electrical Engineering Department, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309 USA, on leave from the National Research Institute for Metals, Tsukuba, Japan (e-mail: author@nrim.go.jp). formats for your particular conference.When you open TRANS-JOUR.DOC, select ―Page Layout‖ from the ―View‖ menu in the menu bar (View | Page Layout), which allows you to see the footnotes. Then type over sections of TRANS-JOUR.DOC or cut and paste from another document and then use markup styles. The pull-down style menu is at the left of the Formatting Toolbar at the top of your Word window (for example, the style at this point in the document is ―Text‖). Highlight a section that you want to designate with a certain style, then select the appropriate name on the style menu. The style will adjust your fonts and line spacing. Do not change the font sizes or line spacing to squeeze more text into a limited number of pages. Use italics for emphasis; do not underline. To insert images in Word, position the cursor at the insertion point and either use Insert | Picture | From File or copy the image to the Windows clipboard and then Edit | Paste Special | Picture (with ―Float over text‖ unchecked).IEEE will do the final formatting of your paper. If your paper is intended for a conference, please observe the conference page limits.II.P ROCEDURE FOR P APER S UBMISSIONA.Review StagePlease check with your editor on whether to submit your manuscript by hard copy or electronically for review. If hard copy, submit photocopies such that only one column appears per page. This will give your referees plenty of room to write comments. Send the number of copies specified by your editor (typically four). If submitted electronically, find out if your editor prefers submissions on disk or as e-mail attachments.If you want to submit your file with one column electronically, please do the following:--First, click on the View menu and choose Print Layout.--Second, place your cursor in the first paragraph. Go to the Format menu, choose Columns, choose one column Layout, and choose ―apply to whole document‖ from the dropdown menu.--Third, click and drag the right margin bar to just over 4 inches in width.The graphics will stay in the ―second‖ column, but you can drag them to the first column. Make the graphic wider to push out any text that may try to fill in next to the graphic.Preparation of Papers for IEEE T RANSACTIONS and J OURNALS(March 2004)First A. Author, Second B. Author, Jr., and Third C. Author, Member, IEEETB.Final StageWhen you submit your final version, after your paper has been accepted, print it in two-column format, including figures and tables. Send three prints of the paper; two will go to IEEE and one will be retained by the Editor-in-Chief or conference publications chair.You must also send your final manuscript on a disk, which IEEE will use to prepare your paper for publication. Write the authors’ names on the disk label. If you are using a Macintosh, please save your file on a PC formatted disk, if possible. You may use Zip or CD-ROM disks for large files, or compress files using Compress, Pkzip, Stuffit, or Gzip.Also send a sheet of paper with complete contact information for all authors. Include full mailing addresses, telephone numbers, fax numbers, and e-mail addresses. This information will be used to send each author a complimentary copy of the journal in which the paper appears. In addition, designate one author as the ―corresponding author.‖ This is the author to whom proofs of the paper will be sent. Proofs are sent to the corresponding author only.C.FiguresAll tables and figures will be processed as images. However, IE E E cannot extract the tables and figures embedded in your document. (The figures and tables you insert in your document are only to help you gauge the size of your paper, for the convenience of the referees, and to make it easy for you to distribute preprints.) Therefore, submit, on separate sheets of paper, enlarged versions of the tables and figures that appear in your document.These are the images IEEE will scan and publish with your paper.D.Electronic Image Files (Optional)You will have the greatest control over the appearance of your figures if you are able to prepare electronic image files. If you do not have the required computer skills, just submit paper prints as described above and skip this section.1) Easiest Way: If you have a scanner, the best and quickest way to prepare noncolor figure files is to print your tables and figures on paper exactly as you want them to appear, scan them, and then save them to a file in PostScript (PS) or Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) formats. Use a separate file for each image. File names should be of the form ―fig1.ps‖ or ―fig2.eps.‖2) Slightly Harder Way: Using a scanner as above, save the images in TIFF format. High-contrast line figures and tables should be prepared with 600 dpi resolution and saved with no compression, 1 bit per pixel (monochrome), with file names of the form ―fig3.tif‖ or ―table1.tif.‖ To obtain a 3.45-in figure (one-column width) at 600 dpi, the figure requires a horizontal size of 2070 pixels. Typical file sizes will be on the order of 0.5 MB.Photographs and grayscale figures should be prepared with 220 dpi resolution and saved with no compression, 8 bits per pixel (grayscale). To obtain a 3.45-in figure (one-column width) at 220 dpi, the figure should have a horizontal size of 759 pixels. Color figures should be prepared with 400 dpi resolution and saved with no compression, 8 bits per pixel (palette or 256 color). To obtain a 3.45-in figure (one column width) at 400 dpi, the figure should have a horizontal size of 1380 pixels.For more information on TIFF files, please go to /organizations/pubs/transactions/informati on.htm and click on the link ―Guidelines for Author Supplied Electronic Text and Graphics.‖3) Somewhat Harder Way: If you do not have a scanner, you may create noncolor PostScript figures by ―printing‖ them to files. First, download a PostScript printer driver from /support/downloads/pdrvwin.htm(for Windows) or from /support/downloads/ pdrvmac.htm(for Macintosh) and install the ―Generic PostScript Printer‖ definition. In Word,paste your figure into a new document. Print to a file using the PostScript printer driver. File names should be of the form ―fig5.ps.‖ Use Adobe Type 1 fonts when creating your figures, if possible.4) Other Ways:Experienced computer users can convert figures and tables from their original format to TIFF. Some useful image converters are Adobe Photoshop,Corel Draw,and Microsoft Photo Editor, an application that is part of Microsoft Office 97 and Office 2000 (look for C:\Program Files\Common Files \Microsoft Shared\ PhotoEd\ PHOTOED.EXE. (You may have to custom-install Photo Editor from your original Office disk.)Here is a way to make TIFF image files of tables. First, create your table in Word. Use horizontal lines but no vertical lines. Hide gridlines (Table | Hide Gridlines). Spell check the table to remove any red underlines that indicate spelling errors. Adjust magnification (View | Zoom) such that you can view the entire table at maximum area when you select View | Full Screen. Move the cursor so that it is out of the way. Press ―Print Screen‖ on your keyboard; this copies the screen image to the Windows clipboard. Open Microsoft Photo Editor and click Edit | Paste as New Image. Crop the table image (click Select button; select the part you want, then Image | Crop). Adjust the properties of the image (File | Properties) to monochrome (1 bit) and 600 pixels per inch. Resize the image (Image | Resize) to a width of 3.45 inches. Save the file (File | Save As) in TIFF with no compression (click ―More‖ butto n).Most graphing programs allow you to save graphs in TIFF; however, you often have no control over compression or number of bits per pixel. You should open these image files in a program such as Microsoft Photo Editor and re-save them using no compression, either 1 or 8 bits, and either 600 or 220 dpi resolution (File | Properties; Image | Resize). See Section II-D2 for an explanation of number of bits and resolution. If your graphing program cannot export to TIFF, you can use the same technique described for tables in the previous paragraph.A way to convert a figure from Windows Metafile (WMF) to TIFF is to paste it into Microsoft PowerPoint,save it in JPG format, open it with Microsoft Photo Editor or similar converter,and re-save it as TIFF.Microsoft Excel allows you to save spreadsheet charts in Graphics Interchange Format (GIF). To get good resolution, make the Excel charts very large. Then use the ―Save as HTML‖ feature (see /support/ kb/articles/q158/0/79.asp). You can then convert from GIF toTIFF using Microsoft Photo Editor, for example.No matter how you convert your images, it is a good idea to print the TIFF files to make sure nothing was lost in the conversion.If you modify this document for use with other IEEE journals or conferences, you should save it as type ―Word 97-2000 & 6.0/95 - RTF (*.doc)‖ so that it can be opened by any version of Word.E.Copyright FormAn IEEE copyright form should accompany your final submission. You can get a .pdf, .html, or .doc version at /copyright or from the first issues in each volume of the IEEE T RANSACTIONS and J OURNALS. Authors are responsible for obtaining any security clearances.III.M ATHIf you are using Word,use either the Microsoft Equation Editor or the MathType add-on () for equations in your paper (Insert | Object | Create New | Microsoft Equation or MathType Equation). ―Float over text‖ should not be selected.IV.U NITSUse either SI (MKS) or CGS as primary units. (SI units are strongly encouraged.) English units may be used as secondary For example, write ―15 Gb/cm2(100 Gb/in2).‖ An exception is when English units are used as identifiers in trade, such as ―3½ in disk drive.‖ Avoid combining SI and CGS units, such as current in amperes and magnetic field in oersteds. This often leads to confusion because equations do not balance dimensionally. If you must use mixed units, clearly state the units for each quantity in an equation.The SI unit for magnetic field strength H is A/m. However, if you wish to use units of T, either refer to magnetic flux density B or magnetic field strength symbolized as µ0H. Use the center dot to separate compound units, e.g., ―A·m2.‖V.H ELPFUL H INTSA.Figures and TablesBecause IEEE will do the final formatting of your paper, you do not need to position figures and tables at the top and bottom of each column. In fact, all figures, figure captions, and tables can be at the end of the paper. Large figures and tables may span both columns. Place figure captions below the figures; place table titles above the tables. If your figure has two parts, include the labels ―(a)‖ and ―(b)‖ as part of the artwork. Please verify that the figures and tables you mention in the text actually exist. Please do not include captions as part of the figures. Do not put captions in “text boxes” linked to the figures. Do not put borders around the outside of your figures. Use the abbreviation ―Fig.‖ even at the beginning of a sentence. Do notFig. 1. Magnetization as a function of applied field. Note that ―Fig.‖ is abbreviated. There is a period after the figure number, followed by two spaces. It is good practice to explain the significance of the figure in the caption.abbreviate ―Table.‖ Tables are numbered with Roman numerals. Color printing of figures is available, but is billed to the authors (approximately $1300, depending on the number of figures and number of pages containing color). Include a note with your final paper indicating that you request color printing. Do not use color unless it is necessary for the proper interpretation of your figures. If you want reprints of your color article, the reprint order should be submitted promptly. There is an additional charge of $81 per 100 for color reprints.Figure axis labels are often a source of confusion. Use words rather than symbols. As an example, write the quantity ―Magnetization,‖ or ―Magnetization M,‖ not just ―M.‖ Put units in parentheses. Do not label axes only with units. As in Fig. 1, for example, write ―Magnetization (A/m)‖ or ―Magnetization (A⋅m-1),‖ not just ―A/m.‖Do not label axes with a ratio of quantities and units. For example, write ―Temperature (K),‖ not ―Temperature/K.‖Multipliers can be especially confusing. Write ―Magnetization (kA/m)‖ or ―Magnetization (103A/m).‖ Do not write ―Magnetization (A/m) ⨯ 1000‖ because the reader would not know whether the top axis label in Fig. 1 meant 16000 A/m or 0.016 A/m. Figure labels should be legible, approximately 8 to 12 point type.B.ReferencesNumber citations consecutively in square brackets [1]. The sentence punctuation follows the brackets [2]. Multiple references [2], [3] are each numbered with separate brackets [1]–[3]. When citing a section in a book, please give the relevant page numbers [2]. In sentences, refer simply to the reference number, as in [3]. Do not use ―Ref. [3]‖ or ―reference [3]‖ except at the beginning of a sentence: ―Reference [3] shows ... .‖ Unfortunately the IEEE document translator cannot handle automatic endnotes in Word; therefore, type the reference list at the end of the paper using the ―References‖ style.Number footnotes separately in superscripts (Insert | Footnote).1 Place the actual footnote at the bottom of the column in which it is cited; do not put footnotes in the reference list (endnotes). Use letters for table footnotes (see Table I). Please note that the references at the end of this document are in the preferred referencing style. Give all authors’ names; do not use ―et al.‖ unless there are six authors or more. Use a space after authors' initials. Papers that have not been published should be cited as ―unpublished‖ [4]. Papers that have been submitted for publication should be cited as ―submitted for publication‖ [5]. Papers that have been accepted for publication, but not yet specified for an issue should be cited as ―to be published‖ [6]. Please give affiliations and addresses for private communications [7].Capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for proper nouns and element symbols. For papers published in translation1It is recommended that footnotes be avoided (except for the unnumbered footnote with the receipt date on the first page). Instead, try to integrate the footnote information into the text. journals, please give the English citation first, followed by the original foreign-language citation [8].C.Abbreviations and AcronymsDefine abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text, even after they have already been defined in the abstract. Abbreviations such as IEEE, SI, ac, and dc do not have to be defined. Abbreviations that incorporate periods should not have spaces: write ―C.N.R.S.,‖ not ―C. N. R. S.