Call for Papers
IEEE Transactions on
Automation Science and Engineering
Twenty years ago, the field of Robotics was defined
and galvanized by the creation of an IEEE Journal devoted to the topic.� We now have the opportunity to do the same
for the field of Automation.� The IEEE
voted in February 2003 to bifurcate the IEEE Transactions on Robotics and
Automation, the top-cited archival publication on robotics.� The renamed Transactions on Robotics will
gain a sibling: the Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering.
T-ASE will publish foundational research on
Automation: scientific methods and technologies that improve efficiency,
productivity, quality, and reliability, specifically for methods, machines, and
systems operating in structured environments over long periods, and the
explicit structuring of environments.�
Its coverage will go beyond Automation�s roots in mass production and
include many new applications areas, such as Biotechnology, pharmaceutical, and
health care; Home, service, and retail; Construction, transportation, and
security; Manufacturing, maintenance, and supply chains; and Food handling and
processing.� Research includes topics
related to robots and intelligent machines/systems in structured environments
and the explicit structuring of environments, and topics at the
Operational/Enterprise levels such as System Modeling, Analysis, Performance
Evaluation; Planning, Scheduling, Coordination; Risk Management; and Supply
Chain Management.� T-ASE will integrate
knowledge across disciplines and industries.
Details on IEEE's motivation, distinctions between
Robotics and Automation, scope statements, and sample application areas are
available at: http://www.ieee.org/t-ase.� The first issue will appear in July
2004.�
Paper Categories: T-ASE publishes both Regular and Short Papers
and Communication Items.� Regular papers
describe new abstractions, algorithms, theory, methodologies, models, systems,
or enabling technologies for Automation.�
Short papers usually describe a single result, experiment, or technique
of general interest for which a short treatment is appropriate.� Communications items are a separate class of
short manuscripts that are subject to an expedited review process and
substantially faster publication than regular or short papers.� Appropriate items include (but are not
limited to) rebuttals and/or counter examples of previously published papers,
or preliminary results of significant current research of wide interest.� Review papers are published periodically,
and manuscripts of a tutorial or review nature are welcome.� Papers describing specific current
applications are encouraged, provided that the methods represent the best
current practice, detailed characteristics and performance are included, and
they are of general interest.� Multipart
papers will only be published if there is compelling rationale for a multipart
treatment.� All parts of such submissions
must be accepted for any part to be published.�
In addition, T-ASE addresses a research community willing to integrate
knowledge across disciplines and industries.�
For this purpose, each paper shall include a Note to Practitioners that
summarizes how its results can be applied or how they might be extended to
apply in practice.�
Our Goals: It is our goal to establish T-ASE as the flagship
and most cited journal devoted to Automation by publishing original,
significant, and visionary papers describing theory and new applications.� This will be achieved with a timely,
thorough, and constructive review process.
Paper Submissions: We solicit submissions
starting June 1, 2003.� All manuscripts should
include a cover page containing the title of the paper, paper type (Regular,
Short, or Communication Items), full names and affiliations, complete postal
and electronic addresses, phone and fax numbers, an abstract, and a list of
keywords.� The corresponding author
should be clearly identified.� Please
submit the above electronically in PDF form, double column format, and in a
single file via FTP to the INCOMING directory of site ieeetase.engr.uconn.edu,
or email to [email protected].� Please then email [email protected] the name of the file.� Submission procedures will be obtainable
from the web site http://www.ieee.org/t-ase.� If it is felt that the paper is beyond the
scope or capability of T-ASE, the corresponding author will be notified within
one week.� All questions relating to
paper submissions please send to Editor-in-Chief Peter Luh.�
Peter
B. Luh
Editor-in-Chief,
IEEE T-ASE
SNET
Prof. of Communications & Information Technology
University
of Connecticut
Dept.
of Elec. & Comp. Eng.
371
Fairfield Road, Unit 1157
Storrs,
CT 06269-1157, USA
Phone:
(860) 486-5957
Fax:
(860) 486-1273
Email:
[email protected]
http://www.engr.uconn.edu/msl/
Kenneth
Y. Goldberg
Chair,
T-ASE Advisory Board
University
of California
Industrial
Eng. & Operations Research
Electrical
Eng. & Computer Science
Berkeley,
CA 94720-1777
Phone:
(510) 643-9565
Email:
[email protected]
http://www.ieor.berkeley.edu/~goldberg
Richard
Volz
VP
for Publications, IEEE Robotics and Automation Society
Royce
E. Wisenbaker Prof. of Eng.
Texas
A&M University
Dept.
of Computer Science
College
Station, TX� 77843-3112
Phone:
(979)
845-8873
Fax:
(979)
847-4813
Email:
[email protected]
http://www.cs.tamu.edu/faculty/volz/