Professional Documents
Culture Documents
IJFIS Templete
IJFIS Templete
Title
Abstract
A single paragraph of about 200 words maximum. For research articles, abstracts should
give a pertinent overview of the work. We strongly encourage authors to use the following
style of structured abstracts, but without headings: (1) Background: Place the question
addressed in a broad context and highlight the purpose of the study; (2) Methods: briefly
describe the main methods or treatments applied; (3) Results: summarize the article's main
findings; (4) Conclusions: indicate the main conclusions or interpretations. The abstract
should be an objective representation of the article and it must not contain results that are
not presented and substantiated in the main text and should not exaggerate the main
conclusions. ……
……
Keywords: keyword 1, keyword 2, keyword 3, keyword 4
1.
1. Introduction
The introduction should briefly place the study in a broad context and highlight why it is
important.
It should define the purpose of the work and its significance. The current state of the
research field should be carefully reviewed and key publications cited. Please highlight
controversial and diverging hypotheses when necessary. Finally, briefly mention the main
aim of the work and highlight the principal conclusions. As far as possible, please keep the
Received: Month. Year
Revised : introduction comprehensible to scientists outside your particular field of research. References
Accepted:
should be numbered in order of appearance and indicated by a numeral or numerals in square
*Correspondence to: Name
(email address) brackets—e.g., [1] or [2,3], or [4–6]. See the end of the document for further details on
§ c The Korean Institute of Intelligent Systems references
……………..
Conflict of Interest
3. Results
If there is no conflict of interest regarding this manuscript, please
insert the following statement: “No potential conflict of interest
It should provide a concise and precise description of the relevant to this article was reported.”
experimental results, their interpretation, as well as the
experimental conclusions that can be drawn.
References
Table 1. Example of a table
[1] H. Yao, S. Sinha, C. Chiang, X. Hong, and Y. Cai, “Efficient
Dataset Train Test
process-hotspot detection using range pattern matching”, in
HS NHS HS NHS
Proc. IEEE/ACM Int. Conf. on Computer-Aided Design
Benchmark 1 (32nm) 99 340 226 319
(ICCAD), San Jose, pp. 625-632, 2006.
Benchmark 2 (28nm) 174 5285 499 4146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ICCAD.2006.320026
Benchmark 3 (28nm) 909 4643 1847 3541
[2] A. B. Kahng, C. Park, and X. Xu, “Fast Dual-Graph-Based
Benchmark 4 (28nm) 95 4452 192 3386
Hotspot Filtering,” IEEE Trans. on Computer-Aided
Benchmark 5 (28nm) 26 2716 42 2111
Design of Integrated Circuits and System, Vol. 27, No. 9,
pp. 1635-1642, 2008.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TCAD.2008.927765
3.2 Subsection