LISA Manual
Proceedings
Proceedings are the written
record of the conference; they allow participants as well as those who
could not attend to get an overview of the meeting, read individual articles
of particular interest and contact authors for further information, if
required. They provide a wider recognition and visibility for authors
and are important for historical reasons as volumes from a series show
the evolution of ideas over time and put important developments into context.
Sometimes the proceedings are
published in-house by the host institution or at another astronomical
institution. For budgetary reasons, it may be advisable to publish electronic-only
proceedings in future (either online or offline, see Format
section below). A copy of the book or CD should be given to every participant.
The topics covered in this
section are:
- Editors tasks, including
- Language issues
- Wordprocessing software
- Instructions for authors
- Receiving manuscripts
- Style and format
- Timeline adherence
- Compiling the book
- Creating electronic
proceedings
- Publisher
- Format
- Contents of the proceedings
volume
Editors'
tasks
The SOC
selects the editors of the proceedings. It is important that the editors
are familiar with the word processing system chosen for proceedings (or
willing to learn under time pressure!) Under no circumstances should inexperienced
colleagues embark on such a project alone unless they are sure that experienced
persons at their home institution are willing to help whenever problems
(in particular technical ones) occur.
At least one of the editors
should be a native English speaker who can take care of the (typically
many) language problems in manuscripts.
Language issues
Early on, the editors should agree on using either only English or
only American spelling (and be consistent throughout the proceedings --
unlike we have been in this manual!) Alternatively, they may decide to
leave the individual 'flavors' of the authors' choice of language. If
one spelling is preferred, the authors must be informed about this decision
even though probably not all of them will fulfil this request.
Wordprocessing
software
Selecting a word
processing software may be determined by the publisher and his demands.
On the one hand, it may be convenient to just go along with the software
demanded by the publisher if the publisher provides macros for this software
which ensures the same look and feel across all articles. On the other
hand, editors should keep in mind that being forced to work with word
processing software the majority of authors have never used before can
result in large difficulties and considerable delays. The editors must
be prepared to provide technical help for manuscripts.
The same software will also
be used by the editors to process the whole book, e.g., establish table
of contents, index and page numbers, include photos etc. In the case of
LaTeX, this means that they will need extensive knowledge of working under
Unix. If the editors are not familiar with the selected software (and
operating system), they must either make sure to have in-house help or
to be learning at a high pace and under pressure. Authors will submit
papers written with a variety of versions of the chosen word processing
software. Some systems may be more tolerant regarding articles prepared
with older versions. For instance, Word seems to be fairly downward compatible,
while processing documents prepared with various versions of LaTeX can
be problematic, even more so using Unix LaTeX and PCTeX in parallel.
Related document:
Sample
LaTeX document (exerpt from LISA IV)
Maximum page length
The editors must set an allowed number of pages per article and communicate
this information to the authors. Typically, the maximum number will be
different for various types of articles; for instance, oral presentations
may be granted a maximum of 8 pages, poster papers 4, panel discussions
and 'Birds of a Feather' sessions 2. These lengths must be respected by
the authors; even one page more here or there can drastically offset the
outcome of the estimated total number of printed pages and increase the
proceedings costs immensely.
Instructions
for authors
As early as possible, a web page with instructions for authors should
be set up. The page contains essential information regarding
the conference
the program booklet
the website
- submission deadline and
format of slideshows and presentation summaries (see: Publicity:
Websites)
the proceedings
- selected publisher
- selected format
- expected time frame (when
will the proceedings be published)
- whether authors will receive
a copy of the proceedings
- deadline for post-meeting
receipt of manuscripts
- required format for text
submissions (LaTeX, Word, etc.) and images/figures (Postscript, TIFF,
etc.)
