INFORMATION FOR
AUTHORS
The International JOURNAL OF
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING publishes original research papers on all aspects of
electrical and electronic engineering.
Each paper submitted is subject to a review procedure, and the
publication decision is based on reviewers’ comments on the paper. Only those papers that are highly
recommended will be accepted, and this Journal reserves the right to accept the
paper either as a regular paper or a short paper. A short paper is similar in
form to a regular paper, but presents material of a brief nature or restricted
scope.
Papers selected for
publication in the Journal are subject to a page charge of NT$600 dollars
(about US$20) per printed page for the first 10 pages of a full paper and for
the first 4 pages of a short paper.
The excess page
charge is NT$1200 (US$40) per printed page for both a full and a short paper.
Submission of Manuscripts:
Please go to the web
site http://ijee.ntu.edu.tw/ijee/ to submit your
paper. To sumbit for speical issue, please select the special issue item. Manuscripts
are reviewed with the understanding that the same work has not been and will
not be published, nor is presently submitted elsewhere. If the paper is
accepted, the author(s) will be responsible for proof-reading.
Style for Manuscripts:
In addition to being concise and
consistent in style, spelling and the use of abbreviations, the paper should
conform to the following instructions.
(1) Language:
Papers should be written in English. The first page of the manuscript should
consist of the title, the author’s name and institutional affiliation, an
abstract, key words, and corresponding author’s address, telephone and fax
numbers, including e-mail address.
(2) Typescript:
Manuscript should be in single-column, double-space, A4 size (
(3) Title
and Authors: The title of the paper should be concise, informative and in
capital letters. The author’s name and affiliation should appear below the
title.
(4) Abstracts:
For regular papers, an abstract of not more than 200 words is required. For short papers, an abstract of not
more than 100 words is required.
The abstract should not only indicate the scope of the paper, but should
summarize the author’s conclusions, so that the abstract by itself may be
useful in information-retrieval systems.
(5) Key
Words: Several key words (3 to 5 words) for the paper should be given below
the abstract.
(6) Headings:
Headings for sections should be centered on the page and numbered in Roman numerals.
Headings for subsections, which can be marked by capital alphabet letters,
should begin from the left margin.
(7) Equations
and Mathematical Formulas: All equations and mathematical formulas should be
numbered serially on the right-hand side by Arabic numerals in parentheses.
(8) Illustrations
and Tables: Illustrations and tables should be clearly readable. In
illustrations, all words (as distinct from mathematical symbols) should be
written entirely in capital letters and in type size that is at least 8 points
in the printed version.
(9) Length:
The manuscript of a regular paper should be restricted in length to 30 pages,
including illustrations and tables. The maximum length for a short paper is 15
pages including illustrations and tables.
(10) References:
References to published literature should be quoted in the text in square
brackets. Number all references in a single sequence in the order that they are
cited in the text, or in alphabetical order according to the author’s last
name, and list them together at the end of the text.
Examples:
(a) Books:
[1] K. Hwang, Computer
arithmetic: Principles, Architecture, and Design,
[2] G. O. Young, “Synthetic
structure of industrial plastics,” in Plastics, vol. 3, Polymers of Hexadromicon, J. Peters, Ed., 2nd ed., New York:
McGraw-Hill, 1964, pp. 15-64.
(b) Periodicals:
[3] A. Peled
and B. Liu, “A new hardware realization of digital filters,” IEEE Trans. Acoust., Speech, Signal Processing, vol. ASSP-22, no.
6, pp. 456-462, December 1974.
(c) Articles from published conference proceedings:
[4] R. T. Sokolov
and J. C. Rogers, “Realizing homomorphic system for
convolution by time domain cepstral transformation,”
in Proc. Int. Conf. Acoust., Speech, Signal
Processing, vol. 3, Toronto, Canada, May 1991, pp. 2257-2260.
(d) Papers presented at conferences
(unpublished):
[5] D. Ebehard
and E. Voges, “Digital single sideband detection for interferometric sensors,” presented at 2nd Int. Conf.
Optical Fiber Sensors,
(e) Dissertations:
[6] T. F. Quatieri,
“Phase estimation with application on speech analysis-synthesis,” Ph.D.
dissertation, Department of Electrical Engineering, M.I.T.,
(f) Technical reports:
[7] D. C. Youla,
“Selected topics in modern network theory,” Technical Report, RADC-TR-65-259,
October 1965, pp. 67-69.