Publications
IEEE Xplore
All accepted, registered and presented papers (In person) will be submitted for possible publication in the IEEE Xplore Digital Library through the IEEE Conference Publications Program (CPP).
Author Ethics:
https://conferences.ieeeauthorcenter.ieee.org/author-ethics/ethical-requirements/
Ethical Requirements
Following ethical guidelines is required in scientific publishing. Understand IEEE's publishing guidelines and concepts to ensure ethical requirements are met. Learn about authorship, how to cite sources appropriately, plagiarism, how to report your data accurately, and the importance of publishing original research.
Definition of Authorship
Who should be listed as an author on your paper? The IEEE definition of authorship will help you answer that question and clarify each author's responsibilities.
IEEE considers individuals who meet all of the following criteria to be authors:
- Made a significant intellectual contribution to the theoretical development, system or experimental design, prototype development, and/or the analysis and interpretation of data associated with the work contained in the paper.
- Contributed to drafting the paper or reviewing and/or revising it for intellectual content.
- Approved the final version of the paper as accepted for publication, including references.
Contributors who do not meet all of the above criteria may be included in the Acknowledgment section of the paper. Omitting an author who contributed to your paper or including a person who did not fulfill all of the above requirements is considered a breach of publishing ethics.
Source: IEEE Publication Services and Products Board Operations Manual, Section 8.2.1.A.1.
Proper Citation Practices
You can improve research reproducibility with proper citation practices. Always cite your sources. Citation is required in several instances. Follow these guidelines:
- Direct quotation: Place verbatim text from another source in quotation marks. Indent text for longer quotes. Include a citation to the original source.
- Paraphrase or summary: Include a citation when restating or summarizing information from another source, including ideas, processes, arguments, or conclusions.
- Data, research results, information, graphics, or tables: Cite the original source when referring to, adapting, or reusing any information from another source.