ewchp 2012 - paper template
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PAPERTITLE: EWCHP-2012 WORD TEMPLATE
First author1, Second author, , T.Grntoft2
ABSTRACTIn this word template, we describe the formattingguidelines for EWCHP-2011 Proceedings.
KeywordsKeywords are your own designated keywords.
1. Introduction
The proceedings are the records of the workshop. Theworkshop committee hopes to give these workshop by-products a single, high-quality appearance. To do this,we ask that authors follow some simple guidelines. Inessence, we ask you to make your paper look exactlylike this document. The easiest way to do this is simplyto save the template to your computer and replace thecontent with your own material. Note that thisdocument uses MS-Word-Style-Sheets. Please do notchange the style sheet settings.
2. Page Size
All material on each page should fit within a DIN A4paper size, centered on the page, beginning 2.5 cm fromthe top of the page and ending with 2.5 cm from thebottom. The right and left margins should be 2.0 cm.The text should be in two columns.
3. Page Limit and Maximum Size of theDocument
Page limit is 8 pages. For some extraordinary paperspage limit could be increased. For that purpose feedbackfrom the organizing committee is needed. Themaximum document size of the final Word-documentshould not exceed 10Mbyte.
4. Typeset Text4.1 Normal or Body Text
Please use a 10-point Times Roman font in which theseguidelines have been set. The goal is to have a 10-pointtext, as you see here. Please use sans-serif or non-proportional fonts only for special purposes, such asdistinguishing source code text. If Times Roman is notavailable, try the font named Computer Modern Roman.Right margins should be justified, not ragged.
For paragraph use the paragraph style sheet:
Paragraph
Paragraph
Paragraph
4.2 Title and Authors
The title (Times Roman 18-point bold with smallcapitals), authors' names (Helvetica 12-point) andaffiliations (Cambria 10-point) run across the full widthof the page one column wide. We also recommend
organization/institute, country and e-mail address to beadded as footnote. See the top and footnote of this page.For more than three authors, you may have toimprovise.
4.3 Subsequent Pages
For pages other than the first page, start at the top of thepage, and continue in double-column format. The twocolumns on the last page should be as close to equallength as possible.
4.1 Equations
Number equations consecutively with equation numbers
in parentheses flush with the right margin, as in (1).First use the equation editor to create the equation.Then select the Equation markup style. Press the tabkey and write the equation number in parentheses. Tomake your equations more compact, you may use thesolidus ( / ), the exp function, or appropriate exponents.Use parentheses to avoid ambiguities in denominators.Punctuate equations when they are part of a sentence, asin
.)()()||(exp
)]2(/[),(
021
1
0
020
2
drJrJzz
rddrrF
iij
r
=
(1)
Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been
defined before the equation appears or immediately
following. Italicize symbols (T might refer to
temperature, but T is the unit tesla). Refer to (1), not
Eq. (1) or equation (1), except at the beginning of a
sentence: Equation (1) is ... .
4.2 References and Citations
Footnotes are allowed only for the authors affiliation.
1 Organisation / Institution, Country,[email protected]
2 NILU-Norwegian Institute for Air Research, [email protected]
mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected] -
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Figure 3 Example of an image extended to both columns
6. Sections
The heading of a section should be in Times NewRoman 12-point bold. Every word must be capitalizedexcept short minor words with an additional 6-points ofwhite space above and additional 3-points after thesection head. Sections and subsequent sub-sectionsshould be numbered and flush left. For a section head
and a subsection head together (such as Section 3 andsubsection 3.1), use no additional space above thesubsection head. The limit of subsection levels is three.
6.1 Subsections
The heading of subsections should be in Times NewRoman 11-point bold with only the initial letterscapitalized. (Note: For subsections and subsubsections, aword like the ora is not capitalized unless it is the firstword of the header.)
6.1.1 Subsubsections
The heading for subsubsections should be in Times NewRoman 11-point italic with initial letters capitalized and6-points of white space above and 2-points below thesubsubsection head.
7. Acknowledgements
Our thanks to the European Commission for Projectfunding.
8. References
[1] Bowman, M., Debray, S. K., and Peterson, L. L. 1993.Reasoning about naming systems.ACM Trans. Program.Lang. Syst. 15, 5 (Nov. 1993), 795-825. DOI=http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/161468.16147.
[2] Ding, W. and Marchionini, G. 1997.A Study on Video
Browsing Strategies. Technical Report. University ofMaryland at College Park.
[3] Frhlich, B. and Plate, J. 2000. The cubic mouse: a newdevice for three-dimensional input. InProceedings of theSIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in ComputingSystems (The Hague, The Netherlands, April 01 - 06,2000). CHI '00. ACM, New York, NY, 526-531. DOI=http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/332040.332491.
[4] Tavel, P. 2007.Modeling and Simulation Design. AKPeters Ltd., Natick, MA.
[5] Sannella, M. J. 1994. Constraint Satisfaction andDebugging for Interactive User Interfaces. DoctoralThesis. UMI Order Number: UMI Order No. GAX95-09398., University of Washington.
[6] Forman, G. 2003. An extensive empirical study of featureselection metrics for text classification. J. Mach. Learn.Res. 3 (Mar. 2003), 1289-1305.
[7] Brown, L. D., Hua, H., and Gao, C. 2003. A widgetframework for augmented interaction in SCAPE. InProceedings of the 16th Annual ACM Symposium on UserInterface Software and Technology (Vancouver, Canada,
November 02 - 05, 2003). UIST '03. ACM, New York,NY, 1-10. DOI=http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/964696.964697.
[8] Yu, Y. T. and Lau, M. F. 2006. A comparison of MC/DC,MUMCUT and several other coverage criteria for logicaldecisions.J. Syst. Softw. 79, 5 (May. 2006), 577-590.DOI=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2005.05.030.
[9] Spector, A. Z. 1989. Achieving application requirements.InDistributed Systems, S. Mullender, Ed. ACM PressFrontier Series. ACM, New York, NY, 19-33. DOI=http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/90417.90738.
http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/161468.16147http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/161468.16147http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/332040.332491http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/332040.332491http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/964696.964697http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/964696.964697http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2005.05.030http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2005.05.030http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/90417.90738http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/90417.90738http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/161468.16147http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/332040.332491http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/964696.964697http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2005.05.030http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/90417.90738