Paper Format For The Proceedings of The 2013 IEEE International Conference On Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management
Paper Format For The Proceedings of The 2013 IEEE International Conference On Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management
I. INTRODUCTION
Your goal is to simulate, as closely as possible, the
usual appearance of typeset papers in the IEEE
Transactions. One difference is that the authors
affiliations should appear immediately following their
names do not include your title there. For items not
addressed in these instructions, please refer to a recent
issue of an IEEE Transactions.
II. METHODOLOGY
All papers must be submitted electronically in pdf
format. Prepare your paper using a A4 page size of 210
mm 297 mm (8.27" 11.69").
1) Type sizes and typefaces: The best results will be
obtained if your computer word processor has several
type sizes. Try to follow the type sizes specified in Table I
as best as you can. Use 14 point bold, capital letters for
the title, 12 point Roman (normal) characters for author
names and 10 point Roman characters for the main text
and author's affiliations.
2) Format: In formatting your page, set top margin
to 25 mm (1") and bottom margin to 31 mm (1 1/4). Left
and right margins should be 19 mm (3/4"). Use a twocolumn format where each column is 83 mm (3 1/4")
wide and spacing of 6 mm (1/4") between columns.
Indent paragraphs by 6 mm (1/4").
Left and right-justify your columns. Use tables and
figures to adjust column length. Use automatic
hyphenation and check spelling. All figures, tables, and
equations must be included in-line with the text. Do not
use links to external files.
III. RESULTS
A. Figures and Tables
Graphics should be in TIFF, 600 dpi (1 bit/sample)
for line art (graphics, charts, drawings or tables) and 220
dpi for photos and gray scale images
Position figures and tables at the tops and bottoms 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 names
and table captions should be above the tables. Use the
abbreviation Fig. even at the beginning of a sentence.
Figure axis labels are often a source of confusion. Try
to 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 m1), 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 (10 3 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. Figure labels should be
legible, approximately 10-point type.
TABLE I
TYPE SIZES FOR CAMERA-READY PAPERS
Type
Size
(pts)
7
8
9
10
12
Appearance
Regular
Bold
Italic
Table captions
Section titles, tables, table names a,
first letters in table captions a, table
superscripts, figure captions, text
subscripts and superscripts,
references, footnotes
Abstract
Authors affliations, main text,
equations, first letter in section
titles a, first letter in table names a
Authors names
14
Subheading
Papertitle
a
Capital letters
B. References
Number citations consecutively in square 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] shows ... .
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 (see Table I). IEEE
Transactions no longer use a journal prefix before the
volume number. For example, use IEEE Trans. Magn.,
vol. 25, not vol. MAG 25.
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, 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].
C. Abbreviations and Acronyms
Define 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,
MKS, CGS, ac, dc, and rms 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
(1)
REFERENCES
[1] D. J. Beebe, Signal conversion (Book style with paper title
and editor), in Biomedical Digital Signal Processing, W. J.
Tompkins, Ed. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1993,
ch. 3, pp. 6174.
[2] M. Akay, Time Frequency and Wavelets in Biomedical
Signal Processing (Book style). Piscataway, NJ: IEEE
Press, 1998, pp. 123135.
[3] G. B. Gentili, V. Tesi, M. Linari, and M. Marsili, A
versatile microwave plethysmograph for the monitoring of
physiological parameters (Periodical style), IEEE Trans.
Biomed. Eng., vol. 49, no. 10, pp. 12041210, Oct. 2002.
[4] V. Medina, R. Valdes, J. Azpiroz, and E. Sacristan, Title of
paper if known, unpublished.
[5] E. H. Miller, A note on reflector arrays (Periodical style
Accepted for publication), IEEE Trans. Antennas
Propagat., in press.
[6] T. Menendez, S. Achenbach, W. Moshage, M. Flug, E.
Beinder, A. Kollert, A. Bittel, and K. Bachmann, Prenatal
recording of fetal heart action with magnetocardiography
(in German), Zeitschrift fr Kardiologie, vol. 87, no. 2, pp.
1118, 1998.
[7] J. E. Monzon, The cultural approach to telemedicine in
Latin American homes (Published Conference Proceedings
style), in Proc. 3rd Conf. Information Technology
Applications in Biomedicine, ITAB00, Arlington, VA, pp.
5053.
[8] F. A. Saunders, Electrotactile sensory aids for the
handicapped (Presented Conference Paper style),
presented at the 4th Annu. Meeting Biomedical Engineering
Society, Los Angeles, CA, 1973.
[9] J. R. Boheki, Adaptive AR model spectral parameters for
monitoring neonatal EEG (Thesis or Dissertation style),
Ph.D. dissertation, Biomed. Eng. Program, Univ. Fed. Rio
de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 2000.
[10] J. P. Wilkinson, Nonlinear resonant circuit devices (Patent
style), U.S. Patent 3 624 12, July 16, 1990.