‖ Do not use abbreviations in the title unless they are unavoidable (for example, ―IEEE‖ in the title of this articl e).D.EquationsNumber equations consecutively with equation numbers in parentheses flush with the right margin, as in (1). First use the equation editor to create the equation. Then select the ―Equation‖ markup style. Press the tab key and write the equation number in parentheses. To make your equations more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. Use parentheses to avoid ambiguities in denominators. Punctuate equations when they are part of a sentence, as in.)()()||(exp)]2(/[),(21122λλλλλμσϕϕdrJrJzzrddrrFiijr-∞--⋅=⎰⎰(1)Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before the equation appears or immediately following. Italicize symbols (T might refer to temperature, but T is the unit tesla). Refer to ―(1),‖ not ―Eq. (1)‖ or ―equation (1),‖except at the beginning of a sentence: ―Equation (1) is ... .‖E.Other RecommendationsUse one space after periods and colons. Hyphenate complex modifiers: ―zero-field-cooled magnetization.‖ Avoid dangling participles, such as, ―Using (1), the potential was calculated.‖ [It is not clear who or what used (1).] Write instead, ―The potential was calculated by using (1),‖ or ―Using (1), we calculated the potential.‖Use a zero before decimal points: ―0.25,‖ not ―.25.‖ Use ―cm3,‖ not ―cc.‖ Indicate sample dimensions as ―0.1 cm ⨯0.2 cm,‖ not ―0.1 ⨯ 0.2 cm2.‖ The abbreviation for ―seconds‖ is ―s,‖ not ―sec.‖ Do not mix complete spellings and abbreviations of units: use ―Wb/m2‖ or ―webers per square meter,‖ not ―webers/m2.‖ When expressing a range of values, write ―7 to 9‖ or ―7-9,‖ not ―7~9.‖A parenthetical statement at the end of a sentence is punctuated outside of the closing parenthesis (like this). (A parenthetical sentence is punctuated within the parentheses.) In American English, periods and commas are within quotation marks, like ―this period.‖ Other punctuation is ―outside‖! Avoid contractions; for example, write ―do not‖ instead of ―don’t.‖ The serial comma is preferred: ―A, B, and C‖ instead of ―A, B and C.‖If you wish, you may write in the first person singular or pluraland use the active voice (―I observed that ...‖ or ―We observed that ...‖ instead of ―It was observed that ...‖). Remember to check spelling. If your native language is not English, please get a native English-speaking colleague to proofread your paper.VI.S OME C OMMON M ISTAKESThe word ―data‖ is plural, not singular. The subscript for the permeability of vacuum µ0is zero, not a lowercase letter ―o.‖ The term for residual magnetization is ―remanence‖; the adjective is ―remanent‖; do not write ―remnance‖ or ―remnant.‖ Use the word ―micrometer‖ instead of ―micron.‖ A graph within a graph is an ―inset,‖ not an ―insert.‖ The word ―alternatively‖ is preferred to the word ―alternately‖ (unless you really mean something that alternates). Use the w ord ―whereas‖ instead of ―while‖ (unless you are referring to simultaneous events). Do not use the word ―essentially‖ to mean ―approximately‖ or ―effectively.‖ Do not use the word ―issue‖ as a euphemism for ―problem.‖ When compositions are not specified, s eparate chemical symbols by en-dashes; for example, ―NiMn‖ indicates the intermetallic compound Ni0.5Mn0.5whereas ―Ni–Mn‖ indicates an alloy of some composition Ni x Mn1-x.Be aware of the different meanings of the homophones ―affect‖ (usually a verb) and ―effect‖ (usually a noun), ―complement‖ and ―compliment,‖ ―discreet‖ and ―discrete,‖ ―principal‖ (e.g., ―principal investigator‖) and ―principle‖ (e.g., ―principle of measurement‖). Do not confuse ―imply‖ and ―infer.‖Prefixes such as ―non,‖ ―sub,‖ ―micro,‖ ―multi,‖ and ―"ultra‖ are not independent words; they should be joined to the words they modify, usually without a hyphen. There is no period after the ―et‖ in the Latin abbreviation ―et al.‖ (it is also italicized). The abbreviation ―i.e.,‖ means ―that is,‖ and the abbreviation ―e.g.,‖ means ―for example‖ (these abbreviations are not italicized).An excellent style manual and source of information for science writers is [9]. A general IEEE style guide, Information for Authors,is available at /organizations/pubs/transactions/informati on.htmVII.E DITORIAL P OLICYSubmission of a manuscript is not required for participation in a conference. Do not submit a reworked version of a paper you have submitted or published elsewhere. Do not publish ―preliminary‖ data or results. The submitting author is responsible for obtaining agreement of all coauthors and any consent required from sponsors before submitting a paper. IEEE T RANSACTIONS and J OURNALS strongly discourage courtesy authorship. It is the obligation of the authors to cite relevant prior work.The Transactions and Journals Department does not publish conference records or proceedings. The T RANSACTIONS does publish papers related to conferences that have been recommended for publication on the basis of peer review. As a matter of convenience and service to the technical community, these topical papers are collected and published in one issue of the T RANSACTIONS.At least two reviews are required for every paper submitted. For conference-related papers, the decision to accept or reject a paper is made by the conference editors and publications committee; the recommendations of the referees are advisory only. Undecipherable English is a valid reason for rejection. Authors of rejected papers may revise and resubmit them to the T RANSACTIONS as regular papers, whereupon they will be reviewed by two new referees.VIII.P UBLICATION P RINCIPLESThe contents of IEEE T RANSACTIONS and J OURNALS are peer-reviewed and archival. The T RANSACTIONS publishes scholarly articles of archival value as well as tutorial expositions and critical reviews of classical subjects and topics of current interest.Authors should consider the following points:1)Technical papers submitted for publication must advancethe state of knowledge and must cite relevant prior work.2)The length of a submitted paper should be commensuratewith the importance, or appropriate to the complexity, of the work. For example, an obvious extension of previously published work might not be appropriate for publication or might be adequately treated in just a few pages.3)Authors must convince both peer reviewers and the editorsof the scientific and technical merit of a paper; the standards of proof are higher when extraordinary or unexpected results are reported.4)Because replication is required for scientific progress,papers submitted for publication must provide sufficient information to allow readers to perform similar experiments or calculations and use the reported results. Although not everything need be disclosed, a paper must contain new, useable, and fully described information. For example, a specimen's chemical composition need not be reported if the main purpose of a paper is to introduce a new measurement technique. Authors should expect to be challenged by reviewers if the results are not supported by adequate data and critical details.5)Papers that describe ongoing work or announce the latesttechnical achievement, which are suitable for presentation at a professional conference, may not be appropriate for publication in a T RANSACTIONS or J OURNAL.IX.C ONCLUSIONA conclusion section is not required. Although a conclusion may review the main points of the paper, do not replicate theabstract as the conclusion. A conclusion might elaborate on the importance of the work or suggest applications and extensions.A PPENDIXAppendixes, if needed, appear before the acknowledgment.A CKNOWLEDGMENTThe preferred spelling of the wor d ―acknowledgment‖ in American English is without an ―e‖ after the ―g.‖ Use the singular heading even if you have many acknowledgments. Avoid expressions such as ―One of us (S.B.A.) would like to thank ... .‖ Instead, write ―F. A. Author thanks ... .‖ Sponsor and financial support acknowledgments are placed in the unnumbered footnote on the first page.R EFERENCES[1]G. O. Young, ―Synthetic structure of industrial plastics (Book stylewith paper title and editor),‖ in Plastics, 2nd ed. vol. 3, J. Peters, Ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964, pp. 15–64.[2]W.-K. Chen, Linear Networks and Systems (Book style). Belmont,CA: Wadsworth, 1993, pp. 123–135.[3] H. Poor, An Introduction to Signal Detection and Estimation. NewYork: Springer-Verlag, 1985, ch. 4.[4] B. Smith, ―An a pproach to graphs of linear forms (Unpublished workstyle),‖ unpublished.[5] E. H. Miller, ―A note on reflector arrays (Periodical style—Acceptedfor publication),‖ IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat., to be published.[6]J. Wang, ―Fundamentals of erbium-doped fiber amplifiers arrays(Periodical style—Submitted for publication),‖ IEEE J. QuantumElectron., submitted for publication.[7] C. J. Kaufman, Rocky Mountain Research Lab., Boulder, CO, privatecommunication, May 1995.[8]Y. Yorozu, M. Hirano, K. Oka, and Y. Tagawa, ―Electronspectroscopy studies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate interfaces(Translation Journals style),‖ IEEE Transl. J. Magn.Jpn., vol. 2, Aug. 1987, pp. 740–741 [Dig. 9th Annu. Conf. Magnetics Japan, 1982, p. 301].[9]M. Young, The Techincal Writers l Valley, CA:University Science, 1989.[10]J. U. Duncombe, ―Infrared navigation—Part I: An assessment offeasibility (Periodical style),‖ IEEE Trans. Electron Devices, vol.ED-11, pp. 34–39, Jan. 1959.[11] S. Chen, B. Mulgrew, and P. M. Grant, ―A clustering technique fordigital communications channel equalization using radial basisfunction networks,‖ IEEE Trans. Neural Networks, vol. 4, pp.570–578, July 1993.[12]R. W. Lucky, ―Automatic equalization for digital communication,‖Bell Syst. Tech. J., vol. 44, no. 4, pp. 547–588, Apr. 1965.[13]S. P. Bingulac, ―On the compatibility of adaptive controllers(Published Conference Proceedings style),‖ in Proc. 4th Annu.Allerton Conf. Circuits and Systems Theory, New York, 1994, pp.8–16.[14]G. R. Faulhaber, ―Design of service systems with priorityreservation,‖ in Conf. Rec. 1995 IEEE Int. Conf. Communications, pp. 3–8.[15]W. D. Doyle, ―Magnetization reversal in films with biaxialanisotropy,‖ in 1987 Proc. INTERMAG Conf., pp. 2.2-1–2.2-6. [16]G. W. Juette and L. E. Zeffanella, ―Radio noise currents n shortsections on bundle conductors (Presented Conference Paper style),‖ presented at the IEEE Summer power Meeting, Dallas, TX, June22–27, 1990, Paper 90 SM 690-0 PWRS.[17]J. G. Kreifeldt, ―An analysis of surface-detected EMG as anamplitude-modulated noise,‖ presented at the 1989 Int. Conf.Medicine and Biological Engineering, Chicago, IL.[18]J. Williams, ―Narrow-band analyzer (Thesis or Dissertation style),‖Ph.D. dissertation, Dept. Elect. Eng., Harvard Univ., Cambridge, MA, 1993.[19]N. Kawasaki, ―Parametric study of thermal and chemicalnonequilibrium nozzle flow,‖ M.S. thesis, Dept. Electron. Eng., Osaka Univ., Osaka, Japan, 1993.[20]J. P. Wilkinson, ―Nonlinear resonant circuit devices (Patent style),‖U.S. Patent 3 624 12, July 16, 1990.[21]IEEE Criteria for Class IE Electric Systems (Standards style), IEEEStandard 308, 1969.[22]Letter Symbols for Quantities, ANSI Standard Y10.5-1968.[23]R. E. Haskell and C. T. Case, ―Transient signal propagation in losslessisotropic plasmas (Report style),‖ USAF Cambridge Res. Lab., Cambridge, MA Rep. ARCRL-66-234 (II), 1994, vol. 2.[24]E. E. Reber, R. L. Michell, and C. J. Carter, ―Oxygen absorption inthe Earth’s atmosphere,‖ Aerospace Corp., Los Angeles, CA, Tech.Rep. TR-0200 (420-46)-3, Nov. 1988.[25](Handbook style) Transmission Systems for Communications, 3rd ed.,Western Electric Co., Winston-Salem, NC, 1985, pp. 44–60. [26]Motorola Semiconductor Data Manual, Motorola SemiconductorProducts Inc., Phoenix, AZ, 1989.[27](Basic Book/Monograph Online Sources) J. K. Author. (year, month,day). Title (edition) [Type of medium]. Volume(issue). Available: http://www.(URL)[28]J. Jones. (1991, May 10). Networks (2nd ed.) [Online]. Available:[29](Journal Online Sources style) K. Author. (year, month). Title.Journal [Type of medium]. Volume(issue), paging if given.Available: http://www.(URL)[30]R. J. Vidmar. (1992, August). On the use of atmospheric plasmas aselectromagnetic reflectors. IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. [Online]. 21(3).pp. 876—880. Available: /pub/journals/21ps03-vidmarFirst A. Author(M’76–SM’81–F’87) and the other authors may include biographies at the end of regular papers. Biographies are often not included in conference-related papers. This author became a Member (M) of IEEE in 1976, a Senior Member (SM) in 1981, and a Fellow (F) in 1987. The first paragraph may contain a place and/or date of birth (list place, then date). Next, the author’s educational background is listed. The degrees should be listed with type of degree in what field, which institution, city, state or country, and year degree was earned. The author’s major field of study should be lower-cased.The second paragraph uses the pronoun of the person (he or she) and not the author’s last name. It lists military and work experience, including summer and fellowship jobs. Job titles are capitalized. The current job must have a location; previous positions may be listed without one. Information concerning previous publications may be included. Try not to list more than three books or published articles. The format for listing publishers of a book within the biography is: title of book (city, state: publisher name, year) similar to a reference. Current and previous research interests ends the paragraph.The third paragraph begins with the author’s title and last name (e.g., Dr. Smith, Prof. Jones, Mr. Kajor, Ms. Hunter). List any memberships in professional societies other than the IEEE. Finally, list any awards and work for IEEE committees and publications. If a photograph is provided, the biography will be indented around it. The photograph is placed at the top left of the biography. Personal hobbies will be deleted from the biography.。

