Papers

Word (preferred) or Latex?

CinC papers can be prepared using MS Word or LaTeX.

All papers must be submitted as Word or LaTeX files. In preparing your paper, please use the correct CinC style (as specified below). The Editor will make minor editorial and formatting changes in papers prepared using Word without asking the author for a further submission in most cases. If a paper prepared using LaTeX requires changes, the Editor will request the author to correct and resubmit the paper, possibly more than once.

To summarize:

Preparing a paper

Start with a template for your preferred software:

If you use MS Word:
  1. Download cinctemplate.dot.
  2. Open it in MS Word, and insert your content.
  3. Spell-check your paper.
  4. Check your paper before submitting it. Make a PDF of your paper using MS Word. If your version of MS Word is not able to create a PDF, use Adobe Acrobat or Distiller, Adobe's on-line PDF converter (for a small fee), PrimoPDF (free), or another method of your choice. Check that your paper is properly formatted and that it is no more than 4 pages long.
  5. Submit your .doc or .docx file, along with your .pdf file, to the CinC abstract and paper collection site.

If you use LaTeX:

  1. Download and unpack latex.tar.gz or latex.zip. Detailed instructions and examples are available here if you need them.
  2. Edit template.tex, inserting your content.
  3. Spell-check your paper.
  4. Zip all of your files (except the .pdf) together.
  5. Check the zip file before submitting it. Make an empty folder (directory) and unpack the zip file into it. Make a PDF of your paper using pdflatex, or another method of your choice. If anything is missing from the zip file, add it and repeat this step. Check that your paper is properly formatted and that it is no more than 4 pages long.
  6. Submit the zip file, along with your .pdf file, to the CinC abstract and paper collection site.

As you write, keep these points in mind:

Study the instructions above very carefully. We want papers that are published in Computing in Cardiology to have a consistent format. It is particularly important that you follow the instructions for the title block, authors' names, authors' addresses and section headings. It is vital that the text of your paper is contained within the dimensions given. The editors have made significant achievements in reducing the publication delay, and authors must help to improve this further. Poorly prepared papers introduce significant delays, and may result in your paper not being published.

Composing the title block

The title block appears at the top of the first page of your paper. It includes the title, the byline, and the authors' affiliations, as in this example:

A Comparison of 2D and 3D Edge Detectors in Semi-Automated Measurements of
Chamber Volumes Using 3D Echocardiographic Laboratory Phantom Images

Kun Wang1, Andrew J Sims1,2, Alan Murray1,2

1Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
2Regional Medical Physics Department, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

To maintain a professional and uniform appearance, please follow these instructions carefully when composing the title block:

Submitting your paper

When your paper is ready to be submitted, go to the CinC abstract and paper collection site and follow the instructions there to upload your paper. You will need the passcode that you obtained when you submitted your abstract. If you lose your passcode, you can request for it to be sent to the contact email address that you entered when submitting the abstract.

You may revise your paper at any time up until the deadline (1 week before the conference begins in September); to do so, return to the CinC abstract and paper collection site and submit your revised paper.

Preprints

You may allow your accepted paper to be posted as a preprint, either at the time you submit it or at any later time, by following the instructions on the CinC abstract and paper collection site. Preprints generate interest in your work by giving other attendees an early opportunity to learn about it, increasing the likelihood for thoughtful discussion at the meeting.