From 0ddcb72e0c0227e6325e632a70a6fefffef8c0fd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jon Whiteaker Date: Thu, 5 Jan 2012 15:10:24 -0800 Subject: initial setup for kinect paper --- eccv.tex | 449 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 449 insertions(+) create mode 100755 eccv.tex (limited to 'eccv.tex') diff --git a/eccv.tex b/eccv.tex new file mode 100755 index 0000000..d044ef4 --- /dev/null +++ b/eccv.tex @@ -0,0 +1,449 @@ +% last updated in April 2002 by Antje Endemann +% Based on CVPR 07 and LNCS, with modifications by DAF, AZ and elle, 2008 and AA, 2010, and CC, 2011 + +\documentclass[runningheads]{llncs} +\usepackage{graphicx} +\usepackage{amsmath,amssymb} % define this before the line numbering. +\usepackage{ruler} +\usepackage{color} +\usepackage[width=122mm,left=12mm,paperwidth=146mm,height=193mm,top=12mm,paperheight=217mm]{geometry} +\begin{document} +% \renewcommand\thelinenumber{\color[rgb]{0.2,0.5,0.8}\normalfont\sffamily\scriptsize\arabic{linenumber}\color[rgb]{0,0,0}} +% \renewcommand\makeLineNumber {\hss\thelinenumber\ \hspace{6mm} \rlap{\hskip\textwidth\ \hspace{6.5mm}\thelinenumber}} +% \linenumbers +\pagestyle{headings} +\mainmatter +\def\ECCV12SubNumber{***} % Insert your submission number here + +\title{Author Guidelines for ECCV Submission} % Replace with your title + +\titlerunning{ECCV-12 submission ID \ECCV12SubNumber} + +\authorrunning{ECCV-12 submission ID \ECCV12SubNumber} + +\author{Anonymous ECCV submission} +\institute{Paper ID \ECCV12SubNumber} + + +\maketitle + +\begin{abstract} +The abstract should summarize the contents of the paper and should +contain at least 70 and at most 300 words. It should be set in 9-point +font size and should be inset 1.0~cm from the right and left margins. +\dots +\end{abstract} + + +\section{Introduction} + + +Please follow the steps outlined below when submitting your manuscript. + +%------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +\subsection{Language} + +All manuscripts must be in English. + +\subsection{Paper length} +The basic length is 12 pages, but up to two additional pages may be +purchased in the final printed proceedings. This brings the {\em +maximum} length for submission to 14 pages. Overlength papers will +simply not be reviewed. This includes papers where the margins and +formatting are deemed to have been significantly altered from those +laid down by this style guide. The reason such papers will not be +reviewed is that there is no provision for supervised revisions of +manuscripts. The reviewing process cannot determine the suitability of +the paper for presentation in 14 pages if it is reviewed in 16. + +\subsection{Dual submission} + +By submitting a manuscript to ECCV, the author(s) assert that it +has not been previously published in substantially similar form. +Furthermore, no paper which contains significant overlap with the +contributions of this paper either has been or will be submitted +during the ECCV 2012 review period to either a journal or a +conference. + +If there are any papers that may appear to the reviewers to violate +this condition, then it is your responsibility to (1) cite these +papers (preserving anonymity as described in section~\ref{sec:blind} +of this example paper, (2) argue in the body of your paper why your +ECCV paper is nontrivially different from these concurrent +submissions, and (3) include anonymized versions of those papers in +the supplemental material. + +\subsection{Supplemental Material} + +Authors may optionally upload supplemental material. Typically, this +material might include videos of results that cannot be included in +the main paper, anonymized related submissions to other conferences +and journals, and appendices or technical reports containing extended +proofs and mathematical derivations that are not essential for +understanding of the paper. Note that the contents of the supplemental +material should be referred to appropriately in the paper and that +reviewers are not obliged to look at it. + +All supplemental material must be zipped or tarred into a single +file. There is a 50MB limit on the size of this file. The deadline for +supplemental material is five days after the main paper deadline. + +%------------------------------------------------------------------------- +\subsection{Line numbering} + +All lines should be numbered, as in this example document. This makes +reviewing more efficient, because reviewers can refer to a line on a +page. If you are preparing a document using a non-\LaTeX\ +document preparation system, please arrange for an equivalent line