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1 The Title Should be The Fewest Possible Words Those


2 Adequately Describe The Contents (Center, Bold, Cambria 14 pt)
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11 Abstract
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13 An Abstract should be viewed as a mini version of the paper. The
14 abstract should provide a brief summary of important messages of
15 each section of the paper : Background of the Problem (~1 sentence),
16 Problem and its interest (1-2 sentences), Solution (~5 sentences),
17 and Performance (~2 sentences). The Abstract should not exceed
18 250 words and should be designed to define clearly what is dealt
19 with in the paper. It should be typed as a single paragraph, and
20 written in Cambria 11 pt. The Abstract should state the principal
21 objectives and scope of the investigation, claim uniqueness of the
22 solution, describe the methods employed, summarize the result and
23 state the principal conclusions. The Abstract should never give any
24 information or conclusion that is not stated in the paper. References
25 to the literature must not be cited in the Abstract (except in rare
26 instances, such as modification of a previously published method).
27
28 Keywords: maximum 5 keywords, separated by comma.
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30
311. INTRODUCTION
32 The purpose of the introduction should be to supply sufficient
33backgroud information to allow the reader to understand and evaluate the
34result of the present study without needing to refer to previous publications
35on the topic. The introduction should also provide the rationale for the
36present study. Choose references carefully to provide the most important
37background information. Much of the introduction should be written in the
38present tense, because you will be reffering primarily to your problem and
39the establised knoledge relating to it at the start of your work. Organization
40and citation of the bibliography are made in Vancouver style in sign [1], [2]
41and so on. The introduction should include: (1) Background of the problem,
42and (2) Problem of the research and its interest. It presents possible clarity,
43the nature and scope of problem investigated.
44 The manuscript is written in Microsoft Word 97-2003 document, single
45space, Cambria 12 pt and minimum 8 pages. Be sure your text is fully
46justified. Please do not place any additional blank lines between paragraphs.
47Please keep all text and graphics within the column margins. The main text
48format consists of one column on A4 paper (210 x 297 mm). The margin text
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49from the left, right, top, and bottom 3.5 cm. Please do not alter the formatting
50and style layouts which have been set up in this template document. Do not
51number pages on the front, as page numbers will be added separately for the
52preprints and the Proceedings.
53
542. RELATED WORKS
55 The related work is a literature review with describes the work that has
56been done and explain your position work. It should be a summary of the
57paper and highlight an important section. It may be work that you are basing
58your work off of, or work that shows others attempts to solve the same
59problem. After reading your related work section, a reader should
60understand the key idea and contribution of each significant piece of related
61work, how they fit together and how your work differs.
62
633. ORIGINALITY
64 The term 'original' stands at the fictitious and intangible border
65between a new text (and the knowledge, ideas, and concepts that it contains)
66and a text that has existed before. The positive side of the term original
67indicates that a text that is labelled original must also be creative, inventive,
68or novel. Here, the emphasis is on the specific characteristics of the text,
69which is that it contains new ideas or concepts those can solve the problem
70stated in Introduction. Interestingly, the term 'originality' primarily indicates
71creativeness and inventiveness in the positive side. Originality contains claim
72of the uniqueness for the proposed approach as the solution to the problem.
73It also discusses the basic idea of the proposed approach and the reasons for
74the choice of the approach.
75
764. SYSTEM DESIGN
77 In the third section of the paper, the Originality, you stated (or should
78have) the methodology employed in the study. If necessary, you also defended
79the reasons for your choice of a particular method over competing methods.
80Now, in this section you must give the full details. Most of the section should
81be written in the past tense. The main purpose of this section is to describe
82(and if necessary defend) the experimental design and then provide enough
83detail so that a competent worker can repeat the experiments. Careful
84writing of this section is critically important because the cornerstone of the
85scientific method requires that your result, to be of scientific merit, must be
86reproducible, and for the results to be adjudged reproducible, you must
87provide the basis for repetition of the experiments by others. For methods,
88the usual order of presentation is chronological. Obviously, however, related
89methods should be described together, and straight chronological order
90cannot always be followed.
91
924.1 Tables
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93 The title of the table should be concise and not divided into two or more
94clauses or setences. Tables, Figures and their caption are presented center. All
95tables should be numbered with Arabic numerals. Headings should be placed
96above tables and center. Tables must be embedded into the text and not
97supplied separately. The table number and caption should be typed below the
98illustration in Cambria 11 pt and center. Table 1 is an example which authors
99may find useful.
100
101 Table 1. Channel clasification in mobile communication
Parameter Condition Channel type
Delay Bc >> Bs Frequency flat
spread Bc < Bs Frequency selective
Doppler Tc >> Ts Slow fading
spread Tc < Ts Fast fading
102
1034.2 Equations
104 Equations and formulae should be typed 11 pt and numbered
105consecutively with Arabic numerals in parentheses on the right hand side of
106the page (if referred to explicitly in the text). They should also be separated
107from the surrounding text by 1.5 spaces.
108
new old
109 w i  wi  wi (1)

110 wi   h ki v,w   v  w i  (2)


