Strona: Information for authors / Politechnika Rzeszowska

Information for authors

red. Karol Siwiec

FedCSIS announces two separate calls for papers, with the deadlines for submissions about three weeks apart: Call for Regular Papers and Call for Position Papers.

Papers submitted within the Call for Regular Papers can be accepted, by the Program Committee, in one of the three categories: full papers, short papers or communication papers. Regular papers must consist of minimum 4 and maximum 12 pages at submission, but when accepted they will be published with the following stricter size restrictions: minimum 8 and up to 12 pages for full papers, minimum 4 and up to 6 pages for short papers, and minimum 6 and up to 8 pages for communication papers. More pages can be added to full papers, for an additional fee (see details).

Full and short papers constitute Proceedings of the FedCSIS conference – they are published electronically in a volume of “Annals of Computer Science and Information Systems” (ACSIS) and are submitted for inclusion in the IEEE Xplore Digital Library. ACSIS Volumes with Proceedings of the FedCSIS conference are submitted for indexation in Web of Science, SCOPUS, DBLP, Index Copernicus and other indexing services (see, Indexation for more details).

Communication papers are published in separate ACSIS volume(s) and they are not submitted to the IEEE Xplore DL. This means that they are not submitted for indexing in the Web of Science. However, they are submitted to all remaining indexing services (see Indexation,  for current indexation information).

Papers submitted within the Call for Position Papers can only be accepted as position papers, i.e. they cannot be accepted as regular papers. They must consists of minimum 4 and maximum 8 pages at submission, and when accepted the size limit of minimum 6 and up to 8 pages applies. Position papers are published similarly to communication papers, i.e. in separate ACSIS volume(s) and they are not submitted to the IEEE Xplore DL. They are indexed as per the indexation of the communication papers explained above.

Categories of papers

Paper submission instructions

Preprint policy

Paper reviews and acceptance decisions

Publication

Publications in journals and book series

Indexation

Professor Zdzisław Pawlak Awards

Categories of papers

Regular papers (full or short papers) should relate to an original research work and discuss concrete research findings. Regular papers could be:

  • Original contribution papers (accepted as full or short papers) describe new research contributions. They define theories and/or build artifacts, describe the related research, and propose a solution validated via scientific methods, such as experiments, analyses, simulations, mathematical proofs or field/case studies.

  • Experience evaluation papers (accepted as full or short papers) present existing experiences encountered in practice. They define related challenges, and propose new scientifically-validated solutions to one or more of those challenges. Papers in this category seek to create innovations based on cutting-edge computer science and information systems capabilities.

Position papers relate to an ongoing research or experience. Papers submitted within the Call for Position Papers cannot be accepted as regular papers. However, time and space allowed, position papers will be presented by the authors alongside regular papers. Position papers could be:

  • Challenge papers that propose and describe research challenges in theory or practice of computer science and information systems. The papers in this category must be based on deep understanding of existing research or industrial problems. Based on such understanding and experience, they need to define new exciting research directions and show why these directions are crucial to the society at large.

  • Emerging research papers that present preliminary research results from work-in-progress based on sound scientific approach but presenting work not completely validated as yet. They must describe precisely the research problem and its rationale. They must also define precisely the intended future work including the expected benefits from solution to the tackled problem. Subsequently, they may be more conceptual than experimental.

Communication papers report on research topics worthy of immediate communication. They may be used to mark a hot new research territory, or to describe work in progress, in order to quickly present it to scientific community. They may also contain additional information omitted from the earlier papers, or may present software tools and products in a research state.

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