英文论文格式(参考IEEE会议论文格式)

英文论文格式(参考IEEE会议论文格式)

Paper Title Subtitle as neededAuthors Name/s per 1stline 1 (of Affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name of universityline 3: City, Countryline4:e-mail:************Authors Name/s per 2ndline 1 (of Affiliation): dept. name of organization line 2: name of universityline 3: City, Countryline4:e-mail:************Abstract—This electronic document is a “live” template. The various components of your paper re already defined on the style sheet, as illustrated by the portions given in this document.Keywords-keyword1; keyword2; keyword3; keyword4I.I NTRODUCTIONAll manuscripts must be in English. These guidelines include complete descriptions of the fonts, spacing, and related information for producing your proceedings manuscripts.II.T YPE S TYLE AND F ONTSWherever Times is specified, Times Roman or Times New Roman may be used. If neither is available on your word processor, please use the font closest in appearance to Times. Avoid using bit-mapped fonts if possible. True-Type 1 or Open Type fonts are preferred. Please embed symbol fonts, as well, for math, etc.III.E ASE OF U SEA.Selecting a TemplateFirst, confirm that you have the correct template for your paper size. This template has been tailored for output on the US-letter paper size. If you are using A4-sized paper, please close this template and download the file for A4 paper format called “CPS_A4_format”.B.Maintaining the Integrity of the SpecificationsThe template is used to format your paper and style the text. All margins, column widths, line spaces, and text fonts are prescribed; please do not alter them. You may note peculiarities. For example, the head margin in this template measures proportionately more than is customary. This measurement and others are deliberate, using specifications that anticipate your paper as one part of the entire proceedings, and not as an independent document. Please do not revise any of the current designations.IV.F IGURE AND TABLEV.C ONCLUSIONA CKNOWLEDGMENTThe preferred spelling of the word “acknowledgment” in America is without an “e” after the “g”. Avoid the stilted expression, “One of us (R.B.G.) thanks . . .” Instead, try “R.B.G. thanks”. Put applicable sponsor acknowledgments here; DO NOT place them on the first page of your paper or as a footnote.R EFERENCES[1]G. Eason, B. Noble, and I. N. Sneddon, “On certain integrals ofLipschitz-Hankel type involving products of Bessel functions,” Phil.Trans. Roy. Soc. London, vol. A247, pp. 529–551, April 1955.(references)[2]J. Clerk Maxwell, A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, 3rd ed.,vol. 2. Oxford: Clarendon, 1892, pp.68–73.[3]I. S. Jacobs and C. P. Bean, “Fine particles, thin films and exchangeanisotropy,” in Magnetism, vol. III, G. T. Rado and H. Suhl, Eds.New York: Academic, 1963, pp. 271–350.[4]K. E lissa, “Title of paper if known,” unpublished.[5]R. Nicole, “Title of paper with only first word capitalized,” J. NameStand. Abbrev., in press.[6]Y. Yorozu, M. Hirano, K. Oka, and Y. Tagawa, “Electronspectroscopy studies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate interface,” IEEE Transl. J. Magn. Japan, vol. 2, pp. 740–741, August 1987 [Digests 9th Annual Conf. Magnetics Japan, p. 301, 1982]. [7]M. Young, The Technical Writer’s Handbook. Mill Valley, CA:University Science, 1989.[8]Electronic Publication: Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs):Article in a journal:[9] D. Kornack and P. Rakic, “Cell Proliferation without Neurogenesis inAdult Primate Neocortex,” Science, vol. 294, Dec. 2001, pp. 2127-2130, doi:10.1126/science.1065467.Article in a conference proceedings:[10]H. Goto, Y. Hasegawa, and M. Tanaka, “Efficient SchedulingFocusing on the Duality of MPL Representatives,” Proc. IEEE Symp.Computational Intelligence in Scheduling (SCIS 07), IEEE Press, Dec.2007, pp. 57-64, doi:10.1109/SCIS.2007.357670.We suggest that you use a text box to insert a graphic (ideally 300 dpi), with all fonts embedded) because, in an MSW document, this method is somewhat more stable than directly inserting a picture.To have non-visible rules on your frame, use the MSWord pull-down menu, select Format > Borders and Shading > Select “None”.TABLE I.T ABLE T YPE S TYLES Table Head Table Column HeadTable column subhead Subhead SubheadcopyMore table copy aFigure 1. Example of a ONE-COLUMN figure caption.Figure 2. Example of a TWO-COLUMN figure caption: (a) this is the format for referencing parts of a figure.。

IEEE会议论文格式

IEEE会议论文格式

Abstract—These instructions give you guidelines for preparing papers for the ICSGCE/IEEE conference. Use this document as a template by using Microsoft Word 6.0 or later. Otherwise, use this document as an instruction set. P lease use this document as a “template” to prepare your manuscript. For submission guidelines, follow the instructions on paper submission on /. Do not delete the blank line immediately above the abstract; it sets the footnote at the bottom of this column.Keywords-Component; formatting; style; styling; insertI.IntroductionThese guidelines include complete descriptions of the fonts, line spacing, margins, column widths, and related information for producing your manuscripts. If you are reading the ICSGCE-Template.doc, please save to your own conference directory for later use. Please follow them and if you have any questions, direct them to Publication Chair at ********************* or *********************.II.Procedure for Paper SubmissionA.Manuscript PreparingWhen you are preparing your manuscript, open the ICSGCE-Template.doc and rename it into yourown.doc. Then type over sections directly in the template, or simply cut and paste from another document and then format them by means of format paintbrush. Use italics for emphasis; do not underline. Do not change the font sizes, margins, column widths or line spacing to squeeze more text into a limited number of pages.You are also advised to follow the Manuscript received April 10, 2011. (Write the date on which you submitted your paper for review.) This work was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Commerce under Grant BS123456 (sponsor and financial support acknowledgment goes here). Paper titles should be written in uppercase and lowercase letters, not all uppercase. Avoid writing long formulas with subscripts in the title; short formulas that identify the elements are fine (e.g., "Nd–Fe–B"). Full names of authors are preferred in the author field, but are not required. Put a space between authors' initials.F. A. Author is with the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, CO 80305 USA (corresponding author to provide phone: 303-555-5555;fax:303-555-5555;e-mail:*******************.gov).S. B. Author, Jr. is with the Department of Physics, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523 USA (e-mail: author@lamar. ).T. C. Author is with the Electrical Engineering Department, University of Colorado,Boulder,CO80309USA(e-mail:**************.jp).instructions on paper formatting on /. All manuscripts must be prepared in English.B.Paper SubmissionWhen you submit your manuscript, follow the instructions on paper submission on /and submit your papers online or via Email.Also send a Registration Form with complete contact information for all authors. Include full mailing addresses, telephone numbers, and e-mail addresses. In addition, designate one author as the “corresponding author.” This is the author to whom the notification of acceptance with revising requirements of the paper will be sent. The notification of acceptance is sent to the corresponding author only.C.Copyright FormAn ICSGCE/IEEE copyright form should accompany your final submission. These will be custom generated for you at the submission time. Authors are responsible for obtaining any security clearances.III.MathAll mathematical expressions must be legible. It is required to create equations or variables in your manuscript by the MathType. Size setting of equations is as follows:Full 10ptSubscript 7ptSub-subscript 6ptSymbol 12ptSub-symbol 8ptNumber equations consecutively with equation numbers in parentheses flush with the right margin, as in (1). To make your equations more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. Use parentheses to avoid ambiguities in denominators. Punctuate equations when they are part of a sentence, as in220(,)/[/(2)]rF r dr d rϕϕσμ=⎰1120exp(||)()()j i iz z J r J r dλλλλλ∞-⨯--⎰ (1)Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before the equation appears or immediately following.Refer to “(1),” not “Eq. (1)” or “equation (1),” except at the beginning of a sentence: “Equation (1) is ...”.• Italicize general variables (T might refer to temperature,Template for Preparation of Papers for ICSGCE/IEEE Conferences First A. Author, Second B. Author, Jr., and Third C. Author, Member, IEEEbut T is the unit tesla).• Denote vectors and matrices in bold but not italic Times New Roman.• Express derivatives as follows:2, not 2dx x b x x b dt=+=+ (2) • Half line spacing is suggested between the equation and its upper (lower) text as in (1) and (2).Do not give derivations that are easily found in the literature, merely cite the reference.IV. Figure and TableEach figure and table should have a caption to concisely and intelligibly illustrate the contents of it. Figures/tables may be worked into the text or placed at the end of the manuscript. To conserve space in the publication, most figures/tables are reduced to single-column width if possible. This may result in as much as a 4:1 reduction from the original. Therefore, figures/tables should be kept to a minimum in original and be easily viewed on published pages. Large figures and tables may span both columns.In the finalized sizes of figures/tables, authors are advised to make sure that (see Fig. 1):• All images/photographs will be published in black- and-white, so do not describe any of images/photographs with words such as red line, blue area, etc.• Graphing figures are recommended to generate in gray curves because some color lines will be not legible in black-and-white.• Lines in the figures are in 0.75 pounds and arrows in the minimum.• Mathematical expressions (variables) appearing in figures should be in the same styles as in texts (see Section III).• Trigram tables are suggested, as in Table 1, the first and the last lines are double lines and the 2nd line is in 0.75 pounds.• Texts in figures are approximately 8pt.• Captions of figures and tables are approximately 9pt. • Place figure captions below the figures, as in Fig. 1. • Place table titles above the tables, as in Table 1.The figures and tables are recommended to insert in your document after the text actually exists. Please do not include captions as part of the figures. Do not put captions in “t ext boxes” linked to the figures. Use the abbreviation “Fig.” even at the beginning of a sentence. Do not abbreviate “Tab.”