- links to templates and style
files needed for manuscript preparation
- if necessary, explanations
on how to use the templates
- maximum number of pages
for invited, contributed, poster papers and write-ups of panel discussions
- English or American spelling
- possibility to include colour
images (which raises costs of the print proceedings)
- naming conventions for submitted
text and image files (e.g., paper 1 = Oneauthor1.tex, figure 1 = Oneauthor1a.ps,
figure 2 = Oneauthor1b.ps)
- procedure for manuscript
submission (send manuscript to whom? in which format?)
- editors' e-mail, postal
and fax addresses so that authors can contact them easily in case they
have questions
Sample author instructions:
LISA III
LISA
III instructions for authors
LISA IV
LISA
IV author instructions (pre-conference)
LISA
IV note to authors of poster papers (pre-conference)
LISA
IV general information for authors (sent by e-mail after the meeting)
LISA
IV instructions for authors (from conference website)
Receiving manuscripts
Authors should submit their contributions electronically, preferably
to both editors to avoid loss of any submission. In addition, a printout
of the final manuscript should be sent to one editor. This way, the editors
know the layout the authors intended (which is particularly important
in case the word processing software yields strange layouts due to version
incompatibilities).
For manuscript receipt, it
has proven to be most efficient if the editors set up a ftp account. The
exact address and procedure should be noted on the author instructions
web page. Editors must keep track of all received manuscripts and acknowledge
them immediately after receipt.
Style and format
Even more important than spelling corrections are changes that may
be necessary regarding content, outline, and general structure of manuscripts.
Editors may have to modify certain sections of documents to make sure
the authors are understood properly by readers. However, they should not
re-write whole articles unless absolutely unavoidable. In any case authors
have to be notified about all changes made in their manuscripts.
The editors must monitor adherence
to style standards (as set by the publisher) to make contributions look
similar. In particular, they must be strict regarding acceptance of with
regard to accepting the required format of images. Otherwise converting
postscript, tiff, jpg, gif etc. into whatever format needed will consume
many work hours (if it is manageable at all).
Timeline adherence
In order to publish the proceedings as soon as possible after the
meeting took place, authors must adhere to the deadlines set and communicated
to them by the editors. Unfortunately, there will always be authors who
do not submit their contributions in time. It is one of the editors' most
annoying tasks to harass these late submissions. In case an author still
doesn't submit the manuscripts after a short grace period, editors should
exclude this paper from publication. Speed of publication is more important
than 100% completeness.
Related document:
LISA
IV Reminder (sent by e-mail)
Compiling the book
The final manuscripts files are arranged by the editors in the proper
order and processed so that accompanying material like contents table,
page number, author index etc. are created automatically (if possible).
Even if the publisher provides a software package to create the final
book, it may be incomplete. In the past, one publisher's package contained
style files and macros, but the file that actually gathered all individual
manuscripts in the desired orde was not included. (It was kindly provided
by an experienced colleague who had developed this tool during preparation
of a previous proceedings volume.)
When the book is complete,
all files (or camera-ready printouts) are sent to the publisher (often
electronically) by the agreed-upon deadline. They should be accompanied
by a list of recipients (conference participants) for distribution of
the printed volume. Once the galley proofs are ready, editors have to
review and, if necessary, correct them before the final printing.
Creating
electronic proceedings
According to experience from LISA III and IV, "electronic proceedings"
means an unrestrictedly available web version. The easiest solution will
be if the publisher provides it at no (or reasonable) additional costs.
Usually this is not the case, and the print editors or the SOC have to
find one or more volunteers to convert te book (using the underlying files)
into web format. (Note that permission to establish e-LISA proceedings
is part of the publisher selection process.) These volunteers can, but
need not be the editors of the print edition.
Typical file formats for web
proceedings are currently HTML and/or PDF. HTML documents can be read
with any web browser.and are therefore easier to access. PDF documents
require the Adobe Acrobat Reader software which sometimes leads to version
incompatibilities and browser plug-in problems. It is more suitable for
printing though.
