
All MARC2008 abstracts must be formatted to fit on one page and can have up to two figures. The abstracts are to be printed in black and white. These abstracts must be submitted to our website by October 31. Our editors will review your submissions. They will be returned to you with suggested changes during the week of November 5-9. Reply to the committee immediately if you agree/disagree with the proposed changes. The deadline to return the first-round edits will be November 16. Following that, the documents will be set in the final ‘camera ready’ format for review and printing. You will have an opportunity to review these documents from December 10-19, make changes, and submit your final approval.
Starting on December 12, your abstracts will be available online for download as PDF proofs. Stop by office 39-313 to sign a copyright release form and to make any final changes to your abstract. We will require a signed copyright release form from every author for your protection.
All final approval must be given by December 19 - no exceptions!
The abstract cannot exceed one page with figures included. Abstracts must use the provided styles specified within the document template provided (styles are available from the Style dropdown menu in Microsoft Word).
The Conference Proceedings will be printed in black and white. Please keep this in mind when labelling figures that originally appear in full color. Figures can also be embedded in your Word file submissions. A maximum of two image files can be submitted with each abstract. A good program to use for image conversions is Adobe Photoshop (www.adobe.com).
There have been many issues in the past when converting documents from Windows to Mac use. The publications committee may contact you to resolve issues with images. The best way to avoid problems is to first save your images as TIF or JPEG files before embedding them in your Word document.
Figures should be numbered consecutively in a separate series and in the order of their reference in the text (e.g., Figure 1, Figure 2). Hyphenated numbers should not be used. A figure should be referenced in the text by the word Figure and its number only (e.g., see Figure 1). It is permissible to label the first figure in a clause with the letter a, preceded by the clause number (e.g., Figure 1a, Figure 1b, Figure 1c). If referring to two or more figures in the same sentence, each should be named separately. For example, use (Figure 1, Figure 2) instead of see Figures 1 through 2c. Only the initial letter of the first word and proper nouns should be capitalized in figure titles.
See http://standards.ieee.org/guides/style/section6.html#10281.
Abstract submissions should be named as "lastname_titlekeyword.doc." Lastname should be the last name of the lead author (student, postdoc). If multiple abstracts are submitted with the same last name, choose a unique title keyword for each abstract submitted.
An example filename for an abstract "A MEMS Power Generator" (Authors: O. Nielsen, M. Schmidt), would be nielsen_memspower.doc
No other naming conventions will be allowed. Please keep your filenames restricted to lower-case letters when possible.
I proofread the document for the following:
ORIGINAL The modified instrument designs were developed by the Glucose Monitor Group.
EDITED The Glucose Monitor Group (GMG) developed the modified instrument designs.
ORIGINAL It is the purpose of this section of the report to discuss the increasing heat output of numeric co-processors.
EDITED This section discusses the increasing heat output of numeric co-processors.
ORIGINAL We will discuss and explain any special factors and considerations in a separate report.
EDITED We will discuss any special considerations in a separate report.
ORIGINAL We have developed a testing method which consists of a set of uncomplicated, dependable, and economical bioassays that cover most significant toxic reactions that might be expected by which we can identify the toxicity of a sample without knowing its chemical contents.
EDITED We developed a testing method to identify the toxicity of a sample, even if the chemical contents are unknown. The test’s bioassays are uncomplicated, dependable, and economical.
ORIGINAL The T Cell statisticians were given training in organizing technical data and in how to present their conclusions.
EDITED The T Cell statisticians learned how to organize data and present conclusions.
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Improved |
at the present time |
now |
by means of |
with, by |
due to the fact that |
because, since |
for the purpose of |
for |
in a number of cases |
some |
in relation to |
toward, to |
in the event of |
if |
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C. Cohen-Tannoudji, J. Dupont-Roc, G. Grynberg, Atom-photon Intereactions. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1992.
J.C. Candy and G.C. Temes, Eds., Oversampling Delta-Sigma Data Converters Theory, Design and Simulation. New York: IEEE Press, 1992.
W.V. Sorin, “Optical reflectometry for component characterization,” in Fiber Optic Test and Measurement, D. Derickson, Ed. Englwood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1998.
J.L. Dawson and T.H. Lee, “Automatic phase alignment for a fully integrated Cartesian feedback power amplifier system,” IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 38, no. 12, pp. 2269-2279, Dec. 2003.
M. Coates, A. Hero, R. Nowak, and B. Yu, “Internet tomography,” IEEE Signal Processing Magazine, May 2002, to be published.
H.J. In, W. Arora, T. Buchner, S.M. Jurga, H.I. Smith, and G. Barbasathis, “The nanostructured Origamiä 3D fabrication and assembly process for nanomanufacturing,” in Proc. Fourth IEEE Conference on Nanotechnology, Munich, Germany, Aug. 2004, pp. 358-360.
S.G. Finn, M. Medard, and R.A. Barry, “A novel approach to automatic protection switching using trees,” presented at the International Conference on Communication, Munich, Germany, Aug. 1997.
T. Sepke, J.K. Fiorenza, C.G. Sodini, P. Holloway, and H.-S. Lee, “Comparator-based switched-capacitor circuits for scaled CMOS technologies,” to be presented at IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference, San Francisco, CA, Feb. 2006.
D.D. Wentzloff and A.P Chandrakasan, “A 3.1-10.6 GHz ultra-wideband pulse-shaping mixer,” IEEE RFIC Symposium Digest of Papers, June 2005, pp. 83-86.
J.C. Lee, “Magnetic flux measurement of superconducting Qubits with Josephson inductors,” Master’s thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, 2002.
Author name. (date of publication if available) Site/document title. [Online]. Available: full web address
D. Arseneau. (1999, Mar.) The url.sty package. [Online]. Available: http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/other/misc/
P. Mao, “Fabrication and characterization of nanofluidic channels for studying molecular dynamics in confined environments,” Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, Mechanical Engineering Annual Report, 2005.
Begin with the speaker, followed by the title (if any), the meeting (and sponsoring organization), the location, and the date. If it is untitled, use a descriptive label, such as Speech, with no quotation marks.
D. Graves. “When bad things happen to good ideas.” National Council of Teachers of English Convention. St. Louis, 21 Nov. 1989.
Due October 31, 2007 by 5:00PM!
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