| General.
The manuscript should be typed single-spaced throughout.
Manuscripts should begin with the title of the paper,
followed by the names and addresses of the authors.
Phone and fax numbers and e-mail addresses should
be included, where possible. In the case of co-authors,
a corresponding author should be clearly indicated.
An abstract must be included and placed after the
author information.
Tables. All tables should be designated
by Arabic numerals, sequentially increasing. A self
explanatory title, indicating a content of a table
should be included.
Figures. All figures should be
designated by Arabic numerals, sequentially increasing.
A self explanatory title, indicating a content of
a figure should be included.
Equations and Formulas. All equations
and formulas should be typed in separate lines,
and numbered by Arabic numerals in parentheses on
the right, sequentially increasing. References to
equations or formulas should be quoted in parentheses.
References and Notes. References
should be quoted in alphabetical sequence of author
names, listed at the end of the manuscript, and
numbered sequentially. The references should be
cited in the main text only (not in abstracts and
titles), by using the corresponding Arabic numbers
in square brackets. To quote the references, please
use the following model:
- Agrawal, R., Srikant, R.: Fast Algorithms for
Mining Association Rules. In Proceedings of the
20th International Conference on Very Large Databases.
Morgan Kaufmann, Santiago, Chile, 487-499. (1994)
- Garcia-Molina, H., Ullman, D. J., Widom, J.:
Database Systems: The Complete Book. Prentice
Hall, New Jersey, USA. (2002)
- Wang, X., Bettini, C., Brodsky A., Jajoida,
S.: Logical Design for Temporal Databases with
Multiple Granularities. ACM Transactions on Database
Systems, Vol. 22, No. 2, 115-170. (1997)
- Bruce, K.B., Cardelli, L., Pierce, B.C.: Comparing
Object Encodings. In: Abadi, M., Ito, T. (eds.):
Theoretical Aspects of Computer Software. Lecture
Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 1281. Springer-Verlag,
Berlin Heidelberg New York, 415–438. (1997)
- van Leeuwen, J. (ed.): Computer Science Today.
Recent Trends and Developments. Lecture Notes
in Computer Science, Vol. 1000. Springer-Verlag,
Berlin Heidelberg New York (1995)
- Ribiere, M., Charlton, P.: Ontology Overview.
Motorola Labs, Paris (2002). [Online]. Available:
http://www.fipa.org/docs/input/f-in-00045/f-in-00045.pdf
(current October 2003)
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