. Tables are numbered with Arabic numerals.Table 1: The arrangement of channelsChannels Group 1 Group 2 … Group c Main channel Channel 1 Channel 2 … Channel c ………… …Fig. 1. Magnetization as a function of applied field. Note that “Fig.” is abbreviated. There is a period after the figure number, followed by two spaces. It is good practice to explain the significance of the figure in the caption. If your figure has two parts, include the labels “(a)” and “(b)” below the corresponding part of the figure. Then the figure caption should be “The significance of the figure: (a) the significance of (a) and (b) the significance of (b)”Figure axis labels are often a source of confusion. Use words rather than symbols. As an example, write the quantity “Magnetization,” or “Magnetization M ,” not just “M .” Put units in parentheses. Do not label axes only with units. As in Fig. 1, for example, write “Magnetization (A/m)” or “Magnetization (A ⋅m -1),” not just “A/m.” Do not label axes with a ratio of quantities and units. For example, write “Temperature (K),” not “Temperature/K.”Multipliers can be especially confusing. Write “Magnetization (kA/m)” or “Magnetization (103 A/m).” Do not write “Magnetization (A/m)⨯1000” because the reader would not know whether the top axis label in Fig. 1 meant 16000 A/m or 0.016 A/m.V. Helpful HintsEssentially, academic paper writing is as a form of problem-solving in which the writer, or the author, faces two main tasks: a) generating his academic ideas in language, and b) composing these ideas into a written structure to meet the need of readers and the requirements of the journal.Generally speaking, writing a good paper in English requires the mastery of various skills. It requires language basis, grammatical accuracy and readability, so that relationship between words and sentences are clear, and understanding between reader and writer is made easier. Additionally, it requires vocabulary appropriate to the subject matter and to the level and tone of the paper. Finally, of more importance, writing a good academic paper requires a careful and well-planned structuring of ideas.However, this Template is incapable to include everything you need to know to be a better writer. Given here are some useful language hints that should be an important part of resources for your paper writing. A. Formal Usages• Use one space after periods and colons.• Hyphenate complex modifiers: “zero -field-cooled magnetization.”• Prefixes such as “non,” “sub,” “micro,” “multi,” and“"ultra” are not independent words; they should be joined to the words they modify, usually without a hyphen.•Avoid dangling participles, such as, “Using (1), the potential was calculated.” [It is not clear who or what used (1).] Write instead, “The potential was calculated by using (1),” or “Using (1), we calculated the potential.”•A parenthetical statement at the end of a sentence is punctuated outside of the closing parenthesis (like this). (A parenthetical sentence is punctuated within the parentheses.) •Avoid contractions; for example, write “do not” instead of “don’t.” The serial comma is preferred: “A, B, and C” instead of “A, B and C.”B.Some Common Mistakes•The word “data” is plural, not singular.•The word “alternatively” is preferred to the word “alternately” (unless you really mean something that alternates).• Use the wo rd “whereas” instead of “while” (unless you are referring to simultaneous events).•Do not use the word “issue”or “question”as a euphemism for “problem.”• Be aware of the different meanings of the homophones “affect” (usually a verb) and “effect” (usua lly a noun), “complement” and “compliment,” “discreet” and “discrete,” “principal” (e.g., “principal investigator”) and “principle”(e.g., “principle of measurement”). Do not confuse “imply” and “infer.”•There is no period after the “et” in the Latin ab breviation “et al.” (It is also italicized).•The abbreviation “i.e.,” means “that is,” and the abbreviation “e.g.,” means “for example” (these abbreviations are not italicized).C.Abbreviations and AcronymsDefine abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text, even after they have already been defined in the abstract. Abbreviations such as TCP/IP, ac, and dc do not have to be defined. Do not use abbreviations in the title unless they are unavoidable.The abbreviation for “seconds” is “s,” not “sec.”D.UnitsUse SI not CGS as primary units. Avoid combining SI and CGS units. This often leads to confusion because equations do not balance dimensionally. If you must use mixed units, clearly state the units for each quantity in an equation.•Use the center dot to separate compound units, e.g., “A·m2.”•Indicate sample dimensions as “0.1 cm ⨯0.2 cm,” not “0.1 ⨯ 0.2 cm2.”•When expressing a range of values, write “7 to 9”or “7-9”, not “7~9”.Remember that an excellent academic paper needs to be composed by authors in good language! Undeciphe- rable English is a valid reason for rejection! If your native language is not English, please get a colleague good at English or a native English-speaker to proofread your paper.VI.References and CitationsNumber citations consecutively in square brackets [1]. The sentence punctuation follows the brackets [2]. Multiple references [2], [3] are each numbered with separate brackets [1]–[3]. When citing a section in a book, please give the relevant page numbers [2]. In sentences, refer simply to the reference number, as in [3]. Do not use “Ref. [3]” or “reference [3]” except at the beginning of a sentence: “Reference [3] shows ... .” The conference cannot accept footnotes in its document; therefore, type the reference list at the end of the paper using the “References” stylePlease note that the references at the end of this document are in the preferred referencing style. Give all authors’ names; do not use “et al.” unless there are six authors or more. Use a space after authors' initials. Papers that have not been published should be cited as “unpublished” [4]. Papers that have been submitted for publication should be cited as “submitted for publication” [5]. Papers that have been accepted for publication, but not yet specified for an issue should be cited as “to be published” [6]. Please give affiliations and addresses for private communications [7]. Capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for proper nouns and element symbols. For papers published in translation journals, please give the English citation first, followed by the original foreign-language citation [8].VII.ConclusionA conclusion section is not required. Although a conclusion 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.VIII.AppendixAppendixes, if needed, appear before the acknowledgment.IX.AcknowledgmentUse the singular heading even if you have many acknowledgments. Avoid expressions such as “One of us (S.B.A.) would like to thank ... .” Instead, write “F. A. Author thanks ... .” Sponsor and financial support acknowledgments are placed in the unnumbered footnote on the first page.References[1]G. O. Y oung, “Synthetic structure of industrial plastics (Book stylewith paper title and editor),” in Plastics, 2nd ed. vol. 3, J. Peters, Ed.New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964, pp. 15–64.[2]W.-K. Chen, Linear Networks and Systems (Book style).Belmont, CA:Wadsworth, 1993, pp. 123–135.[3] H. Poor, An Introduction to Signal Detection and Estimation. NewYork: Springer-Verlag, 1985, ch. 4.[4] B. Smith, “An approach to graphs of linear forms (Unpublished workstyle),” unpublished.[5] E. H. Miller, “A note on reflector arrays (Periodical style—Acceptedfor publication),” IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat., to be published.[6]J. Wang, “Fundamentals of erbium-doped fiber amplifiers arrays(Periodical style—Submitted for publication),” IEEE J. QuantumElectron., submitted for publication.[7] C. J. Kaufman, Rocky Mountain Research Lab., Boulder, CO, privatecommunication, May 1995.[8]Y. Yorozu, M. Hirano, K. Oka, and Y. Tagawa, “Electron spectroscopystudies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate interfaces(Translation Journals style),”IEEE Transl. J. Magn.Jpn., vol.2, Aug. 1987, pp. 740–741 [Dig. 9th Annu. Conf. Magnetics Japan, 1982, p. 301].[9]M. Young, The Techincal Writers l Valley, CA:University Science, 1989.[10]J. U. Duncombe, “Infrared navigation—Part I: An assessment offeasibility (Periodical style),” IEEE Trans. Electron Devices, vol.ED-11, pp. 34–39, Jan. 1959.[11]S. Chen, B. Mulgrew, and P. M. Grant, “A clustering technique fordigital communications channel equalization using radial basisfunction networks,” IEEE Trans. Neural Networks, vol. 4, pp. 570–578, July 1993.[12]R. W. Lucky, “Automatic equalization for digital communication,”Bell Syst. Tech. J., vol. 44, no. 4, pp. 547–588, Apr. 1965.[13]S. P. Bingulac, “On the compatibility of adaptive controllers (PublishedConference Proceedings style),” in Proc. 4th Annu. Allerton Conf.Circuits and Systems Theory, New York, 1994, pp. 8–16.[14]G. R. Faulhaber, “Design of service systems with priority reservation,”in Conf. Rec. 1995 IEEE Int. Conf. Communications, pp. 3–8. [15]W. D. Doyle, “Magnetization reversal in films with biaxial anisotropy,”in 1987 Proc. INTERMAG Conf., pp. 2.2-1–2.2-6.[16]G. W. Juette and L. E. Zeffanella, “Radio noise currents n short sectionson bundle conductors (Presented Conference Paper style),” presente d at the IEEE Summer power Meeting, Dallas, TX, June 22–27, 1990,Paper 90 SM 690-0 PWRS. [17]J. G. Kreifeldt, “An analysis of surface-detected EMG as anamplitude-modulated noise,” presented at the 1989 Int. Conf. Medicine and Biological Engineering, Chicago, IL.[18]J. Williams, “Narrow-band analyzer (Thesis or Dissertation style),”Ph.D. dissertation, Dept. Elect. Eng., Harvard Univ., Cambridge, MA, 1993.[19]N. Kawasaki, “Parametric study of thermal and chemicalnonequilibrium nozzle flow,” M.S. thesis, Dept. Elec tron. Eng., Osaka Univ., Osaka, Japan, 1993.[20]J. P. Wilkinson, “Nonlinear resonant circuit devices (Patent style),”U.S. Patent 3 624 12, July 16, 1990.[21]IEEE Criteria for Class IE Electric Systems (Standards style), IEEEStandard 308, 1969.[22]Letter Symbols for Quantities, ANSI Standard Y10.5-1968.[23]R. E. Haskell and C. T. Case, “Transient signal propagation in losslessisotropic plasmas (Report style),” USAF Cambridge Res. Lab., Cambridge, MA Rep. ARCRL-66-234 (II), 1994, vol. 2.[24] E. E. Reber, R. L. Michell, a nd C. J. Carter, “Oxygen absorption in theEarth’s atmosphere,” Aerospace Corp., Los Angeles, CA, Tech. Rep.TR-0200 (420-46)-3, Nov. 1988.[25](Handbook style) Transmission Systems for Communications, 3rd ed.,Western Electric Co., Winston-Salem, NC, 1985, pp. 44–60.Motorola Semiconductor Data Manual,Motorola Semiconductor Products Inc., Phoenix, AZ, 1989.[26](Basic Book/Monograph Online Sources) J. K. Author. (year, month,day). Title (edition) [Type of medium]. Volume(issue). Available:http://www.(URL)[27]J. Jones. (1991, May 10). Networks (2nd ed.) [Online]. Available:[28](Journal Online Sources style) K. Author. (year, month). Title. Journal[Type of medium]. Volume(issue), paging if given. Available:http://www.(URL)[29]R. J. Vidmar. (1992, August). On the use of atmospheric plasmas aselectromagnetic reflectors. IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. [Online]. 21(3).pp. 876—880. Available: /pub/journals/ 21ps03-vidmar。

