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Please follow the
guidelines below when submitting your graphics. For production
purposes any line art, graphs, charts, drawings, tables, and
photographs may be treated as graphics.
- All graphics
should be submitted in PS, EPS, or TIFF formats. If submitting
graphics in TIFF please make sure that the graphics contain all
the required tags.
- Graphics should
be submitted by either e-mail or disk. For initial submissions, it
is best if you use the same method you are using for your
manuscript. Do not imbed your graphics in the text of your paper.
If you are submitting your manuscript on disk, please submit your
graphic on disks separate from your manuscript. If you are
submitting your graphics by e-mail, send them separate from the
manuscript and send each graphic as a separate attachment or
separate file. If you wish to send the files by e-mail, please use
a support encoding method. Whichever method you use, please
include a scannable proof so we can verify that we have received
the proper version of each graphic. If there is a problem with
your initial submission the staff editor will contact you for a
revised electronic graphic. If the revised graphic is unusable, we
will scan your proof.
- Revised or
corrected graphics should have the same name as the original
graphic.
- If a graphic is
to appear in print as black and white it should be saved and
submitted as a black and white file. If a graphic is to appear in
color it should be submitted as a paletted color TIFF file.
Alternately, a color graphic may be scanned.
- If you are
creating your graphic using Macintosh and are submitting graphics
on a disk, please send PC formatted floppy disks, if
possible.
- Please use
lower case letters when naming figures, tables, and author
photographs. Figures should contain only the image and not the
caption text. Please embed callouts to identify parts of figures,
i.e., (a), (b), (c), within the figure. Callouts should be in a
Times Roman font with a point size consistent with the other text
in the graphic. Tables should contain only the body of the table.
Below is the naming convention for these kinds of images.
- Figures –
should be named fig1.tif, fig2.eps, fig3.ps, and so forth.
Please do not give them descriptive names. Thus, the first three
figures of a paper may be fig1.ps, fig2ab.tif, and fig
3.tif.
- Tables –
should be named table1.tif, table2.ps, table3.eps, and so forth.
Thus the first three tables of a paper may be named: table1.tif,
table2.ps, table3.eps.
- Author
photographs – should be named using the first five characters of
the author’s last name, followed by the type of file (resolution
should always be 220 dpi, 8 bits/sample). Thus, four author
photographs for a paper may be named: smith.ps, jones.tiff,
lee.eps, and moshf.ps (for moshfefhi’s author
photograph).
The final
printed size of an author photograph is exactly 1" wide by 1 ¼"
long (6 picas x 7 ½ picas). Please ensure that the author
photographs you submit are proportioned similarly. If the
author’s photograph does not appear at the end of the paper,
then please size it so that it is proportional to the standard
size of 1 7/12" wide by 2" long (9 ½ picas x 12
picas).
- A column-wide
graphic can be no wider than 3 ½" or 21 picas. A page-wide figure
can be no larger than 7 1/6" or 43 picas wide. The maximum depth
of a graphic is 9 2/3" or 58 picas. Please allow space for the
caption.
- Please use
consistent typefaces and typesizes in all your figures and tables.
Please choose type sizes that will allow the type to be scaled to
8 points.
Naming
Multiple-Part Figures
It may be
necessary for you to combine your figures so that they may be
presented in the way that you prefer. The reason for this is that
the page composition software we use stacks graphics one above
another. Thus, if you want to have an "a part" over a "b part" (as
shown below) you should submit two separate graphics files. Please
place callouts in the figure parts.
First file -->
Second
file -->

Figure Caption 1 Here
If you have an "a
part" next to a "b part" and then a "c part" next to a "d part" then
you should submit two figures. The first graphic will contain parts
a and b, the second graphic will contain parts c and d (as shown
below). If this were to be figure 1 then you would name them
fig1ab.600 and fig1cd.600 (see "Preparing Electronic Graphics for
Submission" for information regarding naming of graphics). Please
place the callouts in the figure parts.
First file -->
Second file
-->
Figure 2 Caption Here
Encoding
Methods
Please use one of
the listed encoding methods if you are sending your graphics by
e-mail or disk.
1) MIME base 64 2)
uuencode 3) BinHex 4
Compression
Methods
In order to save
disk space or to fit a graphic on a disk, please use the following
compression methods.
1) Compress 2)
pkzip 3) stuffit 4)
gzip
NOTE:
this Guide is based on a similar Guide of the IEEE Signal Processing
Society. |