6.4.1 - Instructions to Conference Proceedings Editors
This section is intended to be a guideline for editors and
authors wishing to submit conference proceedings for inclusion in
the ADS Abstract and Scanned Literature
Services. Any questions about the procedure should
be directed to ads@cfa.harvard.edu
The ADS is pleased to include any conference proceedings volume, as well
as individual conference proceedings abstracts. This includes both
electronic and printed conference proceedings. We have a set of naming
conventions detailed below, but are flexible if there is a different
naming scheme which is more appropriate for your particular conference.
If you would like to have your conference proceedings included in our
database before your conference, we request that you submit them to us
one month in advance of the start of your conference.
6.4.1.1 - Submitting Bibliographic Records for the ADS Abstract Service
We request the following in order to include a conference proceeding
in the ADS abstract service databases:
- A Table of Contents Entry: This is an entry for the conference
proceeding as a whole. It should be listed as follows:
%R Bibliographic code (See Bibcodes)
%T Title of the Conference
%A Editors: "Last name, First initial; last name2, first initial2", etc.
%J Title of the Conference, plus any additional useful information such
as the meeting dates, editors of the proceedings, publisher of the
proceedings, etc.
%D Publication Date (MM/YYYY, with MM = 00 if unknown).
%B Abstract (optional description of the proceeding)
%Z Reference Strings
You can use the Proceedings Entry Form to submit the information about your conference.
- A listing of authors and paper titles, with page numbers if
available. If page numbers are unavailable, please indicate
whether they are expected to become available or not. These can
be entered in our tagged format
, if you are
so inclined. For proceedings which are to be published
electronically, in lieu of a page number, we use a "counter" with
an E preceding it (E1, E2, E3) to indicate an
electronically published item.
- Abstracts for the papers, if available. It is best if abstracts
are in latex or ascii format. Please note that abstracts are
highly desirable since they are necessary for efficient searching.
We recommend that proceedings editors require abstracts from
authors that they can submit to us, even if they are not going to
be published in the proceedings.
- References for each article, if available. We currently have
reference information from several sources, but mainly for
journal literature. We would like to maintain and expand our
reference and citation database.
In order to do that we ask for the lists
of references from the papers published in the proceedings.
- Any style files used in creation of latex output for your conference.
This information can be submitted via email to
ads@cfa.harvard.edu
or placed on our anonymous ftp site, under
ftp://adsftp.harvard.edu/pub/Conf .
Please send us an email indicating when you have transferred things to
us, so that we can include it in our database as soon as possible.
6.4.1.2 - A Few Helpful Hints
- Once you have submitted a proceedings entry, if you submit sets of
%T Title
%A Author List
%P Page number
%B Abstract (optional)
(one per paper), it will be most convenient (i.e. quickest) for us to include your abstracts.
- Accented letters: We currently indicate accented letters by
enclosing the following between "&" and ";":
é == eacute
ü == uuml
à == agrave
ñ == ntilde
etc.
We can also convert the latex equivalent to the html format above:
é == \'e
ü == \"u
à == \`a
ñ == \~n
etc.
- Bibliographic Codes: Bibliographic codes are in the form:
YYYYJJJJJVVVVPPPPPA, where YYYY is the year of
publication, JJJJJVVVV is the abbreviation of the conference
proceeding, PPPPP is the page number, and A is the first
letter of the first author's surname (see Bibcodes
)
For a conference proceeding such as an ASPC conference proceeding or
an IAU Symposium, the abbreviation of the conference proceeding is
straight-forward (ASPC..117 or IAUS..120). To create the
abbreviation for other conference proceedings, we typically take the
first letter from the first four words in the title (omitting words
like the, a,and, etc). For the volume number, we use
conf for abstracts from the conference and proc for the
proceedings abstracts. We then end up with an abbreviation such as
hgrb.conf for the conference abstracts from "The Huntsville
Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium". For the Table of Contents entry,
the page number will be ".....". Here is a sample Table of Contents
entry:
%R 1996eds..proc.....L
%T The Extragalactic Distance Scale, Proceedings of the ST ScI May Symposium
%A Livio, M.; Donahue, M.; Panagi, N.
%J The Extragalactic Distance Scale, Proceedings of the ST ScI
May Symposium, held in Baltimore, MD,
May 7 - 10, 1996, Eds.: M. Livio, M. Donahue, and N. Panagia,
Cambridge University Press.
