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I am writing a paper with my teacher and his teacher. I don't know the standard of writing authors name, affiliation and email in the paper. I am using IEEEtran template for an IEEE conference. If the authors are in different department or university there is no problem we can use column author name like this:

 Author one Author two Author three Department one Department two Department three University one University two University three [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] 

but what if two of them be in a same department and just two of them has a .edu email address? In this situations we can use another style like this:

 Author one*!, Author two*! and Author three^# *Department One, University One ^Department two, University two !{Author.one, Author.two}@univ-one.edu #[email protected] 

or it should be like this?

 Author one*, Author two* and Author three^ *Department One, University One {Author.one, Author.two}@univ-one.edu ^Department two, University two [email protected] 

My question is this: What is the right format in this case when different authors with different affiliation, department and email should be on a paper?

In my specific, we all are from the same Univ. and Department but they both have .edu email and I don't have one.

Thanks in advance.

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  • Is your question how to format addresses using the IEEEtran template? If so, then this question probably belongs on the TeX Stack Exchange board instead of this one. Commented Aug 16, 2013 at 15:30
  • @aeismail That was what I had doubt for. but I know how to use tex to write any of those forms. I am looking for the format standard no matter it is latex or word template. Commented Aug 16, 2013 at 15:47
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    There is no universal format standard. As F'x suggests, you need to use the format prescribed by the organization you're submitting to (and an organization like IEEE should definitely have one). Commented Aug 16, 2013 at 19:23
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    I would just do something easy to read and unambiguous. If there are some standards, you'll be informed of those by the editors at some point but, most likely, everything not offending the eye will pass. Commented Aug 16, 2013 at 21:12
  • I don't understand. What's wrong with the first format? So what if Department One and Department Two are identical? Ink is cheap! Commented Aug 26, 2013 at 2:25

2 Answers 2

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We had a similar complicated case in our paper. I'd suggest this as a good way to do it.

For your own case, add a comma after the braces, followed by your email.

Here's how it would look like:

{Author.one, Author.two}@univ-one.edu, [email protected] 

I am assuming your username tells the reader that it is yours (has your lastname, initials or so). Additionally, do your best to sort the emails such that they follow the same order of authors.

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Just look up previous conference proceedings and do the same!

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