IEEE Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation 论文模板(TDEI Template)

IEEE Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation 论文模板(TDEI Template)

Preparation of Papers for Publicationin IEEE Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical InsulationAuthor(s) Same AddressSheridan Printing Co.1425 Third AvenueAlpha, NJ 08865, USAand Other Author(s)University of KnowledgeDepartment of FunCity of Leisure, PA 18045, USAABSTRACTThese instructions give you guidelines for preparing papers for the IEEET RANSACTIONS ON D IELECTRICS AND E LECTRICAL I NSULATION. Use this document as atemplate with Microsoft Word 6.0 or later. Define all symbols used in the abstract. Donot cite references in the abstract. The abstract body copy should be in Times or TimesNew Roman, 10 pt. Bold.Index Terms —Instructions,guidelines, abstract, copy. A list of acceptedIEEE/TDEI index terms are available on the submission page.1 INTRODUCTIONT HIS document is a template for Microsoft Word versions 6.0or later. If you are reading a paper or PDF version of thisdocument, please download the electronic template from /ieeetdei/TDEI%20Template.docto prepare your manuscript.The objective of this document is to provide a template for thepreparation of a paper for publication in the IEEE T RANSACTIONS ON D IELECTRICS AND E LECTRICAL I NSULATION. The use of this template will ensure the professional appearance of your paper aswell as providing a uniform digital source from which to satisfy theelectronic publication requirements of IEEE Xplore.When you open this document, select “Page Layout” or “Print Layout” from the “View” menu in the menu bar, which allows you to see the footnotes. Then type over sections of this document or cut from another document and paste and then use markup styles. The pull-down style menu is at the left of the Formatting Toolbar at the top of your Word window (for example, the style at this point in the document is “Text”). Highlight a section that you want to designate with a certain style, then select the appropriate name on the style menu. The style will adjust your fonts and line spacing. Do not change the font sizes or line spacing to squeeze more text into a limited number of pages.Use italics for emphasis; do not underline. Turn off “smart quotes” (Tools | AutoCorrect | AutoFormat tabs). Turn off automatic hyphenation (Tools | Language | Hyphenation).To insert images in Word,position the cursor at the insertion point and either use Insert | Picture | From File or copy the image to the Windows clipboard and then Edit | Paste Special | Picture (wit h “Float over text” unchecked).2 PROCEDURE FOR PAPER SUBMISSION This section covers the details regarding preparation of your manuscript for submission, the submission procedure, review process and copyright information.2.1 PREPARATION OF MANUSCRIPTIn the interest of speed and economy, the IEEE T RANSACTIONS ON D IELECTRICS AND E LECTRICAL I NSULATION is printed directly from this electronic template as furnished by the author after a thorough peer review. Since the final printed pages are based on the submitted copy, we urge that utmost care be taken in the preparation utilizing this electronic template. For your information, page size is 8.5x11 inches and column width is 3.5 inches (8.9 mm) and column length 9.2 inches (23.4 cm). All figures and tables should have adequate titles or captions, and must be integrally placed at their proper location(s) in the text. For the benefit of the readers, the figures, tables, graphs and photos should be placed near the corresponding text; that is, not accumulated at the end of the text or at the end of the manuscript. Further information on Figures and Tables can be found in Section 6.1.Due care should be exercised to avoid the use of abbreviations and phrases which may not be familiar to all readers. Readers of the IEEE T RANSACTIONS ON D IELECTRICSManuscript received on X Month 2005, in final form XX Month 2005.AND E LECTRICAL I NSULATION have wide and diverse backgrounds and may not be employed in the specific area of any given paper, but are still interested in following the state-of-the-art. All abbreviations and phrases need to be suitably defined in the text.The length of technical papers, in general, is preferred to be not more than 8 pages (including all figures and biographies). Review type papers may be longer. This requirement is unfortunately dictated by financial constraints.The efforts of the persons who otherwise provided help to the author(s) should be recognized in the Acknowledgment section at the end of the paper.For each author, we require a photograph of head and shoulder (24 mm x 30 mm) and a brief technical biography. Begin with the author name followed by IEEE membership grade(s) (e.g. S‟91-M‟95-SM‟00-F‟05). Continue with the date and place of birth, educational background, degrees received, year received and universities names and their locations, employment history and special fields of interest.2.2 SUBMISSION PROCEDUREThe Transactions Editor will need to receive an electronic version of your manuscript. The only acceptable electronic format is Word 6.0 or later (.doc).Papers must be submitted electronically to the following web site: /ieeetdei.. The web site will require you to enter information about the paper as well as contact information. Upon successful submission of the paper an email confirmation will be sent to the corresponding author acknowledging the receipt of the paper and other information including the name of the Associate/Guest Editor who is handling the review.If there are questions, the corresponding author may wish to contact:Professor Reuben HackamEditor-in-Chief, IEEE TDEI725 North Talbot RoadWindsor, Ontario N9G 1M8, CanadaTel.: 519-966-4748hackam@uwindsor.ca or r.hackam@2.3 REVIEW PROCESSAll papers submitted to the IEEE T RANSACTIONS ON D IELECTRICS AND E LECTRICAL I NSULATION are subject to a thorough review process. The Editor-in-Chief is responsible for coordinating the review among members of the Editorial Board and making final decisions on the paper subject to the recommendation of the Associate/Guest Editor handling the paper. Routine inquiries as to the status of the submitted paper within the Review process cannot be accommodated.2.4 COPYRIGHTIt is the policy of the IEEE to own the copyright to the technical contributions that it publishes on behalf of the interests of the IEEE, its authors, and their employers, and to facilitate the appropriate re-use of this material by others. To comply with the U.S. copyright law, authors are required to sign an IEEE Copyright Form before publication. This form returns to authors, and their employers, full rights to reuse their material for their own purposes. Authors must submit a signed copy of this form with their manuscripts online during the submission of the paper. The form will be generated during the electronic submission process.3 E DITORIAL P OLICIESThe IEEE Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation Society (DEIS) is responsible for leadership, coordination, and communication among those who are concerned with dielectric phenomena and measurements; with development and characterization of gaseous, liquid, and solid electrical insulating materials and vacuum; and with utilization of these materials in circuits and systems under conditions of use. The Society offers two publications which are relevant to the dissemination of information within its scope: these Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation and the Electrical Insulation Magazine. In each publication, every paper is reviewed and evaluated for acceptability in terms of its relevance, its technical contribution, and, for the Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation its continuing value as part of the permanent literature.Reports and articles worth writing deserve skillful presentation. The text must be stylistically and grammatically correct. The facts and ideas need to be expressed clearly, succinctly, and attractively for the average reader; the author should not assume that every reader is an expert in the author‟s field. Stimulating and informative communication of scientific and technical knowledge that has continuing value is required. Good style and clarity are courtesies that the author owes to the reader. The purpose of publication is to convey technical information. Good writing ensures that this is accomplished. The author needs not be a member of the IEEE or of the DEIS. All persons active in the field are encouraged to submit papers for consideration, irrespective of professional affiliation.An essential part of research is open publication of its results. Therefore, it can be argued that a research project should bear part of the publication cost, usually paid in the form of page charges. Nevertheless, the DEIS currently does not levy page charges. All publication costs are paid by the DEIS as a service to its members and the research community. However, if either the figures, tables or other artwork in the manuscript violate the guidelines, or if changes are made on the final proof beyond the original manuscript, the author will be charged appropriate modification costs.published bimonthly to provide a permanent record of the expanding corpus of scientific and technical knowledge for all IEEE members and others interested in the interdisciplinary field of dielectrics and electrical insulation. It is an archival publication which disseminates the results of fundamental and applied research. This journal is edited to encourage deeper understanding and greater effectiveness in the reporting of facts and theories germane to dielectric behavior and properties of electrical insulating materials and systems. Thoughtfully prepared and carefully documented papers dealing with fundamental concepts of dielectric behavior, with original theoretical and experimental studies, and with reproducible means of evaluating performance of materials and equipment are most appropriate. Tutorial or synoptic papers are encouraged, provided they present a fresh approach and a penetrating analysis of an established subject in the field of dielectrics or electrical insulation.Conclusions must be supported by data or literature references so that the reader may judge the paper‟s validity independently. The author is expected to differentiate between conclusions based on association and those that can be attributed to specific causes. The manuscript should be precise, concise, and candid. All pertinent literature, including antithetical references, should be cited. Mere summaries of the literature, progress reports having no permanent value, and papers containing commercial overtones are not acceptable. Failure either to disclose the generic name of a material, or to characterize it technically, and the improper use of a trademark will result in a request for revision as a condition of acceptance.The Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation publishes four categories of technical reports: papers, reviews, communications, and discussions. Papers, as described above, are well-documented final reports of research projects. Communications are shorter and contain noteworthy items of technical interest or ideas required rapid publication. Reviews are synoptic papers on a subject of general interest, with ample literature references, and written for readers with widely varying background. Discussions on published reports, with author rebuttals, form the fourth category of TRANSACTIONS ON DIELECTRICS AND ELECTRICAL INSULATION publications.4 MATHWhen using Word, use either the Microsoft Equation Editor or the MathType add-on () for equations in your paper (Insert | Object | Create New | Microsoft Equation or MathType Equation). “Float over text” should not be selected.5 UNITSUse only SI units. In cases where none SI units are desired these must be placed in parenthesis next to the SI units.6 HELPFUL HINTS6.1 FIGURES AND TABLESLarge figures and tables may span both columns. Place figure captions below the figures; place table titles above the tables. If your figure has two parts, for example, include the labels “(a)” and “(b)” as part of the artwork. In the text use Figure 4a and not Fig. 4 (a). Figures 5a and 5b and not Figs. 5 (a) and (b). Please verify that figures and tables that you men tion in the text actually exist. Use …Figure‟ even in the middle of sentence. Do not use the abbreviation “Fig.”. Do not abbreviate “Table.”Figure axis labels are often a source of confusion. Use words rather than symbols. As an example, write the quantity “Rate,” or “Rate, R,” not just “R.” Put units in parentheses. Do not label axes only with units. As in Figure 1, for example, write “Rate (kb/s).”Multipliers can be especially confusing. Write “Rate (kb/s)” or “Rate (103b/s),” not “Rate (b/s) 1000.” Figure labels should be legible, approximately 8 to 12 point type.6.2 REFERENCESNumber citations/references consecutively in square brackets [1]. The sentence punctuation follows the brackets [2]. Multiple references [2, 4-6] are numbered between same brackets. When citing a section in a book, please give the relevant page numbers [8]. In sentences, refer simply to the reference number, as in [3]. Do not use “Ref. [3]” or “reference [3]” except at the beginning of a sentence: “Reference [3] shows ....”Number footnotes separately in superscripts (Insert | Footnote).1 Place the actual footnote at the bottom of the column in which it is cited; do not put footnotes in thereference list.Note that IEEE referencing style is quite different from that use d by most physics journals. Give all authors‟ names; do not use “et al”. Use a space after authors‟ initials. Papers that have not been published should be cited as “unpublished” [4]. Papers that have been submitted or accepted for publication should be ci ted as “submitted for publication” [5]. Please give affiliations and addresses for personal communications [6]. For papers published in translation journals, please give the English citation first, followed by the original foreign-language citation [7].Website addresses should not be used as references because they are not permanent and therefore are not archival. Also IEEE-Xplore is developing linkages to all references but not to website addresses.6.3 ABBREVIATIONSDefine abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text, even after they have already been defined in the abstract. Abbreviations such as IEEE, SI, ac, and dc do not have to be defined. Abbreviations that incorporate periods should not have spaces: write “C.N.R.S.,” not “C.N. R. S.” Do not use abbreviations in the title unless they are unavoidable (for example, “IEEE” in the title of this article). For a more complete listing of common abbreviations and acronyms please refer to Appendix II of / organizations/pubs/transactions/auinfo00.pdf.6.4 EQUATIONSNumber equations consecutively with equation numbers in parentheses flush with the right margin, as in (1). First use the equation editor to create the equation. Then select the “Equation” markup style. Pr ess the tab key and write the equation number in parentheses. To make your equations more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. Use parentheses to avoid ambiguities in denominators. Punctuate equations when they are part of a sentence, as in(1))sinh()cosh(),(rxBrxAjxu+=ωBe sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before the equation appears or immediately following. Symbols should be as used in the equations either in Roman or italics. Refer to “equation (1)” not “Eq. (1)” or “(1),” except at the beginning of a sentence: “Equation (1) is ... .”6.5 OTHER RECOMMENDATIONSUse one space after periods and colons. Hyphenate complex modifiers: “zero-field-cooled magnetization.” Avoid dangling participles, s uch as, “Using (1), the potential was calculated.” [It is not clear who or what used (1).] Write instead, “The potential was calculated by using equation (1) or “Using equation (1), we calculated the potential.”Use a zero before decimal points: “0.25,” not “.25.” Use “cm3,” not “cc.” Indicate sample dimensions as “0.1 cm ⨯ 0.2 cm,” not “0.1 ⨯0.2 cm2.” The abbreviation for “seconds” is “s,” not “sec.” Do not mix complete spellings and abbreviations of units: use “Mb/s” or “megabits per second,” not “megabits/s.” When expressing a range of values, write “7 to 9” or “7-9,” not “7~9.”A parenthetical statement at the end of a sentence is punctuated outside of the closing parenthesis (like this). (A parenthetical sentence is punctuated outside the parentheses). In American English, periods and commas are outside quotation marks, like “this period”. Other punctuation is “outside”! Avoid contractions; for example, write “do not” instead of “don‟t”.Remember to check spelling. If you are not well versed in the English language, please request a colleague such as professor of English if you are in a university or a professional translator to proofread your paper.7 SOME COMMON MISTAKESThe word “data” is plural, not singular. Use the word “micrometer” instead of “micron.” A graph within a graph is an “inset,” not an “insert.” The word “alternatively” is preferred to the word “alternately” (unless you really mean something that alternates). Use the word “whereas” instead of “while” (unless you are referring to simulta neous events). Do not use the word “essentially” to mean “approximately” or “effectively.” Do not use the word “issue” as a euphemism for “problem.”Be aware of the different meanings of the homophones “affect” (usually a verb) and “effect” (usually a nou n), “complement” and “compliment”, “discreet” and “discrete,” “principal” (e.g., “principal investigator”) and “principle” (e.g., “principle of measurement”). Do not confuse “imply” and “infer”.Prefixes such as “non,” “sub”, “micro”, and “ultra” are not independent words; they should be joined to the words they modify, usually without a hyphen. There is no period after the “et” in the Latin abbreviation “et al”. The abbreviation “i.e.” means “that is” and the abbreviation “e.g.” means “for example”.A general IEEE style guide, Information for Authors,is available at:/organizations/pubs/transactions/auinfo00.pdf.8 CONCLUSIONA conclusion section is very useful. Although a conclusion 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.APPENDIXAppendices, if needed, appear before the acknowledgment.ACKNOWLEDGMENTThe preferred spelling of the word “acknowledgment” in American English is without an “e” after the “g.” Use thesingular heading even if you have many acknowledgments. Avoid expressions such as “One of us (S.B.A.) woul d like to thank ... .” Instead, write “S.B.A. thanks ... .” Put sponsor acknowledgments in the Acknowledgment section.This template is based in part on that used by IEEE Transactions on Consumer Electronics and thanks are extended to the creators of that template.REFERENCES[1] A. Vetro, H. Sun, P. DaGraca, and T. Poon, “Minimum driftarchitectures for three-layer scalable DTV decoding”,IEEE Trans.Dielectr. Electr. Insul, Vol. 44, pp. 527-536, 1998.[2] A. N. Netravali and B. G. Haskell, Digital Pictures, 2nd ed., PlenumPress: New York, pp. 613-651, 1995.[3]H. Sun, W. Kwok, and J. Zdepski, “Architectures for MPEGcompressed bitstream scaling”, IEEE Electr. Insul. Mag., Vol. 6, No.4, pp. 191-199, 1996.[4]K. Elissa, “Title of paper”, unpublished.[5]R. Nicole, “Title of paper with only first letter of the first wordcapitalized”, J. Name Stand. Abbrev., submitted for publication.[6] C. J. Kaufman, Rocky Mountain Research Laboratories, Boulder, CO,personal communication, 1992. [7]Y. Yorozu, M. Hirano, K. Oka, and Y. Tagawa, “Electron spectroscopystudies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate interface”, IEEE Transl. J. Magn. Jpn., Vol. 2, pp. 740-741, 1987 [Dig. 9th Annual Conf.Magn. Jpn., p. 301, 1982].[8] D.E. Fred and G, Halo, Superlative Insulators, Plenty Press, Inc., NewYork, Ch.4, 2001.Note: It is recommended that all authors provide a brieftechnical biography and photo. Please follow thefollowing example for all authors:First A. Author(S‟72-M‟76-SM‟81-F‟87) was born in Tel-Aviv, Israel in 1975. He received the B.Sc. degree from the Technion, Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel in 1995, the M.Sc. degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA in 1999 and the Ph.D. degree from the University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel in 2004. Other usual biography information includes employments, and memberships in other professional societies. It is also appropriate to include research interests, professional activities and awards that have been received.。

ieee transaction journal latex模板

ieee transaction journal latex模板

ieee transaction journal latex模板全文共四篇示例,供读者参考第一篇示例:IEEE Transactions on Journal是IEEE旗下的学术期刊,致力于推动电气和电子工程领域的学术交流和研究进展。

在撰写IEEE Transactions on Journal的论文时,通常需要使用LaTeX模板来确保格式的统一和规范。

本文将介绍IEEE Transactions on Journal的LaTeX模板,并指导读者如何使用该模板撰写论文。

我们需要下载IEEE Transactions on Journal的LaTeX模板。

可以通过IEEE官方网站或一些LaTeX模板网站获取该模板的最新版本。

在下载好模板文件后,解压缩并查看其中的文档说明,以了解如何正确安装和使用该模板。

接着,我们需要编辑LaTeX文件以撰写IEEE Transactions on Journal的论文。

打开LaTeX编辑器,并新建一个.tex文件作为论文的主文件。

在.tex文件中,我们需要包含以下内容:1. 论文的标题页:在标题页中包括论文的标题、作者姓名、作者所属机构、摘要等信息。

按照IEEE Transactions on Journal的要求,需要使用特定的字体和格式。

4. 表格和图片:如果论文中包含表格和图片,需要将它们插入到适当位置,并调整大小和位置以适应页面布局。

需要为表格和图片添加标题和标签,以方便引用和交流。

在撰写完成后,我们运行LaTeX编译器生成PDF版本的论文。

在编译过程中,可能会出现一些错误或警告信息,需要及时处理并查找解决方案。

一般来说,LaTeX模板提供了一些常见问题的解决方案和调整方法,可以参考对应的文档说明进行修正。

第二篇示例:IEEE Transactions on journal 是IEEE 旗下的一个期刊,它提供了一个专门领域的学术交流平台,吸引了众多高水平学者和研究人员的关注。