%D 00/1996
6.4.1.3 - Including Full-text Papers in the ADS
It is possible for us to make the full-text of articles published in
conference proceedings available via the ADS Article Service. This
section describes the requirements and procedures to be followed in
order to do that.
Note: We do not publish original material that is not
published elsewhere, since we are not a publisher.
- Provide written permission from the copyright holder allowing
the ADS to publish electronically the papers in the conference
proceedings. The relevant letter should state something along the
following lines:
The <full description of the copyright holder> grants
permission to the NASA Astrophysics Data System at the
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory to:
- 1. Convert postscript files to tiff files for <name of conference>
- 2. Add a note at the bottom of each page with the following content:
(©) <name of copyright holder> - Provided by the NASA Astrophysics Data System
- 3. Make the images of the articles electronically available,
free of charge, for all volumes starting 6 months after publication.
Feel free to modify as you see fit, especially item three, then send a
copy of a signed copy of the permission letter to:
Dr. Alberto Accomazzi
NASA Astrophysics Data System
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
60 Garden Street, M.S. 67
Cambridge, MA 02138
USA
- Send us either a printed copy of the conference proceedings
book or (if available) the set of full-text files used to create
the proceedings. If only a printed book is available, please send
it to Guenther Eichhorn at the address listed above along with the
permission letter. If full-text PostScript or PDF files are
available for all papers, please read on.
- To submit the full-text files with the necessary information
for us to process them, you will need to create a tar or
zip archive and transfer it to our ftp server. This is what
must be included in the archive file:
- All the files containing the full-text, including
front-matter (introductory) and back-matter (index) pages if
available. You should make sure that these files are either
in PostScript or PDF format, and that they have been created
using 600dpi or higher resolution fonts. (Note: if you are
using dvips to create the postscript file, you can specify
the options -D600 -Z on the command-line to have 600dpi
fonts included).
- A file named README, containing general information
concerning this publication, the name and email address of
the person submitting the full-text papers to us, and any
additional information we should be aware of.
- A file named PUBLICATION, containing the full name of the
conference or book (you should use the same name given in the
journal field above).
- A file named COPYRIGHT, containing the copyright string
that needs to be displayed at the bottom of each page that
the ADS creates and places online in its article service (please
do not try to include the copyright symboly © since we
already do this for you).
- A file named BIBSTEM, containing the bibliographic
abbreviation for the publication (e.g. ASPC..117
or 2000immm.proc). This should be the same
abbreviation that has been used to create the bibliographic
entries described above.
- Optionally, a PAGEMAP file containing mapping of full-text
file names to page numbers, if these cannot be determined
from the full-text files themselves. Whether or not this is
needed is a function of how the files were originally
created; usually if you used LaTeX and dvips to create the
postscript files then the page numbering displayed on each
page is carried into the postscript files and can be
automatically extracted at least for "regular" pages. Pages
which are part of the front-matter may need to have entries
associated with them.
The format of the PAGEMAP file is the following:
# This is a comment
file1.ps C1-C4 # first file has cover pages 1-4
file2.ps C6 # second file has cover page 6
file3.ps 1-8 8A 9-15 # third file has pages 1-8, insert 8A, 9-15
file4.pdf 16- # fourth file has pages 16 and up
When in doubt, please contact us for help.
- Create a compressed tar or zip archive containing of all the
full-text files, the README file, and name the file using (if
possible) the standard acronym adopted by the ADS in naming
bibliographic entries for the conference. For example, the
archive file containing papers submitted to the ASP Conference
Proceedings n.117 should be named ASPC117.tar.gz or
ASPC..117.tar.gz. The archive for files containing the
conference 2000immm.proc should be named
2000immm.proc.tar.gz.
- Deposit the tar archive on our anonymous ftp server under the
URL ftp://adsftp.harvard.edu/pub/Conf
and notify us. We will contact you with any questions regarding
the full-text processing of the files.
6.4.1.4 - Archiving Conference Proceedings in the ADS
As more conferences are published electronically, editors are turning
to the ADS for long-term archiving of their full text proceedings. We
can agree to this under the following conditions:
- The conference is originally published elswhere (e.g. through a
university or observatory publication, or through another publisher).
- We receive the pdf or postscript files as described above.
- The data have been published at least three years ago.
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