numbering. + +\subsection{Mathematics} + +Please number all of your sections and displayed equations. Again, +this makes reviewing more efficient, because reviewers can refer to a +line on a page. Also, it is important for readers to be able to refer +to any particular equation. Just because you didn't refer to it in +the text doesn't mean some future reader might not need to refer to +it. It is cumbersome to have to use circumlocutions like ``the +equation second from the top of page 3 column 1''. (Note that the +line numbering will not be present in the final copy, so is not an +alternative to equation numbers). Some authors might benefit from +reading Mermin's description of how to write mathematics: +\url{http://www.cvpr.org/doc/mermin.pdf}. + + +\section{Blind review} +\label{sec:blind} + +Many authors misunderstand the concept of anonymizing for blind +review. Blind review does not mean that one must remove +citations to one's own work---in fact it is often impossible to +review a paper unless the previous citations are known and +available. + +Blind review means that you do not use the words ``my'' or ``our'' +when citing previous work. That is all. (But see below for +techreports). + +Saying ``this builds on the work of Lucy Smith [1]'' does not say +that you are Lucy Smith, it says that you are building on her +work. If you are Smith and Jones, do not say ``as we show in +[7]'', say ``as Smith and Jones show in [7]'' and at the end of the +paper, include reference 7 as you would any other cited work. + +An example of a bad paper: +\begin{quote} +\begin{center} + An analysis of the frobnicatable foo filter. +\end{center} + + In this paper we present a performance analysis of our + previous paper [1], and show it to be inferior to all + previously known methods. Why the previous paper was + accepted without this analysis is beyond me. + + [1] Removed for blind review +\end{quote} + + +An example of an excellent paper: + +\begin{quote} +\begin{center} + An analysis of the frobnicatable foo filter. +\end{center} + + In this paper we present a performance analysis of the + paper of Smith [1], and show it to be inferior to + all previously known methods. Why the previous paper + was accepted without this analysis is beyond me. + + [1] Smith, L and Jones, C. ``The frobnicatable foo + filter, a fundamental contribution to human knowledge''. + Nature 381(12), 1-213. +\end{quote} + +If you are making a submission to another conference at the same +time, which covers similar or overlapping material, you may need +to refer to that submission in order to explain the differences, +just as you would if you had previously published related work. In +such cases, include the anonymized parallel +submission~\cite{Authors12} as additional material and cite it as +\begin{quote} +1. Authors. ``The frobnicatable foo filter'', BMVC 2012 Submission +ID 324, Supplied as additional material {\tt bmvc12.pdf}. +\end{quote} + +Finally, you may feel you need to tell the reader that more +details can be found elsewhere, and refer them to a technical +report. For conference submissions, the paper must stand on its +own, and not {\em require} the reviewer to go to a techreport for +further details. Thus, you may say in the body of the paper +``further details may be found in~\cite{Authors12b}''. Then +submit the techreport as additional material. Again, you may not +assume the reviewers will read this material. + +Sometimes your paper is about a problem which you tested using a tool which +is widely known to be restricted to a single institution. For example, +let's say it's 1969, you have solved a key problem on the Apollo lander, +and you believe that the ECCV audience would like to hear about your +solution. The work is a development of your celebrated 1968 paper entitled +``Zero-g frobnication: How being the only people in the world with access to +the Apollo lander source code makes us a wow at parties'', by Zeus. + +You can handle this paper like any other. Don't write ``We show how to +improve our previous work [Anonymous, 1968]. This time we tested the +algorithm on a lunar lander [name of lander removed for blind review]''. +That would be silly, and would immediately identify the authors. Instead +write the following: +\begin{quotation} +\noindent + We describe a system for zero-g frobnication. This + system is new because it handles the following cases: + A, B. Previous systems [Zeus et al. 1968] didn't + handle case B properly. Ours handles it by including + a foo term in the bar integral. + + ... + + The proposed system was integrated with the Apollo + lunar lander, and went all the way to the