IEEE论文模板

IEEE论文模板

A Methodological Approach to Multisensor Classificationfor Innovative Laser Material Processing UnitsVincenzo PiuriDepartment of Information Technologies, University of MilanVia Bramante 65, 26013 Crema (CR), ItalyPhone: +39-02-503-30066, Fax: +39-02-503-30010, Email: ***************.itAbstract –Online quality detection and online laser beam control are important research topics to improve the overall quality of nowadays laser beam material processing units. In both cases innovative units are at study where the state is monitored by a set of heterogeneous in-process sensors conveying a large amount of information. However, low experiment reproducibility, lack of dominion knowledge and high costs greatly limit our ability of finding an optimal solution. In this paper we propose a methodology to guide the engineer's design choices towards an optimal implementation of the inductive classifier.Keywords –multisensor classification, quality assessment, neural classifier.INTRODUCTIONNowadays an increasing attention towards material laser material processing is registered in those industrial sectors where narrow process windows and high quality levels are mandatory. Welding metals with laser is especially attractive for many aspects: Laser devices can concentrate enormous amounts of power on very narrow spots, without needing a complex setup. A correctly executed laser weld will have small area, high penetration depth, optimal mechanical properties, often even better than those of the base metal, and will be stable with time. What is more surprising, industrial laser welding processes have also a degree of flexibility incomparable to that of any other welding process: The only requirement for a piece to be welded is its optical visibility, since no contact between the welding head and the piece is required. All these features will come only at the premium of high capital costs due to the necessity of producing a stable beam, controllable in intensity and duration, with a very high output power and a correct wavelength. In facts, metals are very good light reflectors, even better at the typical emission wavelengths of the most common laser devices. As the metal melts, its light reflectivity suddenly lowers and the laser power is more promptly transferred to the workpiece.At the present time all these issues greatly limit the industrial fields where a laser based process can be applied. Fine-tuning the process parameters over factors like reflectivity and actual geometry of the workpiece is a demanding issue, which is still unsolved. Nowadays it is common industrial practice to set the process parameters in an open-loop fashion, usually trusting on the experience of a human operator to fine tune the parameters when process drifts excessively increase the percentage of rejects. Improving the overall economicity of laser material processing units by detecting process drifts as soon as possible (i.e., moving from post-process statistic inspection towards online quality monitoring and automatic process tuning) is the key which would enable moving laser material processing to industrial environments with too high yield requisites for current processes.This paper will be structured as follows; In Section II we will expose the issues which motivate a methodological approach; In Section III we will describe our approach, explaining each step with meaningful examples; In section 4 we will show how applying a methodological approach yields meaningful advantages over an unstructured approach, for what concerns both understanding the problem dominion and defining a solution close to the optimal one.PROBLEM DEFINITIONWe can resume all these issues by stating that laser beam processes are characterized by scarce a priori information, and that limited experimental data can be obtained from them in a reproducible way. Differently from what happens, for example, with numerical transmission, where large amount of real or simulated data can be obtained with a relatively low cost, setting up for laser welding and cutting has high capital costs, both for the laser welding device and for the sensors, and perhaps high operative costs. Moreover, thoroughly exploring the space of configurations often means the need to operate beyond the ordinary welding conditions. Physical changes in the sensible parts due to operation stress alter the experimental condition, thus severely compromising experimental reproducibility.To limit this issue we can avoid exploring the zones of the parameter space that may cause more stress to the sensitive parts of the setup, trading off polarization against reproducibility, but the issue generally remains serious. The situation is worsened by the fact that we do not know whether the observed variables are related to any or all the meaningful process parameters, neither how these parameters affect the final weld quality, not even if "weld quality" can unambiguously be defined. Finally, the lack of a mathematical model for the process makes impossible to obtain more data by simulation. All these aspects imply that we must use the available data efficiently, looking for the best trade-offbetween complexity and performance. Moreover, understanding what we can (and what we cannot) obtain is of primary importance to rethink the requisites in the (likely) eventuality they would reveal unattainable. A. First alternativeThe Bayesian theory of classification tells us that there exists a lower bound on classification accuracy, which does not depend on the particular classification algorithm adopted, or on the number of available samples, but only on the distribution of samples in the feature space. If we estimate those distributions, we can have an idea on what will be the maximum performance attainable with the available dataset. It is necessary to extract from the signals produced by the sensors those features that are relevant to the classification problem, thus making simpler the classifier design and improving classification accuracy. Here the problem is understanding which features describe the process in a way almost accurate as the full signals, and which constitute a minimal set, avoiding both the "curse of dimensionality" and incomplete process description. B. Second alternativeOur methodology organizes the work so that “what can be saved will be saved”. This objective is met by structuring the methodology so that the assumptions which are more likely to be removed, or whose removal will more affect the work done, are made later in the methodology, when most of the work has already been done.5 Y + 4z * sin(r) (22)We may assess a lower bound for confidence over performance by applying the results presented in [3], which establish the optimal confidence value, viz. the one obtainable with the optimal Bayesian classifier. In our work this step proved very useful to understand how "trustable" are the performance figures obtained for our classifiers. In an industrial environment this step would be done "a priori" by choosing the number of samples during the experiment design methodological step.Table 2. Floating-point operations necessary to classify a sample.Two classifier structures, two-layer feedforward neural network with sigmoid hidden neurons and the KNN classifier, were compared against a performance metric and a cost metric.We trained a high number of networks and assumed that the network which best performed over a validation set of samples not used to train the network is also the best network. At thispurpose the sample set has been randomly partitioned in a design and a validation subset, and all the networks have been trained/validated over them. We used the available a priori information about the data set structure in order to reduce the polarization introduced when partitioning.Fig. 1. A flow chart of the feature selection heuristic.A set of candidates is selected among the highest-rank ones, then the procedure is iterated with all (or some of) the two, three, … inp ut classifiers that can be built from all the possible unions of the feature sets produced at the previous iteration.ACKNOWLEDGMENTThe author wishes to thank the IEEE for providing this template and all colleagues who previously provided technical support.REFERENCES[1] G. L. Plett and I. Kollár, “Specification for Common IEEE Styles”.IEEE Trans. on Instrum. Meas., Vol. 46, No. 6, pp. 1056-62, Dec. 1997. [2] G. L. Plett, Formatting IEEE documents in LaTeX2e,/ieee/ [3] I. Kollár, Formatting IEEE documents in MSWord,http://www.mit.bme.hu/services/ieee/word/AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY(Name)was born in (city),(country),in (year).He received (MS/BS/PhD,etc) from (school),(country),in (year) and (year),respectively.Now he is a (professor/engineer/PhD candidate ,etc)in(dpartment/university,etc),(country).His research interests include (interests).。

IEEE会议论文模板sample

IEEE会议论文模板sample

TYPING INSTRUCTIONS FOR ICMLC 2007 DOCUMENTSXI-ZHAO WANG1, JOHN W. T. LEE21Machine Learning Center, Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Hebei University, Baoding 071002, China 2Department of computing, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong KongE-MAIL: wangxz@, john lee@.hkAbstract:Type the abstract using Times New Romar font with point size 9. The abstract is an essential part of the paper. Use short, direct, and complete sentences. It should be as brief as possible and concise. It should be complete, self-explanatory, and not require reference to the paper itself. The abstract should be informative giving the scope and emphasize the main conclusions, results, or significance of the work described. Do not use the first person; do not include mathematical expressions; do not refer to the reference, and try to avoid acronyms.Keywords:Tracking; estimation; information fusion; resource management; with point size 91.IntroductionThese are instructions for authors typesetting for the The Fifth International Conference on Machine Learning and Cybernetics (ICMLC 2007) to be held in Dalian, on August 13-16 2007. This document has been prepared using the required format. The electronic copy of this document can be found in: /.The paper is to be written in two-column format and be right and left justified. The column width should be 85 mm (3.35 inches). The gap between the two columns should be 5 mm (0.2 inches).1.1.Instructions for authorsIn order for the proceedings to be ready for distribution at the conference, an electronic copy of the final version of your paper (the Camera-Ready paper) must be submitted (WORD and PDF format) to the web site. Please follow the submission instructions shown on the web site.2.Formatting instructionsMS Word users: please use the paragraph styles contained in this document: Title, Author, Affiliation, Abstract, Keywords, Body Text, Equation, Reference, Figure, and Caption. Try not to change the styles manually.2.1.LengthPapers should be limited to 6 pages. Papers longer than 6 pages will be subject to extra fees based on their length.2.2. TitleType the title approximately 4.9 centimeters below the top border of the A4 paper sheet and use Times New Romar font with 14 point size in capital letters. Center the title (horizontally) on the page. Leave approximately 0.6 cm (0.24 inches) between the title and the name (in capital letters) and affiliation of yourself (and of your co-authors, if any), 0.6 cm (0.24 inches) between the name and affiliation, 1.8 cm (0.72 inches) between the affiliation and abstract. Type name(s), affiliation (s) and email(s) in 10 points and center them (horizontally) on the page.2.3. SpacingEach section (or subsection) should be separated from the previous text by 0.6 cm (as indicated in the format/paragraph menu).2.4.Section and subsection headingsNumber section and subsection headings consecutively in Arabic numbers and type them in bold. Use point size 10 for section headings and 10 for subsection headings. Avoid using too many capital letters. Keep section and subsection headings always flushed left. If any further subdivision of a subsection is needed the titles should be 10 point.2.5.Main textUse 1.5 centimeters (0.6 inches) for the left and right margins. Use Times New Roman and font size 10 for text (character size). Do not use bold in the main text; if you want to emphasize specific parts of the main text, use italics. Start a new paragraph by indenting it from the left margin (and not by inserting a blank line), except under a section or subsection heading. The text should be prepared with a double column format and single line spacing.2.6.TablesAll tables must be numbered consecutively (in Arabic numbers). Table headings should be placed (centered) above the table. Place tables as close as possible to where they are mentioned in the main text.2.7.FiguresAll illustrations should be original drawings or photographic prints of originals. Photographs should be glossy prints. Photocopies are often not good enough and should be avoided. All illustrations must be numbered consecutively (i.e., not section-wise), using Arabic numbers. Center figure captions beneath the figure (see Figure 1). 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. No part of a figure should go beyond the typing area. Captions should appear (centered) below graphical objects, as in Figure 1.Figure 1. Figure’s name 2.8.Mathematical formulasMathematical formulas should be roughly centered and have to be numbered as formula (1).)(xfy=(1) 2.9.ReferencesReferences to the literature should be mentioned in the main text by an Arabic number in square brackets [1], [2]. List these (in cited order) at the very end of your paper (under the heading References). Start each reference on a new line with its number in square brackets [3].2.10.Copyright form and copyright noticeOne of the authors must submit a signed copyright form to the Publications Chair before the final version of the paper can be accepted for publication. The copyright form is available from the conference web site.2.11.Fine tuning●Do not end a page with a section or subsectionheading.●Do not include page numbers in the text.2.12.Final versionAfter proofreading your paper, it must be submitted on the ICMLC2007 web site electronically using WORD and PDF format. Do not send hard copies or use other file formats –they will not be accepted.Proper usage of the English language is expected of all submissions (i.e., Camera-ready papers). Make sure that the PDF file looks fine on the screen as well as in print.In order to build the indices for the CD-ROM, we need the title and author information for your paper entered into the PDF file.In Acrobat, select the menu option File→Document Properties →Summary and then fill in your paper title and author information.In Word, select the menu option File→Properties, and then fill in the dialog box with your paper's title and author information.Please use only the standard fonts that come with the system and standard font encoding schemes. If you use your own fonts, please make sure that the fonts are fully embedded into the PDF file. If you create your file on an operating system running a language other than English,please make sure that your file can be opened correctly on all computers. Missing fonts and different font encoding schemes are the main reasons for read errors in Acrobat.Failure to follow the above guidelines may result in a submission being rejected for publication in the conference proceedings and CD ROM.4.ConclusionsIn this sample paper, we have presented the formatting instructions for ICMLC2007.AcknowledgementsThis paper is supported by the Machine Learning Centre of the Hebei University, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, and the IEEE Systems, Man and Cybernetics Society.References[1]Peter. C. Author, “Paper’s name”, Proceeding ofICMLC2002 Conference, Beijing, pp. 111-116, November 2002.[2]John. B. A uthor, and A. Friend, “J ournal paper’sname”,Journal;s name, Vol 39, No. 1, pp. 222-226, Feb. 2001.[3]Xizhao Wang, His book’name, Publisher, Location,Year.。

Conference-template-A4(IEEE)(中文版)

Conference-template-A4(IEEE)(中文版)

Paper Title* (use style: paper title) *Note: Sub-titles are not captured in Xplore and should not be used第一行:第一个给定姓氏第2行:部门。

机构名称(隶属关系)第3行:组织的名称(隶属关系)第4行:城市,国家第5行:电子邮件地址line 1: 4th 第一行:第二个给定姓氏第2行:部门。

机构名称(隶属关系)第3行:组织的名称(隶属关系)第4行:城市,国家第5行:电子邮件地址第1行:第3个名字姓第2行:部门。

机构名称(隶属关系)第3行:组织的名称(隶属关系)第4行:城市,国家第5行:电子邮件地址Abstract—这个电子文档是一个“实时”模板,并且已经在其样式表中定义了您的论文的组成部分[标题,文本,标题等]。

*关键:不要在论文标题或摘要中使用符号,特殊字符,脚注或数学。

. (Abstract)Keywords—component, formatting, style, styling, insert (key words)I.I NTRODUCTION (H EADING 1)该模板在MS Word 2007中进行了修改,并保存为PC的“Word 97-2003文档”,为作者提供了准备电子版论文所需的大部分格式规范。

所有标准纸张组件的规定有三个原因:(1)格式化单张纸时的易用性,(2)自动遵守促进电子产品的同时或稍后生产的电子要求,以及(3)整个样式的一致性会议记录。

内置边距,列宽,行间距和类型样式; 本文档中提供了类型样式的示例,并且在示例后面的括号内以斜体标识。

虽然提供了各种表格文本样式,但是没有规定一些组件,例如多级方程式,图形和表格。

格式化程序需要创建这些组件,并包含以下适用的标准.II.E ASE OF U SEA.Selecting a Template (Heading 2)首先,确认您的纸张尺寸有正确的模板。

IEEE版权模板全文(英文)

IEEE版权模板全文(英文)