111
1124.3 Figures
113 Graphics may be full color. All colors will be retained on the CDROM.
114Graphics must not use stipple fill patterns because they may not be
115reproduced properly. Please use only SOLID FILL colors which contrast well
116both on screen and on a black-and-white hardcopy, as shown in Figure 1. All
117photographs, schemas, graphs and diagrams are to be referred to as figures.
118Line drawings should be good quality scans or true electronic output. Low-
119quality scans are not acceptable. Figures must be embedded into the text and
120located the layout in line with the text.
121 Lettering and symbols should be clearly defined either in the caption or
122in a legend provided as part of the figure. Figures should be placed at the top
123or bottom of a page wherever possible, as close as possible to the first
124reference to them in the paper. The figure number and caption should be
125typed below the illustration in Cambria 11 pt and center. Artwork has no text
126along the side of it in the main body of the text. However, if two images fit
127next to each other, these may be placed next to each other to save space. They
128must be numbered consecutively, all figures, and all tables respectively.
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129
130 Figure 1. Cell layout in the system architecture
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1325. EXPERIMENT AND ANALYSIS
133 There are usually two ingredients of this section. First, you should give
134some kind of overall description of the experiment, providing the "big
135picture". Second, you should present analysis of the experimental results. This
136section should be presented in the past tense. Most importantly, in the
137manuscript you should present representative data rather than endlessly
138repetitive data. The results of the experiment need to be clearly and simply
139stated because it is the results that constitute the new knowledge that you are
140contributing to the world.
141
1426. CONCLUSION
143 Please include a brief summary of the possible clinical implications of
144your work in the Conclusion section. This section should lead the reader to
145important matter of the paper. It also can be followed by suggestion or
146recommendation related to further research.
147
148
149Acknowledgements
150 First, you should acknowledge any significant technical help that you
151received from any individual, whether in your laboratory or else where. You
152should also acknowledge the source of special equipment, cultures, or other
153materials. Second, it is usually the acknowledgments wherein you should
154acknowledge any outside financial assistance, such as grants, contracts or
155fellowships.
156
157
158REFERENCES
159 References should be added at the end of the paper, and its
160corresponding citation will be added in the order of their appearance in the
161text. Authors should ensure that every reference in the text appears in the list.
162References are written in Vancouver style. All reference items must be in 12
163pt font. The main references are international journals and proceeding. All
164references should be to the most pertinent and up-to-date sources. Number
165the reference items consecutively in square brackets, e.g. [1]. The example of
166format for references as below:
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167
168Journal:
169[1] Author_Firstname Author_Secondname, Title of Manuscript, Name of
170 Journal or its Abbreviation, Vol. xx, No. yy, pp. aa-bb (paper pages), Year.
171[2] Ahmad Cahyono, Ria Nasution, Implementation of a Direct Control
172 Algorithm for Induction Motors Based on Discrete Space Vector
173 Modulation, IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics, Vol. 15, No. 4, pp.
174 769-777, 2007.
175
176Proceeding:
177If the proceedings consists of several volumes
178[1] Author_Firstname Author_Secondname, Title of Manuscript, Name of
179 Conference of Semina, Place, Vol. xx, pp. aa-bb (paper pages), Year.
180[2] Bambang Sudibyo, Iwan Bagus Setia, Towards Data Warehouse Quality
181 Metrics, Proceedings of the 3rd International Workshop on Design and
182 Management of Data Warehouses (DMDW), Interlaken, Vol. 39, pp. 2-11,
183 2009.
184
185If the proceedings in single volume
186[3] Author_Firstname Author_Secondname, Title of Manuscript, Name of
187 Conference or Seminar, Place, pp. aa-bb (paper pages), Year.
188[4] Anita Setiowati, Agus Suparman, Implementation of Single Precision
189 Floating Point Square Root on FPGAs, IEEE Symposium on FPGA for
190 Custom Computing Machines, Napa, pp. 226-232, 2008.
191
192Texbooks:
193If the references are refer to specific page range in a book
194[1] Author_Firstname Author_Secondname, Title of the Book, Publisher
195 (City), Ed. tt (edition), pp. aa-bb (paper pages), Year.
196[2] Bagus Suherman, Power Electronics, Cahaya Offset (Surabaya), Ed. 1, pp.
197 11-13, 2003.
198[3] Ani Pradita, Johan Suharto, Strategic planning for Information Systems,
199 Jaya Press (Jakarta), Ed. 4, pp. 102-104, 2007.
200
201If the references are refer to some separate pages in a book.
202[1] Author_Firstname Author_Secondname, Title of the Book, Publisher
203 (City), Ed. tt (edition), Year.
204[2] Nani Andarwati, Power Electronics, Pelita Press, Ed. 2, 2003.
205
206Final Project/Thesis/Disertation:
207[1] Author_Firstname Author_Secondname, Title of Thesis/Disertation,
208 Diploma/Bachelor/Master/PhD Final Project/Thesis/Disertation, Name
209 of University/Institute/College (City), Year.
210[2] Rosyid Sumantri, A Novel Fuzzy ARMA Model for Rain Prediction in
211 Surabaya, D4 Final Project, EEPIS (Surabaya), 2009.
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213Patent:
214[1] Author_Firstname Author_Secondname, Title of the Patent, Place of the
215 Patent, Patent number, Year of publication.
216[2] Ahmad LP, Hooper A. The Lower Switching Losses Method of Space
217 Vector Modulation, Indonesian Patent, PID10309, 2007.
218
219Standard:
220[1] Name of Standard Body/Institution, Title of the Standar, Publisher (Place
221 of publication), Standard number, Year of publication.
222[2] IEEE Standards Association, IEEE Standard VHDL Synthesis Packages,
223 IEEE Press (New York), 1076.3-2009, 2009.
224
225Report:
226[1] Author/Editor (if it is an editor/editors always put (ed./eds.) after the
227 name), Title of the Report, Organisation, Report number: (this should be
228 followed by the actual number in figures), Year of publication.
229[2] Budi Utama, The Framework of Electronic Goverment, U.S. Dept. of
230 Information Technology, Report number: 63, 2005.
231
232Internet:
233No internet reference
234
235Appendix A. An example appendix
236Authors including an appendix section should do so after References section.
237Multiple appendices should all have headings in the style used above. They
238will automatically be ordered A, B, C, etc.
239
240A.1. Example of a sub-heading within an appendix
241There is also the option to include a subheading within the Appendix if you
242wish.

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