moon, don't + you know. It displayed the following behaviours + which show how well we solved cases A and B: ... +\end{quotation} +As you can see, the above text follows standard scientific convention, +reads better than the first version, and does not explicitly name you as +the authors. A reviewer might think it likely that the new paper was +written by Zeus, but cannot make any decision based on that guess. +He or she would have to be sure that no other authors could have been +contracted to solve problem B. \\ + +\noindent FAQ: Are acknowledgements OK? No. Please {\bf omit +acknowledgements} in your review copy; they can go in the final copy. + + + +\section{Manuscript Preparation} +This is an edited version of Springer LNCS instructions adapted +for ECCV 2012 first paper submission. + +You are strongly encouraged to use \LaTeX2$_\varepsilon$ for the +preparation of your +camera-ready manuscript together with the corresponding Springer +class file \verb+llncs.cls+. + +We would like to stress that the class/style files and the template +should not be manipulated and that the guidelines regarding font sizes +and format should be adhered to. This is to ensure that the end product +is as homogeneous as possible. + +\subsection{Printing Area} +The printing area is $122 \; \mbox{mm} \times 193 \; +\mbox{mm}$. +The text should be justified to occupy the full line width, +so that the right margin is not ragged, with words hyphenated as +appropriate. Please fill pages so that the length of the text +is no less than 180~mm. + +\subsection{Layout, Typeface, Font Sizes, and Numbering} +Use 10-point type for the name(s) of the author(s) and 9-point type for +the address(es) and the abstract. For the main text, please use 10-point +type and single-line spacing. +We recommend using Computer Modern Roman (CM) fonts, Times, or one +of the similar typefaces widely used in photo-typesetting. +(In these typefaces the letters have serifs, i.e., short endstrokes at +the head and the foot of letters.) +Italic type may be used to emphasize words in running text. Bold +type and underlining should be avoided. +With these sizes, the interline distance should be set so that some 45 +lines occur on a full-text page. + +\subsubsection{Headings.} + +Headings should be capitalized +(i.e., nouns, verbs, and all other words +except articles, prepositions, and conjunctions should be set with an +initial capital) and should, +with the exception of the title, be aligned to the left. +Words joined by a hyphen are subject to a special rule. If the first +word can stand alone, the second word should be capitalized. +The font sizes +are given in Table~\ref{table:headings}. +\setlength{\tabcolsep}{4pt} +\begin{table} +\begin{center} +\caption{Font sizes of headings. Table captions should always be +positioned {\it above} the tables. The final sentence of a table +caption should end without a full stop} +\label{table:headings} +\begin{tabular}{lll} +\hline\noalign{\smallskip} +Heading level & Example & Font size and style\\ +\noalign{\smallskip} +\hline +\noalign{\smallskip} +Title (centered) & {\Large \bf Lecture Notes \dots} & 14 point, bold\\ +1st-level heading & {\large \bf 1 Introduction} & 12 point, bold\\ +2nd-level heading & {\bf 2.1 Printing Area} & 10 point, bold\\ +3rd-level heading & {\bf Headings.} Text follows \dots & 10 point, bold +\\ +4th-level heading & {\it Remark.} Text follows \dots & 10 point, +italic\\ +\hline +\end{tabular} +\end{center} +\end{table} +\setlength{\tabcolsep}{1.4pt} + +Here are +some examples of headings: ``Criteria to Disprove Context-Freeness of +Collage Languages'', ``On Correcting the Intrusion of Tracing +Non-deterministic Programs by Software'', ``A User-Friendly and +Extendable Data Distribution System'', ``Multi-flip Networks: +Parallelizing GenSAT'', ``Self-determinations of Man''. + +\subsubsection{Lemmas, Propositions, and Theorems.} + +The numbers accorded to lemmas, propositions, and theorems etc. should +appear in consecutive order, starting with the number 1, and not, for +example, with the number 11. + +\subsection{Figures and Photographs} +\label{sect:figures} + +Please produce your figures electronically and integrate +them into your text file. For \LaTeX\ users we recommend using package +\verb+graphicx+ or the style files \verb+psfig+ or \verb+epsf+. + +Check that in line drawings, lines are not +interrupted and have constant width. Grids and details within the +figures must be clearly readable and may not be written one on top of +the other. Line drawings should have a resolution of at least 800 dpi +(preferably 1200 dpi). +For digital halftones 300 dpi is usually sufficient. +The lettering in figures should have a height of 2~mm (10-point type). +Figures should be scaled up or down accordingly. +Please do not use any absolute coordinates in figures. + +Figures should be numbered and should have a caption which should +always be positioned {\it under} the figures, in contrast to the caption +belonging to a table, which should always appear {\it above} the table. +Please center the captions between the margins and set them in +9-point type +(Fig.