ACM Word
Template for SIG Site
1st Author
1st
author's affiliation
1st line of address
2nd line of address
Telephone number, incl. country code
1st author's E-mail
address
2nd Author
2nd
author's affiliation
1st line of address
2nd line of address
Telephone number, incl. country code
2nd E-mail
3rd Author
3rd
author's affiliation
1st line of address
2nd line of address
Telephone number, incl. country code
3rd E-mail
ABSTRACT
In this paper, we describe the formatting
guidelines for ACM SIG Proceedings.
Categories and Subject
Descriptors
D.3.3 [Programming
Languages]: Language Constructs and Features – abstract data types,
polymorphism, control structures. This is just an example, please use the
correct category and subject descriptors for your submission. The ACM Computing Classification
Scheme: http://www.acm.org/class/1998/
General Terms
Your general
terms must be any of the following 16 designated terms: Algorithms, Management,
Measurement, Documentation, Performance, Design, Economics, Reliability,
Experimentation, Security, Human Factors, Standardization, Languages, Theory,
Legal Aspects, Verification.
Keywords
Keywords are
your own designated keywords.
1.
INTRODUCTION
The proceedings are the records of the conference. ACM hopes to give
these conference by-products a single, high-quality appearance. To do this, we
ask that authors follow some simple guidelines. In essence, we ask you to make
your paper look exactly like this document. The easiest way to do this is
simply to down-load a template from [2], and replace the content with your own
material.
2.
PAGE SIZE
All material on each page should fit within a rectangle of 18 × 23.5
cm (7" × 9.25"), centered on the page, beginning 1.9 cm (0.75")
from the top of the page and ending with 2.54 cm (1") from the
bottom. The right and left margins
should be 1.9 cm (.75").
The text should be in two 8.45 cm (3.33") columns with a .83 cm
(.33") gutter.
3.
TYPESET TEXT
3.1
Normal or Body Text
Conference’10, Month 1–2, 2010, City,
State, Country. Copyright 2010 ACM 1-58113-000-0/00/0010 …$15.00. |
Please use a 9-point Times Roman font, or other Roman font with
serifs, as close as possible in appearance to Times Roman in which these
guidelines have been set. The goal is to have a 9-point text, as you see here.
Please use sans-serif or non-proportional fonts only for special purposes, such
as distinguishing source code text. If Times Roman is not available, try the
font named Computer Modern Roman. On a Macintosh, use the font named
Times. Right margins should be
justified, not ragged.
3.2
Title and Authors
The title
(Helvetica 18-point bold), authors' names (Helvetica 12-point) and affiliations
(Helvetica 10-point) run across the full width of the page – one column wide.
We also recommend phone number (Helvetica 10-point) and e-mail address
(Helvetica 12-point). See the top of this page for three addresses. If only one
address is needed, center all address text. For two addresses, use two centered
tabs, and so on. For more than three authors, you may have to improvise.[1]
3.3
First Page Copyright Notice
Please leave 3.81 cm (1.5") of blank text box at the bottom of
the left column of the first page for the copyright notice.
3.4
Subsequent Pages
For pages other than the first page, start at the top of the page,
and continue in double-column format.
The two columns on the last page should be as close to equal length as
possible.
Table 1. Table captions should be placed above the table
Graphics |
Top |
In-between |
Bottom |
Tables |
End |
Last |
First |
Figures |
Good |
Similar |
Very well |
3.5
References and Citations
Footnotes
should be Times New Roman 9-point, and justified to the full width of the
column.
Use the “ACM
Reference format” for references – that is, a numbered list at the end of the
article, ordered alphabetically and formatted accordingly. See examples of some
typical reference types, in the new “ACM Reference format”, at the end of this
document. Within this template, use the style named references for the text. Acceptable abbreviations, for journal
names, can be found here: http://library.caltech.edu/reference/abbreviations/.
Word may try to automatically ‘underline’ hotlinks in your references, the
correct style is NO underlining.
The references
are also in 9 pt., but that section (see Section 7) is ragged right. References
should be published materials accessible to the public. Internal technical
reports may be cited only if they are easily accessible (i.e. you can give the
address to obtain the report within your citation) and may be obtained by any
reader. Proprietary information may not be cited. Private communications should
be acknowledged, not referenced (e.g.,
“[Robertson, personal communication]”).
3.6
Page Numbering, Headers and
Footers
Do not include headers, footers or page numbers in your submission.
These will be added when the publications are assembled.
4.
FIGURES/CAPTIONS
Place
Tables/Figures/Images in text as close to the reference as possible (see Figure
1). It may extend across both columns to
a maximum width of 17.78 cm (7”).
Captions should
be Times New Roman 9-point bold. They
should be numbered (e.g., “Table 1” or “Figure 2”), please note that the word
for Table and Figure are spelled out. Figure’s captions should be centered
beneath the image or picture, and Table captions should be centered above the
table body.
5.
SECTIONS
The heading of a section should be in Times New Roman 12-point bold
in all-capitals flush left with an additional 6-points of white space above the
section head. Sections and subsequent
sub- sections should be numbered and flush left. For a section head and a
subsection head together (such as Section 3 and subsection 3.1), use no
additional space above the subsection head.
5.1
Subsections
The heading of
subsections should be in Times New Roman 12-point bold with only the initial letters
capitalized. (Note: For subsections and subsubsections, a word like the or a is not capitalized unless it is the first word of the header.)
5.1.1
Subsubsections
The heading for subsubsections should be in Times New Roman 11-point
italic with initial letters capitalized and 6-points of white space above the
subsubsection head.
5.1.1.1
Subsubsections
The heading for subsubsections should be in Times New Roman 11-point
italic with initial letters capitalized.
5.1.1.2
Subsubsections
The heading for subsubsections should be in Times New Roman 11-point
italic with initial letters capitalized.
6.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Our thanks to ACM SIGCHI for allowing us to modify templates they
had developed.
7.
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
of Maryland at College Park.
[3]
Fröhlich, B. and Plate, J.
2000. The cubic mouse: a new device for three-dimensional input. In Proceedings
of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (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. AK Peters Ltd., Natick, MA.
[5]
Sannella, M. J. 1994. Constraint
Satisfaction and Debugging for Interactive User Interfaces. Doctoral
Thesis. UMI Order Number: UMI Order No. GAX95-09398., University of Washington.
[6]
Forman, G. 2003. An extensive
empirical study of feature selection metrics for text classification. J.
Mach. Learn. Res. 3 (Mar. 2003), 1289-1305.
[7]
Brown, L. D., Hua, H., and Gao,
C. 2003. A widget framework for augmented interaction in SCAPE. In Proceedings
of the 16th Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface 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 logical
decisions. 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. In Distributed Systems, S. Mullender, Ed. ACM
Press Frontier Series. ACM, New York, NY, 19-33. DOI= http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/90417.90738.
[1] If necessary, you may place
some address information in a footnote, or in a named section at the end of
your paper.
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