INSTRUCTIONS FOR TYPESETTING MANUSCRIPTS
(FOR SAMPLING THEORY IN SIGNAL AND IMAGE PROCESSING)
USING LaTEX (in 11 pt Times Roman)
FIRST AUTHOR (11 pt)
University Department, University Name, Address
City, State ZIP/Zone, Country (9 pt)
SECOND AUTHOR (11 pt)
Group, Laboratory, Address
City, State ZIP/Zone, Country (9 pt)
Abstract is required and should summarize, in less than 200 words, the context, content and conclusions of the paper. It should not contain any references or displayed equations. Textwidth of the abstract should be 4.5 inches.
1. General Appearance
The textheight is 8 inches and textwidth is 5 inches for the first page, and textheight is 8.5 inches and textwidth is 5 inches for subsequent pages.
2. The Main Text
Contributions are to be in English. Authors are encouraged to
have their contribution checked for grammar.
The text is to be typeset in 11 pt Times Roman, single-spaced with
baselineskip of 13 pt. Text area (excluding running title) is 4.75 inches
wide and 7.25 inches high using LaTeX 2e, or Scientific Work Place 2.5 using
AMS article style. Also, authors may use LaTeX’s
"\documentstyle [11pt]{article}" and page size "\textwidth 12 cm, \texthight 18.5 cm."
Graphics should be in EPS format. Figures and tables should be placed
closest to where they are referred to in the text. Final pagination and
insertion of running titles will be done by the publisher. Number each page
of the manuscript lightly at the bottom, on the backside, with a pencil.
3. Major Headings
Major heading should be typeset in boldface with the first letter of important words capitalized.
4. Footnotes
Footnotes should be numbered sequentially in superscript alphabets and should be typeset in 9 pt Times Roman at the bottom of the page.
5. Copyright
Previously published material must be accompanied by written permission from the author and publisher.
6. Acknowledgement
This section should come before the Appendices if any and should be unnumbered. Funding information may also be included here.
7. Appendix
Appendices should be used only when absolutely necessary.
8. References
References should appear at the end of the paper and listed alphabetically. In the text, they should be numbered and placed in brackets to distinguish them from other numbers, e.g., equation numbers. References should be punctuated according to the following examples:
[1] C.E. Shannon, Communications in the presence of noise, Proc. IRE,
37, 10-221, 1949.
[2] J.M. Whittaker, Interpolatory Function Theory, Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge, 1935.
[3] J.J. Benedetto and M.W. Frazier, editors, Wavelets: Mathematics
and Applications, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL 1994.
http:www.clarkson.edu/~jerria/STSIP-Journal.html
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