IEEE COPYRIGHT AND CONSENT FORMTo ensure uniformity of treatment among all contributors, other forms may not be substituted for this form, nor may any wording of the form be changed. This form is intended for original material submitted to the IEEE and must accompany any such material in order to be published by the IEEE. Please read the form carefully and keepa copy for your files.TITLE OF PAPER/ARTICLE/REPORT, INCLUDING ALL CONTENT IN ANY FORM, FORMAT, OR MEDIA (hereinafter, “the Work”): COMPLETE LIST OF AUTHORS:IEEE PUBLICATION TITLE (Journal, Magazine, Conference, Book):Copyright Transfer1.The undersigned hereby assigns to The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Incorporated (the “IEEE”) all rights under copyright that may exist in and to:(a) the above Work, including any revised or expanded derivative works submitted to the IEEE by the undersigned based on the Work; and (b) any associated written ormultimedia components or other enhancements accompanying the Work.Consent and Release2. 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Abstract—These instructions give you guidelines for preparing papers for IEEE T RANSACT IO NS and J O e this document as a template if you are using Microsoft Word6.0 or later. Otherwise, use this document as an instruction set. The electronic file of your paper will be formatted further at IEEE. Define all symbols used in the abstract. Do not cite references in the abstract. Do not delete the blank line immediately above the abstract; it sets the footnote at the bottom of this column.Index Terms—About four key words or phrases in alphabetical order, separated by commas. For a list of suggested keywords, send a blank e-mail to keywords@ or visit the IEEE web site at /organizations/pubs/ani_prod/keywrd98.txtI.I NTRODUCTIONHIS document is a template for Microsoft Word versions 6.0 or later. If you are reading a paper version of this document, please download the electronic file, TRANS-JOUR.DOC, from /organizations/pubs/transactions/styleshe ets.htm so you can use it to prepare your manuscript. If you would prefer to use LATEX, download IEEE’s LATEX style and sample files from the same Web page. Use these LATEX files for formatting, but please follow the instructions in TRANS-JOUR.DOC or TRANS-JOUR.PDF.If your paper is intended for a conference, please contact your conference editor concerning acceptable word processor Manuscript received October 9, 2001. (Write the date on which you submitted your paper for review.) This work was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Commerce under Grant BS123456 (sponsor and financial support acknowledgment goes here). Paper titles should be written in uppercase and lowercase letters, not all uppercase. Avoid writing long formulas with subscripts in the title; short formulas that identify the elements are fine (e.g., "Nd–Fe–B"). Do not write "(Invited)" in the title. Full names of authors are preferred in the author field, but are not required. Put a space between authors' initials.F. A. Author is with the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, CO 80305 USA (corresponding author to provide phone: 303-555-5555; fax: 303-555-5555; e-mail: author@ ).S. B. Author, Jr., was with Rice University, Houston, TX 77005 USA. He is now with the Department of Physics, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523 USA (e-mail: author@lamar. ).T. C. Author is with the Electrical Engineering Department, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309 USA, on leave from the National Research Institute for Metals, Tsukuba, Japan (e-mail: author@nrim.go.jp). formats for your particular conference.When you open TRANS-JOUR.DOC, select ―Page Layout‖ from the ―View‖ menu in the menu bar (View | Page Layout), which allows you to see the footnotes. Then type over sections of TRANS-JOUR.DOC or cut and paste from another document and then use markup styles. The pull-down style menu is at the left of the Formatting Toolbar at the top of your Word window (for example, the style at this point in the document is ―Text‖). Highlight a section that you want to designate with a certain style, then select the appropriate name on the style menu. The style will adjust your fonts and line spacing. Do not change the font sizes or line spacing to squeeze more text into a limited number of pages. Use italics for emphasis; do not underline. To insert images in Word, position the cursor at the insertion point and either use Insert | Picture | From File or copy the image to the Windows clipboard and then Edit | Paste Special | Picture (with ―Float over text‖ unchecked).IEEE will do the final formatting of your paper. If your paper is intended for a conference, please observe the conference page limits.II.P ROCEDURE FOR P APER S UBMISSIONA.Review StagePlease check with your editor on whether to submit your manuscript by hard copy or electronically for review. If hard copy, submit photocopies such that only one column appears per page. This will give your referees plenty of room to write comments. Send the number of copies specified by your editor (typically four). If submitted electronically, find out if your editor prefers submissions on disk or as e-mail attachments.If you want to submit your file with one column electronically, please do the following:--First, click on the View menu and choose Print Layout.--Second, place your cursor in the first paragraph. Go to the Format menu, choose Columns, choose one column Layout, and choose ―apply to whole document‖ from the dropdown menu.--Third, click and drag the right margin bar to just over 4 inches in width.The graphics will stay in the ―second‖ column, but you can drag them to the first column. Make the graphic wider to push out any text that may try to fill in next to the graphic.Preparation of Papers for IEEE T RANSACTIONS and J OURNALS(March 2004)First A. Author, Second B. Author, Jr., and Third C. Author, Member, IEEETB.Final StageWhen you submit your final version, after your paper has been accepted, print it in two-column format, including figures and tables. Send three prints of the paper; two will go to IEEE and one will be retained by the Editor-in-Chief or conference publications chair.You must also send your final manuscript on a disk, which IEEE will use to prepare your paper for publication. Write the authors’ names on the disk label. If you are using a Macintosh, please save your file on a PC formatted disk, if possible. You may use Zip or CD-ROM disks for large files, or compress files using Compress, Pkzip, Stuffit, or Gzip.Also send a sheet of paper with complete contact information for all authors. Include full mailing addresses, telephone numbers, fax numbers, and e-mail addresses. This information will be used to send each author a complimentary copy of the journal in which the paper appears. In addition, designate one author as the ―corresponding author.‖ This is the author to whom proofs of the paper will be sent. Proofs are sent to the corresponding author only.C.FiguresAll tables and figures will be processed as images. However, IE E E cannot extract the tables and figures embedded in your document. (The figures and tables you insert in your document are only to help you gauge the size of your paper, for the convenience of the referees, and to make it easy for you to distribute preprints.) Therefore, submit, on separate sheets of paper, enlarged versions of the tables and figures that appear in your document.These are the images IEEE will scan and publish with your paper.D.Electronic Image Files (Optional)You will have the greatest control over the appearance of your figures if you are able to prepare electronic image files. If you do not have the required computer skills, just submit paper prints as described above and skip this section.1) Easiest Way: If you have a scanner, the best and quickest way to prepare noncolor figure files is to print your tables and figures on paper exactly as you want them to appear, scan them, and then save them to a file in PostScript (PS) or Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) formats. Use a separate file for each image. File names should be of the form ―fig1.ps‖ or ―fig2.eps.‖2) Slightly Harder Way: Using a scanner as above, save the images in TIFF format. High-contrast line figures and tables should be prepared with 600 dpi resolution and saved with no compression, 1 bit per pixel (monochrome), with file names of the form ―fig3.tif‖ or ―table1.tif.‖ To obtain a 3.45-in figure (one-column width) at 600 dpi, the figure requires a horizontal size of 2070 pixels. Typical file sizes will be on the order of 0.5 MB.Photographs and grayscale figures should be prepared with 220 dpi resolution and saved with no compression, 8 bits per pixel (grayscale). To obtain a 3.45-in figure (one-column width) at 220 dpi, the figure should have a horizontal size of 759 pixels. Color figures should be prepared with 400 dpi resolution and saved with no compression, 8 bits per pixel (palette or 256 color). To obtain a 3.45-in figure (one column width) at 400 dpi, the figure should have a horizontal size of 1380 pixels.For more information on TIFF files, please go to /organizations/pubs/transactions/informati on.htm and click on the link ―Guidelines for Author Supplied Electronic Text and Graphics.‖3) Somewhat Harder Way: If you do not have a scanner, you may create noncolor PostScript figures by ―printing‖ them to files. First, download a PostScript printer driver from /support/downloads/pdrvwin.htm(for Windows) or from /support/downloads/ pdrvmac.htm(for Macintosh) and install the ―Generic PostScript Printer‖ definition. In Word,paste your figure into a new document. Print to a file using the PostScript printer driver. File names should be of the form ―fig5.ps.‖ Use Adobe Type 1 fonts when creating your figures, if possible.4) Other Ways:Experienced computer users can convert figures and tables from their original format to TIFF. Some useful image converters are Adobe Photoshop,Corel Draw,and Microsoft Photo Editor, an application that is part of Microsoft Office 97 and Office 2000 (look for C:\Program Files\Common Files \Microsoft Shared\ PhotoEd\ PHOTOED.EXE. (You may have to custom-install Photo Editor from your original Office disk.)Here is a way to make TIFF image files of tables. First, create your table in Word. Use horizontal lines but no vertical lines. Hide gridlines (Table | Hide Gridlines). Spell check the table to remove any red underlines that indicate spelling errors. Adjust magnification (View | Zoom) such that you can view the entire table at maximum area when you select View | Full Screen. Move the cursor so that it is out of the way. Press ―Print Screen‖ on your keyboard; this copies the screen image to the Windows clipboard. Open Microsoft Photo Editor and click Edit | Paste as New Image. Crop the table image (click Select button; select the part you want, then Image | Crop). Adjust the properties of the image (File | Properties) to monochrome (1 bit) and 600 pixels per inch. Resize the image (Image | Resize) to a width of 3.45 inches. Save the file (File | Save As) in TIFF with no compression (click ―More‖ butto n).Most graphing programs allow you to save graphs in TIFF; however, you often have no control over compression or number of bits per pixel. You should open these image files in a program such as Microsoft Photo Editor and re-save them using no compression, either 1 or 8 bits, and either 600 or 220 dpi resolution (File | Properties; Image | Resize). See Section II-D2 for an explanation of number of bits and resolution. If your graphing program cannot export to TIFF, you can use the same technique described for tables in the previous paragraph.A way to convert a figure from Windows Metafile (WMF) to TIFF is to paste it into Microsoft PowerPoint,save it in JPG format, open it with Microsoft Photo Editor or similar converter,and re-save it as TIFF.Microsoft Excel allows you to save spreadsheet charts in Graphics Interchange Format (GIF). To get good resolution, make the Excel charts very large. Then use the ―Save as HTML‖ feature (see /support/ kb/articles/q158/0/79.asp). You can then convert from GIF toTIFF using Microsoft Photo Editor, for example.No matter how you convert your images, it is a good idea to print the TIFF files to make sure nothing was lost in the conversion.If you modify this document for use with other IEEE journals or conferences, you should save it as type ―Word 97-2000 & 6.0/95 - RTF (*.doc)‖ so that it can be opened by any version of Word.E.Copyright FormAn IEEE copyright form should accompany your final submission. You can get a .pdf, .html, or .doc version at /copyright or from the first issues in each volume of the IEEE T RANSACTIONS and J OURNALS. Authors are responsible for obtaining any security clearances.III.M ATHIf you are using Word,use either the Microsoft Equation Editor or the MathType add-on () for equations in your paper (Insert | Object | Create New | Microsoft Equation or MathType Equation). ―Float over text‖ should not be selected.IV.U NITSUse either SI (MKS) or CGS as primary units. (SI units are strongly encouraged.) English units may be used as secondary For example, write ―15 Gb/cm2(100 Gb/in2).‖ An exception is when English units are used as identifiers in trade, such as ―3½ in disk drive.‖ Avoid combining SI and CGS units, such as current in amperes and magnetic field in oersteds. This often leads to confusion because equations do not balance dimensionally. If you must use mixed units, clearly state the units for each quantity in an equation.The SI unit for magnetic field strength H is A/m. However, if you wish to use units of T, either refer to magnetic flux density B or magnetic field strength symbolized as µ0H. Use the center dot to separate compound units, e.g., ―A·m2.‖V.H ELPFUL H INTSA.Figures and TablesBecause IEEE will do the final formatting of your paper, you do not need to position figures and tables at the top and bottom of each column. In fact, all figures, figure captions, and tables can be at the end of the paper. Large figures and tables may span both columns. Place figure captions below the figures; place table titles above the tables. If your figure has two parts, include the labels ―(a)‖ and ―(b)‖ as part of the artwork. Please verify that the figures and tables you mention in the text actually exist. Please do not include captions as part of the figures. Do not put captions in “text boxes” linked to the figures. Do not put borders around the outside of your figures. Use the abbreviation ―Fig.‖ even at the beginning of a sentence. Do notFig. 1. Magnetization as a function of applied field. Note that ―Fig.‖ is abbreviated. There is a period after the figure number, followed by two spaces. It is good practice to explain the significance of the figure in the caption.abbreviate ―Table.‖ Tables are numbered with Roman numerals. Color printing of figures is available, but is billed to the authors (approximately $1300, depending on the number of figures and number of pages containing color). Include a note with your final paper indicating that you request color printing. Do not use color unless it is necessary for the proper interpretation of your figures. If you want reprints of your color article, the reprint order should be submitted promptly. There is an additional charge of $81 per 100 for color reprints.Figure axis labels are often a source of confusion. Use words rather than symbols. As an example, write the quantity ―Magnetization,‖ or ―Magnetization M,‖ not just ―M.‖ Put units in parentheses. Do not label axes only with units. As in Fig. 1, for example, write ―Magnetization (A/m)‖ or ―Magnetization (A⋅m-1),‖ not just ―A/m.‖Do not label axes with a ratio of quantities and units. For example, write ―Temperature (K),‖ not ―Temperature/K.‖Multipliers can be especially confusing. Write ―Magnetization (kA/m)‖ or ―Magnetization (103A/m).