~\ref{fig:example} shows an example). +The distance between text and figure should be about 8~mm, the +distance between figure and caption about 5~mm. +\begin{figure} +\centering +\includegraphics[height=7.2cm]{eijkel2} +\caption{One kernel at $x_s$ ({\it dotted kernel}) or two kernels at +$x_i$ and $x_j$ ({\it left and right}) lead to the same summed estimate +at $x_s$. This shows a figure consisting of different types of +lines. Elements of the figure described in the caption should be set in +italics, +in parentheses, as shown in this sample caption. The last +sentence of a figure caption should generally end without a full stop} +\label{fig:example} +\end{figure} + +If possible (e.g. if you use \LaTeX) please define figures as floating +objects. \LaTeX\ users, please avoid using the location +parameter ``h'' for ``here''. If you have to insert a pagebreak before a +figure, please ensure that the previous page is completely filled. + + +\subsection{Formulas} + +Displayed equations or formulas are centered and set on a separate +line (with an extra line or halfline space above and below). Displayed +expressions should be numbered for reference. The numbers should be +consecutive within the contribution, +with numbers enclosed in parentheses and set on the right margin. +For example, +\begin{align} + \psi (u) & = \int_{0}^{T} \left[\frac{1}{2} + \left(\Lambda_{0}^{-1} u,u\right) + N^{\ast} (-u)\right] dt \; \\ +& = 0 ? +\end{align} + +Please punctuate a displayed equation in the same way as ordinary +text but with a small space before the end punctuation. + +\subsection{Program Code} + +Program listings or program commands in the text are normally set in +typewriter font, e.g., CMTT10 or Courier. + +\medskip + +\noindent +{\it Example of a Computer Program} +\begin{verbatim} +program Inflation (Output) + {Assuming annual inflation rates of 7%, 8%, and 10%,... + years}; + const + MaxYears = 10; + var + Year: 0..MaxYears; + Factor1, Factor2, Factor3: Real; + begin + Year := 0; + Factor1 := 1.0; Factor2 := 1.0; Factor3 := 1.0; + WriteLn('Year 7% 8% 10%'); WriteLn; + repeat + Year := Year + 1; + Factor1 := Factor1 * 1.07; + Factor2 := Factor2 * 1.08; + Factor3 := Factor3 * 1.10; + WriteLn(Year:5,Factor1:7:3,Factor2:7:3,Factor3:7:3) + until Year = MaxYears +end. +\end{verbatim} +% +\noindent +{\small (Example from Jensen K., Wirth N. (1991) Pascal user manual and +report. Springer, New York)} + + +\subsection{Footnotes} + +The superscript numeral used to refer to a footnote appears in the text +either directly after the word to be discussed or -- in relation to a +phrase or a sentence -- following the punctuation sign (comma, +semicolon, or full stop). Footnotes should appear at the bottom of +the +normal text area, with a line of about 2~cm in \TeX\ and about 5~cm in +Word set +immediately above them.\footnote{The footnote numeral is set flush left +and the text follows with the usual word spacing. Second and subsequent +lines are indented. Footnotes should end with a full stop.} + +\subsection{Citations} + +The list of references is headed ``References" and is not assigned a +number +in the decimal system of headings. The list should be set in small print +and placed at the end of your contribution, in front of the appendix, +if one exists. +Please do not insert a pagebreak before the list of references if the +page is not completely filled. +An example is given at the +end of this information sheet. For citations in the text please use +square brackets and consecutive numbers: \cite{Alpher02}, +\cite{Alpher03}, \cite{Alpher04} \dots + + +\bibliographystyle{splncs} +\bibliography{egbib} + +\clearpage\mbox{}Page \thepage\ of the manuscript. +\clearpage\mbox{}Page \thepage\ of the manuscript. +\clearpage\mbox{}Page \thepage\ of the manuscript. +\clearpage\mbox{}Page \thepage\ of the manuscript. +\clearpage\mbox{}Page \thepage\ of the manuscript. +\clearpage\mbox{}Page \thepage\ of the manuscript. +This is the last page of the manuscript. +\par\vfill\par +Now we have reached the maximum size of the ECCV 2012 submission. +\end{document} -- cgit v1.2.3-70-g09d2