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IEEE Requirements for Authors

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Authors interested in publishing with the IEEE should review the IEEE Publication Guidelines outlined in Section 8.2 of the PSPB Operations Manual and become familiar with the IEEE's publication policies outlined in Section 8.1.

* Information provided below has been extracted from the PSPB Operations Manual. (PDF, 1.1MB)*

  

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Authorship

Authorship and co-authorship should be based on a substantial intellectual contribution. It is assumed that all authors have had a significant role in the creation of a manuscript that bears their names. Therefore, the list of authors on an article serves multiple purposes; it indicates who is responsible for the work and to whom questions regarding the work should be addressed. Moreover, the credit implied by authorship is often used as a measure of the contributors’ productivity when they are evaluated for employment, promotions, grants, and prizes.

  1. The IEEE affirms that authorship credit must be reserved for individuals who have met each of the following conditions:

    a. 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 manuscript;

    b. Contributed to drafting the article or reviewing and/or revising it for intellectual content; and

    c. Approved the final version of the manuscript as accepted for publication, including references. Inclusion of deceased persons is deemed appropriate, as authors should be so included with a footnote reporting their death.

  2. In papers with multiple authorship, the order of the authors shall be at the discretion of the authors.
  3. Once the list and order of authors has been established, the list and order of authors should not be altered without permission of all living authors.
  4. Any part of an article essential to its main conclusions must be the responsibility of at least one author.
  5. In the case of papers with multiple authors, a “corresponding” author must be designated as having responsibility for overseeing the publication process and ensuring the integrity of the final document. The corresponding author accepts the responsibility for:

    a. Including as co-authors all persons appropriate and none inappropriate;

    b. Obtaining from all co-authors their assent to be designated as such, as well as their approval of the final version of the manuscript as accepted for publication; and

    c. Keeping all co-authors apprised of the current status of a manuscript submitted for publication, including furnishing all co-authors with copies of the reviewers’ comments and a copy of the published version, as appropriate.

  6. Co-authors have responsibility for work submitted under their names. They should remain knowledgeable in so far as possible regarding the contents and status of the manuscript, including the nature of any revisions.
  7. If a manuscript is revised and resubmitted to the same journal, co-authors should be asked by the corresponding author to reaffirm their assent to be listed as co-authors and to approve the revised version. In addition, if the manuscript is rejected or withdrawn from a journal and then submitted to a different IEEE journal, the co-authors should be asked again by the corresponding author to affirm their assent to authorship even if no substantive changes have been made.
  8. Co-authors have the right to withdraw their names from a manuscript at any time before acceptance of the manuscript by the editor. However, an author’s or co-author’s name should not be removed from a manuscript without his or her permission. The responsible editor shall be notified of any change in authorship.
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Responsibilities of Manuscript Authors

  1. Peer review is essential to discourse. Authors are encouraged to have the first formal publication of their results be a peer-reviewed paper.
  2. Financial support of the work being reported and of the authors should be clearly acknowledged in the manuscript, as well as any potential conflict of interest.
  3. Methods and materials should be described in sufficient detail to permit evaluation and replication.
  4. All data should be presented upon request by the editor, to facilitate the review process.
  5. When submitting a manuscript, authors shall disclose whether or not the manuscript has been published previously or if it is still under active consideration by another publication. In addition, if an author submits a manuscript to a non-IEEE publication while that manuscript is under review by IEEE, the author shall immediately notify IEEE about the additional submission.
  6. Authors have an obligation to correct errors promptly.
  7. IEEE defines plagiarism as the use of someone else’s prior ideas, processes, results, or words without explicitly acknowledging the original author and source. Plagiarism in any form is unacceptable and is considered a serious breach of professional conduct, with potentially severe ethical and legal consequences. Section 8.2.4.D provides detailed guidelines for

    a. handling allegations of plagiarism,

    b. applying appropriate corrective actions when findings of plagiarism have been reached, and

    c. referencing previously published material.

  8. Fabrication and falsification are unacceptable.
  9. Except as indicated in IEEE Policy 6.4 (Multiple Publication of Original Technical Material in IEEE Periodicals), authors should only submit original work that has neither appeared elsewhere for publication, nor which is under review for another publication. If authors have used their own previously published work(s) as a basis for a new submission, they are required to cite the previous work(s) and very briefly indicate how the new submission offers substantive novel contributions beyond those of the previously published work(s). Section 8.2.4.F provides guidelines for handling instances of inappropriate multiple submission and prior publication.
  10. Authors should not discuss any aspect of a manuscript under evaluation with reviewers of the submitted manuscript.
  11. Only those articles of a researcher’s publication record that are directly relevant to the subject matter of the paper under consideration should be included in the bibliography. Furthermore, an article shall be appropriately labeled as “submitted” when still in the review process or “in press” when it has been accepted for publication but has not yet appeared in print.
  12. The IEEE assumes that the material submitted to its publications is properly available for general dissemination to the readership of those publications. It is the responsibility of the authors, not the IEEE, to determine whether disclosure of their material requires the prior consent of other parties and, if so, to obtain it. If authors make use of charts,photographs, or other graphical or textual material from previously published material, the authors are responsible for obtaining written permission to use the material in the manuscript.
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