The (print) proceedings consist
of one or several files that can include text, graphics, images, tables,
photos, and other items. Converting these files into web-suitable format
will not be done with one keystroke. On the contrary! In order to convert
the files received from the print editors into web-suitable format, it
may be necessary to work on various platforms. For instance, converting
the original LISA IV LaTeX manuscripts into PDF files turned out to be
much more complicated than expected. First, files had to be processed
using a Unix workstation, then a PC and finally an Apple Macintosh computer.
When authors mention web addresses
in their manuscripts, these should become active links in the proceedings.
They must be checked carefully to be sure that they are working at least
by the time the proceedings are published. (It will be impossible to maintain
them over time.). Don't artificially introduce more links than those mentioned
explicitly by the authors. One exception from this rule are internal references,
i.e. quotations of other articles published in the same proceedings.
The layout of the proceedings
can mimic the print version or be designed specifically for the web. The
final product should be tested with various web browsers and, if possible,
various versions thereof, in order to make sure that it can be viewed
by (almost) everybody.
Examples of electronic versions:
LISA
III proceedings
LISA
IV proceeding
Publisher
The publisher is chosen by the POC
and SOC. Selection critera include:
- Price:
The price usually is based on a specific number of papers and pages
which need to be calculated by the SOC. It should include mailing (by
the publisher) of one copy to each meeting participant, based on a mailing
list provided by the editors. The price of the proceedings volume is
included in the registration
fee.
- Copyright restrictions:
The publisher should accept of open access and give permission to post
an electronic version of the proceedings at the LISA website
- Publication speed:
To be of greatest use to the community, the proceedings should be published
as quickly as possible after the meeting took place
- Volume quality
The final book will show the care and attention the publisher put into
it. As more and more publishers push control over the product to the
editors, this responsibility is shifted partly to them.
- Publisher reputation
The publisher's reputation may 'wear off' to the proceedings. Publishing
with a widely respected publisher may strengthen the quality and timeliness
of the content
- Wordprocessing software:
An uncommon software may result in more difficulties for authors and
editors during manuscript preparation and compilation of the final book
- Ease of distribution:
Volumes included in a book series may have a wider distribution (namely
to all subscribers to the series) than individually published books
- Ease of purchase:
Purchasing a print copy should not require a subscription to a journal
- Visibility:
Books published by well-known and -respected publishers may be noticed
by more people than publications coming from unknown publishing houses
Sometimes proceedings are published
in-house by an astronomical institution instead of by a commercial
or society publisher (e.g., LISA I and IV). It may be much cheaper to
publish this way, and the publishing institution may be able to distribute
the final proceedings widely to other astronomical institutions.
Format
Should the proceedings be published in print and/or electronic format?
Up to now, LISA editors decided in favor of print volumes for all LISA
proceedings, with the permission to post an electronic version (established
by volunteers) at the conference website. If the publisher is in charge
of both formats, they must be willing for an unrestricted electronic version
to be posted on the web.
Because of budget restrictions,
electronic-only proceedings, either online or offline on CDs, may be considered
in future. While offline proceedings do not sound extremely tempting at
first, they would diminish the production costs immensely and yet make
the proceedings available also to those colleagues with unstable or only
occasional access to internet resources.
See also: New
ideas
Contents
of the proceedings volume
The final proceedings, regardless of the format, should contain
- title page with conference
title, LISA number, conference theme (if any), editors, conference location
and dates, publication year
- table of contents pages
- preface, written by the
editors
- perhaps conference overview,
written by the SOC chairs
- dedication (if any)
- list of SOC and LOC members,
pointing out the chairs
- photos of all committee
members
- list of commercial and
private conference sponsors/donors (but not the amounts donated!)
- list of participants, incl.
home institutions and email addresses
- welcome address (if any)
- conference photograph with
explanatory drawing, list of all participants in the photo
- (possibly) all conference
papers (invited and contributed oral presentations, posters, write-ups
of panel discussions), typically arranged in the order they were presented
during the meeting
- throughout the volume,
photos should be included where appropriate
- author index
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