‖ Do not write ―Magnetization (A/m) ⨯ 1000‖ because the reader would not know whether the top axis label in Fig. 1 meant 16000 A/m or 0.016 A/m. Figure labels should be legible, approximately 8 to 12 point type.B.ReferencesNumber citations consecutively in square brackets [1]. The sentence punctuation follows the brackets [2]. Multiple references [2], [3] are each numbered with separate brackets [1]–[3]. When citing a section in a book, please give the relevant page numbers [2]. In sentences, refer simply to the reference number, as in [3]. Do not use ―Ref. [3]‖ or ―reference [3]‖ except at the beginning of a sentence: ―Reference [3] shows ... .‖ Unfortunately the IEEE document translator cannot handle automatic endnotes in Word; therefore, type the reference list at the end of the paper using the ―References‖ style.Number footnotes separately in superscripts (Insert | Footnote).1 Place the actual footnote at the bottom of the column in which it is cited; do not put footnotes in the reference list (endnotes). Use letters for table footnotes (see Table I). Please note that the references at the end of this document are in the preferred referencing style. Give all authors’ names; do not use ―et al.‖ unless there are six authors or more. Use a space after authors' initials. Papers that have not been published should be cited as ―unpublished‖ [4]. Papers that have been submitted for publication should be cited as ―submitted for publication‖ [5]. Papers that have been accepted for publication, but not yet specified for an issue should be cited as ―to be published‖ [6]. Please give affiliations and addresses for private communications [7].Capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for proper nouns and element symbols. For papers published in translation1It is recommended that footnotes be avoided (except for the unnumbered footnote with the receipt date on the first page). Instead, try to integrate the footnote information into the text. journals, please give the English citation first, followed by the original foreign-language citation [8].C.Abbreviations and AcronymsDefine abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text, even after they have already been defined in the abstract. Abbreviations such as IEEE, SI, ac, and dc do not have to be defined. Abbreviations that incorporate periods should not have spaces: write ―C.N.R.S.,‖ not ―C. N. R. S.‖ Do not use abbreviations in the title unless they are unavoidable (for example, ―IEEE‖ in the title of this articl e).D.EquationsNumber equations consecutively with equation numbers in parentheses flush with the right margin, as in (1). First use the equation editor to create the equation. Then select the ―Equation‖ markup style. Press the tab key and write the equation number in parentheses. To make your equations more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents. Use parentheses to avoid ambiguities in denominators. Punctuate equations when they are part of a sentence, as in.)()()||(exp)]2(/[),(21122λλλλλμσϕϕdrJrJzzrddrrFiijr-∞--⋅=⎰⎰(1)Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been defined before the equation appears or immediately following. Italicize symbols (T might refer to temperature, but T is the unit tesla). Refer to ―(1),‖ not ―Eq. (1)‖ or ―equation (1),‖except at the beginning of a sentence: ―Equation (1) is ... .‖E.Other RecommendationsUse one space after periods and colons. Hyphenate complex modifiers: ―zero-field-cooled magnetization.‖ Avoid dangling participles, such as, ―Using (1), the potential was calculated.‖ [It is not clear who or what used (1).] Write instead, ―The potential was calculated by using (1),‖ or ―Using (1), we calculated the potential.‖Use a zero before decimal points: ―0.25,‖ not ―.25.‖ Use ―cm3,‖ not ―cc.‖ Indicate sample dimensions as ―0.1 cm ⨯0.2 cm,‖ not ―0.1 ⨯ 0.2 cm2.‖ The abbreviation for ―seconds‖ is ―s,‖ not ―sec.‖ Do not mix complete spellings and abbreviations of units: use ―Wb/m2‖ or ―webers per square meter,‖ not ―webers/m2.‖ When expressing a range of values, write ―7 to 9‖ or ―7-9,‖ not ―7~9.‖A parenthetical statement at the end of a sentence is punctuated outside of the closing parenthesis (like this). (A parenthetical sentence is punctuated within the parentheses.) In American English, periods and commas are within quotation marks, like ―this period.‖ Other punctuation is ―outside‖! Avoid contractions; for example, write ―do not‖ instead of ―don’t.‖ The serial comma is preferred: ―A, B, and C‖ instead of ―A, B and C.‖If you wish, you may write in the first person singular or pluraland use the active voice (―I observed that ...‖ or ―We observed that ...‖ instead of ―It was observed that ...‖). Remember to check spelling. If your native language is not English, please get a native English-speaking colleague to proofread your paper.VI.S OME C OMMON M ISTAKESThe word ―data‖ is plural, not singular. The subscript for the permeability of vacuum µ0is zero, not a lowercase letter ―o.‖ The term for residual magnetization is ―remanence‖; the adjective is ―remanent‖; do not write ―remnance‖ or ―remnant.‖ Use the word ―micrometer‖ instead of ―micron.‖ A graph within a graph is an ―inset,‖ not an ―insert.‖ The word ―alternatively‖ is preferred to the word ―alternately‖ (unless you really mean something that alternates). Use the w ord ―whereas‖ instead of ―while‖ (unless you are referring to simultaneous events). Do not use the word ―essentially‖ to mean ―approximately‖ or ―effectively.‖ Do not use the word ―issue‖ as a euphemism for ―problem.‖ When compositions are not specified, s eparate chemical symbols by en-dashes; for example, ―NiMn‖ indicates the intermetallic compound Ni0.5Mn0.5whereas ―Ni–Mn‖ indicates an alloy of some composition Ni x Mn1-x.Be aware of the different meanings of the homophones ―affect‖ (usually a verb) and ―effect‖ (usually a noun), ―complement‖ and ―compliment,‖ ―discreet‖ and ―discrete,‖ ―principal‖ (e.g., ―principal investigator‖) and ―principle‖ (e.g., ―principle of measurement‖). Do not confuse ―imply‖ and ―infer.‖Prefixes such as ―non,‖ ―sub,‖ ―micro,‖ ―multi,‖ and ―"ultra‖ are not independent words; they should be joined to the words they modify, usually without a hyphen. There is no period after the ―et‖ in the Latin abbreviation ―et al.‖ (it is also italicized). The abbreviation ―i.e.,‖ means ―that is,‖ and the abbreviation ―e.g.,‖ means ―for example‖ (these abbreviations are not italicized).An excellent style manual and source of information for science writers is [9]. A general IEEE style guide, Information for Authors,is available at /organizations/pubs/transactions/informati on.htmVII.E DITORIAL P OLICYSubmission of a manuscript is not required for participation in a conference. Do not submit a reworked version of a paper you have submitted or published elsewhere. Do not publish ―preliminary‖ data or results. The submitting author is responsible for obtaining agreement of all coauthors and any consent required from sponsors before submitting a paper. IEEE T RANSACTIONS and J OURNALS strongly discourage courtesy authorship. It is the obligation of the authors to cite relevant prior work.The Transactions and Journals Department does not publish conference records or proceedings. The T RANSACTIONS does publish papers related to conferences that have been recommended for publication on the basis of peer review. As a matter of convenience and service to the technical community, these topical papers are collected and published in one issue of the T RANSACTIONS.At least two reviews are required for every paper submitted. For conference-related papers, the decision to accept or reject a paper is made by the conference editors and publications committee; the recommendations of the referees are advisory only. Undecipherable English is a valid reason for rejection. Authors of rejected papers may revise and resubmit them to the T RANSACTIONS as regular papers, whereupon they will be reviewed by two new referees.VIII.P UBLICATION P RINCIPLESThe contents of IEEE T RANSACTIONS and J OURNALS are peer-reviewed and archival. The T RANSACTIONS publishes scholarly articles of archival value as well as tutorial expositions and critical reviews of classical subjects and topics of current interest.Authors should consider the following points:1)Technical papers submitted for publication must advancethe state of knowledge and must cite relevant prior work.2)The length of a submitted paper should be commensuratewith the importance, or appropriate to the complexity, of the work. For example, an obvious extension of previously published work might not be appropriate for publication or might be adequately treated in just a few pages.3)Authors must convince both peer reviewers and the editorsof the scientific and technical merit of a paper; the standards of proof are higher when extraordinary or unexpected results are reported.4)Because replication is required for scientific progress,papers submitted for publication must provide sufficient information to allow readers to perform similar experiments or calculations and use the reported results. Although not everything need be disclosed, a paper must contain new, useable, and fully described information. For example, a specimen's chemical composition need not be reported if the main purpose of a paper is to introduce a new measurement technique. Authors should expect to be challenged by reviewers if the results are not supported by adequate data and critical details.5)Papers that describe ongoing work or announce the latesttechnical achievement, which are suitable for presentation at a professional conference, may not be appropriate for publication in a T RANSACTIONS or J OURNAL.IX.C ONCLUSIONA conclusion section is not required. Although a conclusion may review the main points of the paper, do not replicate theabstract as the conclusion. A conclusion might elaborate on the importance of the work or suggest applications and extensions.A PPENDIXAppendixes, if needed, appear before the acknowledgment.A CKNOWLEDGMENTThe preferred spelling of the wor d ―acknowledgment‖ in American English is without an ―e‖ after the ―g.‖ Use the singular heading even if you have many acknowledgments. Avoid expressions such as ―One of us (S.B.A.) would like to thank ... .‖ Instead, write ―F. A. Author thanks ... .‖ Sponsor and financial support acknowledgments are placed in the unnumbered footnote on the first page.R EFERENCES[1]G. O. Young, ―Synthetic structure of industrial plastics (Book stylewith paper title and editor),‖ in Plastics, 2nd ed. vol. 3, J. Peters, Ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964, pp. 15–64.[2]W.-K. Chen, Linear Networks and Systems (Book style). Belmont,CA: Wadsworth, 1993, pp. 123–135.[3] H. Poor, An Introduction to Signal Detection and Estimation. NewYork: Springer-Verlag, 1985, ch. 4.[4] B. Smith, ―An a pproach to graphs of linear forms (Unpublished workstyle),‖ unpublished.[5] E. H. Miller, ―A note on reflector arrays (Periodical style—Acceptedfor publication),‖ IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat., to be published.[6]J. Wang, ―Fundamentals of erbium-doped fiber amplifiers arrays(Periodical style—Submitted for publication),‖ IEEE J. QuantumElectron., submitted for publication.[7] C. J. Kaufman, Rocky Mountain Research Lab., Boulder, CO, privatecommunication, May 1995.[8]Y. Yorozu, M. Hirano, K. Oka, and Y. Tagawa, ―Electronspectroscopy studies on magneto-optical media and plastic substrate interfaces(Translation Journals style),‖ IEEE Transl. J. Magn.Jpn., vol. 2, Aug. 1987, pp. 740–741 [Dig. 9th Annu. Conf. Magnetics Japan, 1982, p. 301].[9]M. Young, The Techincal Writers l Valley, CA:University Science, 1989.[10]J. U. Duncombe, ―Infrared navigation—Part I: An assessment offeasibility (Periodical style),‖ IEEE Trans. Electron Devices, vol.ED-11, pp. 34–39, Jan. 1959.[11] S. Chen, B. Mulgrew, and P. M. Grant, ―A clustering technique fordigital communications channel equalization using radial basisfunction networks,‖ IEEE Trans. Neural Networks, vol. 4, pp.570–578, July 1993.[12]R. W. Lucky, ―Automatic equalization for digital communication,‖Bell Syst. Tech. J., vol. 44, no. 4, pp. 547–588, Apr. 1965.[13]S. P. Bingulac, ―On the compatibility of adaptive controllers(Published Conference Proceedings style),‖ in Proc. 4th Annu.Allerton Conf. Circuits and Systems Theory, New York, 1994, pp.8–16.[14]G. R. Faulhaber, ―Design of service systems with priorityreservation,‖ in Conf. Rec. 1995 IEEE Int. Conf. Communications, pp. 3–8.[15]W. D. Doyle, ―Magnetization reversal in films with biaxialanisotropy,‖ in 1987 Proc. INTERMAG Conf., pp. 2.2-1–2.2-6. [16]G. W. Juette and L. E. Zeffanella, ―Radio noise currents n shortsections on bundle conductors (Presented Conference Paper style),‖ presented at the IEEE Summer power Meeting, Dallas, TX, June22–27, 1990, Paper 90 SM 690-0 PWRS.[17]J. G. Kreifeldt, ―An analysis of surface-detected EMG as anamplitude-modulated noise,‖ presented at the 1989 Int. Conf.Medicine and Biological Engineering, Chicago, IL.[18]J. Williams, ―Narrow-band analyzer (Thesis or Dissertation style),‖Ph.D. dissertation, Dept. Elect. Eng., Harvard Univ., Cambridge, MA, 1993.[19]N. Kawasaki, ―Parametric study of thermal and chemicalnonequilibrium nozzle flow,‖ M.S. thesis, Dept. Electron. Eng., Osaka Univ., Osaka, Japan, 1993.[20]J. P. Wilkinson, ―Nonlinear resonant circuit devices (Patent style),‖U.S. Patent 3 624 12, July 16, 1990.[21]IEEE Criteria for Class IE Electric Systems (Standards style), IEEEStandard 308, 1969.[22]Letter Symbols for Quantities, ANSI Standard Y10.5-1968.[23]R. E. Haskell and C. T. Case, ―Transient signal propagation in losslessisotropic plasmas (Report style),‖ USAF Cambridge Res. Lab., Cambridge, MA Rep. ARCRL-66-234 (II), 1994, vol. 2.[24]E. E. Reber, R. L. Michell, and C. J. Carter, ―Oxygen absorption inthe Earth’s atmosphere,‖ Aerospace Corp., Los Angeles, CA, Tech.Rep. TR-0200 (420-46)-3, Nov. 1988.[25](Handbook style) Transmission Systems for Communications, 3rd ed.,Western Electric Co., Winston-Salem, NC, 1985, pp. 44–60. [26]Motorola Semiconductor Data Manual, Motorola SemiconductorProducts Inc., Phoenix, AZ, 1989.[27](Basic Book/Monograph Online Sources) J. K. Author. (year, month,day). Title (edition) [Type of medium]. Volume(issue). Available: http://www.(URL)[28]J. Jones. (1991, May 10). Networks (2nd ed.) [Online]. Available:[29](Journal Online Sources style) K. Author. (year, month). Title.Journal [Type of medium]. Volume(issue), paging if given.Available: http://www.(URL)[30]R. J. Vidmar. (1992, August). On the use of atmospheric plasmas aselectromagnetic reflectors. IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. [Online]. 21(3).pp. 876—880. Available: /pub/journals/21ps03-vidmarFirst A. Author(M’76–SM’81–F’87) and the other authors may include biographies at the end of regular papers. Biographies are often not included in conference-related papers. This author became a Member (M) of IEEE in 1976, a Senior Member (SM) in 1981, and a Fellow (F) in 1987. The first paragraph may contain a place and/or date of birth (list place, then date). Next, the author’s educational background is listed. The degrees should be listed with type of degree in what field, which institution, city, state or country, and year degree was earned. The author’s major field of study should be lower-cased.The second paragraph uses the pronoun of the person (he or she) and not the author’s last name. It lists military and work experience, including summer and fellowship jobs. Job titles are capitalized. The current job must have a location; previous positions may be listed without one. Information concerning previous publications may be included. Try not to list more than three books or published articles. The format for listing publishers of a book within the biography is: title of book (city, state: publisher name, year) similar to a reference. Current and previous research interests ends the paragraph.The third paragraph begins with the author’s title and last name (e.g., Dr. Smith, Prof. Jones, Mr. Kajor, Ms. Hunter). List any memberships in professional societies other than the IEEE. Finally, list any awards and work for IEEE committees and publications. If a photograph is provided, the biography will be indented around it. The photograph is placed at the top left of the biography. Personal hobbies will be deleted from the biography.。

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