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Paper Submission

Authors have the freedom to submit the papers in Computer Science, Information Technology and its advances with the help of Information Technology with an emphasis on complete end-to-end systems and their raw materials. Irrespective of the submission, all the submitted papers need not be accepted after the review. Acceptance of papers shall be guided by the merit of the paper and by the reviewers recommentations as per the quality parameters set by the ACEECom. CSA Flyer can be downloaded from » Click Here

All papers submitted to the CSA 2016 must have minimum of 3 pages with following details described precisely.

Title
Abstract
Keyword
Introduction
Related Work or Literature Studies
Motivation
Problem Domain
Problem Definition
Statement
Innovative content
Problem formulation or representation or design
Solution methodologies or problem solving
Results and Sensitivity Analysis
Data model
Comparison of Results
Justification of the Results
Conclusion

Future work (if any)
Acknowledgement (if any)
References

Title

         » A very brief announcement of the research work in few words without any details. The title should enable a reader either to skip as a non interested topic or to lead further to the abstract as a possible subject of interest.

Abstract

     »The abstract is a place where a reader decides for final as to whether the paper is a subject of his interest or not. It is not just whatever you write and then you identify it by the keyword abstract to satisfy the paper       norm.
     » The abstract has the following properties:
     » More explanation of the title, typically 55 words or less
     »Should reflect the hypothesis
     »Should reflect the problem, solution and the innovation related to the previous work and also the comparison of result with the most recent related work

Keyword

         » Mentions the key terms used in the paper

Introduction

        » The purpose of the Introduction is to prepare the reader to understand the rest of the paper. It places the work in a theoretical context, and enables the reader to understand and appreciate your objectives.

        » Describe the importance (significance) of the study - why was this worth doing in the first place? Provide a broad context.

       » Defend the model - why did you use this particular system? What are its advantages? The practical reasons for using it.

         » Describe the experimental design and how it accomplished the stated objectives.

Related Work or Literature Studies

        » Compares narrow but deeply between the systems and its main rivals at their critical points of difference

         » Belongs “logically” to the evaluation since it establishes the originality of the contribution

Motivation

         » Problems relative to the realistic world and the technologies used in the related works.

Materials and Methods (Innovative and Proposed Method)

         » Materials:

  • Describe materials separately only if the study is so complicated that it saves space this way
  • Include specialized chemicals, biological materials, and any equipment or supplies that are not commonly found in laboratories
  • Do not include commonly found supplies such as test tubes, pipet tips, beakers, etc., or standard lab equipment such as centrifuges, spectrophotometers, pipettors, etc
  • If use of a specific type of equipment, a specific enzyme, or a culture from a particular supplier is critical to the success of the experiment, then it and the source should be singled out, otherwise no
  • Materials may be reported in a separate paragraph or else they may be identified along with your procedures.
  • In biosciences we frequently work with solutions - refer to them by name and describe completely, including concentrations of all reagents, and pH of aqueous solutions, solvent if non-aqueous.

         » Methods:

  • Describe the mehodology completely, including such specifics as temperatures, incubation times, etc.
  • To be concise, present methods under headings devoted to specific procedures or groups of procedures
  • Generalize - report how procedures were done, not how they were specifically performed on a particular day.

Problem Domain, Statement and Definition

        » Should be explained with the mathematical equation, block diagraram, experimentation, flow chart etc.

Test Results

         » Summarize the findings in text and illustrate them, if appropriate, with figures and tables.

         » In text, describe each of the results, pointing the reader to observations that are most relevant.

         » Describe results of control experiments and include observations that are not presented in a formal figure or table, if appropriate.

Sensitivity Analysis

         » Experiment with different states of results

Comparison of Results

         » Compare with the related works and represent it through the graphical or tabular method.

Justification of the Results

         » Justifing the results

Conclusion

         » Summarizes the research and discusses its significance

Future work (if any)

        » Suggest future directions, such as how the experiment might be modified to accomplish another objective.

Acknowledgement (if any)

         » Acknowledgements enable you to thank all those who have helped in carrying out the research.

References

         » Cite all sources used


NOTE: The paper submitted in the form of an extended abstract is not sufficient, and it will not be considered to the review process.

Prospective authors are invited to submit full (original) research papers (which is NOT submitted/published/under consideration anywhere in other conferences/journals). The papers can be submitted in electronic (Doc or Docx) format through the CMT Conference Management System or via email csa.chair @ gmail.com

   
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