期刊名称:ACM TRANSACTIONS ON RECONFIGURABLE TECHNOLOGY AND SYSTEMS

ISSN:1936-7406
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY, 2 PENN PLAZA, STE 701, NEW YORK, USA, NY, 10121-0701
  出版社网址:http://www.acm.org/
期刊网址:http://trets.cse.sc.edu/index.html
影响因子:2.085
主题范畴:COMPUTER SCIENCE, HARDWARE & ARCHITECTURE

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

Cover Image

ACM Transactions on Reconfigurable Technology and Systems (TRETS) is a peer-reviewed and archival journal that covers reconfigurable technology, systems, and applications on reconfigurable computers. Authors are invited to submit original manuscripts for consideration after having reviewed the Information for Authors on this website. The first issue was published in March 2008.

TRETS is a new journal focused on research in, on, and with reconfigurable systems and on the underlying technology (which is currently that of FPGAs but could include other approaches involving an adaptable fabric) that supports these systems for computing or other applications. The scope, rationale, and coverage by other journals are often limited to particular aspects of reconfigurable technology or reconfigurable systems. TRETS will be a journal that covers reconfigurability in its own right.

Topics that would be appropriate for TRETS would include all levels of reconfigurable system abstractions and all aspects of reconfigurable technology including platforms, programming environments and application successes, such as:

  • The systems architecture of a reconfigurable platform.
  • The programming environment of a reconfigurable system.
  • Applications on which success can be demonstrated.
  • The underlying technology from which reconfigurable systems are developed.

In considering whether a paper is suitable for TRETS, the foremost question should be whether reconfigurability has been essential to success. Topics such as architecture, programming languages, compilers, and environments, logic synthesis, and high performance applications are all suitable if the context is appropriate. For example, an architecture for an embedded application that happens to use FPGAs is not necessarily suitable for TRETS, but a architecture using FPGAs for which the reconfigurability of the FPGAs is an inherent part of the specifications would be appropriate for TRETS.

 


Instructions to Authors

Information for Authors

Editorial Process

TRETS will accept submissions which have not been published or submitted in any form elsewhere. The Editors-in-Chief or Associate Editors will solicit reviews and make a publication recommendation; the Editors-in-Chief will make the final decision. Three anonymous reviews will be the norm, and every effort will be made to ensure a swift review process consistent with the fair and professional reviews that authors have a right to expect.

TRETS will publish outstanding papers which are "major value-added extensions" of papers previously published in conferences; that is, TRETS will not automatically reject papers that are major extensions to previously published conference papers. These papers will go through the normal review process. The common practice of "at least 30% new material beyond the conference publication" will be applied by TRETS, and authors should explicitly identify the new material either in the paper or in the cover letter.

TRETS will occasionally publish special issues to provide a timely boost to promising areas of research and development, or a timely consolidation of the results in other areas. Guest editors will be invited to organize such issues.

Submitted papers are evaluated by anonymous referees for originality, relevance, and presentation. (Please see the TRETS Referee Guidelines for more details.) The author will be notified of the name of an Associate Editor who will be responsible for the processing of the manuscript, and should address correspondence to that Associate Editor.

TRETS encourages high-quality submissions that are concise, with no more than 22 published pages including figures, tables, and references. Authors should expect that in longer papers any lengthy appendices, program listings, or similar matter will be published online by ACM and not appear as part of the printed paper.

TRETS normally will not publish survey papers. Authors who wish a survey paper to be considered for TRETS should submit directly to the Editors-in-Chief to determine if a full review is appropriate.

Manuscript Format, Preparation, and Submission

Authors are encouraged to consult the ACM Publications web page, and especially the directions regarding Electronically submitting accepted articles to ACM journals; following those directions and guidelines will speed the process of having your papers reviewed and published. All manuscripts for TRETS must be submitted electronically as Microsoft Word or as pdf files to ACM Manuscript Central. Once you are at that site, you will be asked to create an account and password with which you can enter the manuscript review tracking system. This account is different from the ACM account that you may have. From a drop-down list of journals, choose Transactions on Reconfigurable Technology and Systems and proceed to the Author Center to submit your manuscript and any other accompanying files. Published papers will be required to be submitted in ACM format. This format is encouraged but not required for initial submission.

Authors must include as part of the manuscript a descriptive title, author names and affiliations, an abstract of 150-200 words, and indexing information consistent with the Computing Reviews Classification Scheme (most recently released in 1998). Please select at least one primary-level classification followed by two secondary-level classications. Proper classification by the authors, who best know their work, will aid in the review and publication process.

Questions about submissions should be directed to one of the Editors-in-Chief or by email to trets in the domain acm.org.

Technical content is the primary criterion for acceptability, but the presentation of the technical content is also critical for a successful paper. Authors are encouraged to take this into account before submitting papers, because extremely poor presentation can contribute to a poor evaluation by a reviewer.

In papers describing experimental results, authors should strive to report experiments with replicability as a goal. Such papers shall report results on standard test sets using standard metrics. Authors shall cite the best known results on these test sets. Authors shall provide statistical significance tests on their results. There is little value in a paper that describes an experiment using authors' private data, private test sets, and authors' own metric. In case there are no standard tests or metrics in the paper's area, the authors shall have a mechanism to provide the test material and the evaluation tool to the community.

NOTE: The ACM Digital Library will host ancillary material for a paper on its web site. This material, an online appendix that does not appear in the print journal, is linked to and accessed from the online table of contents. For example, authors could provide hypertext and/or XML versions of their papers, or animations, or any other appropriate technology. Authors that wish to use this option should attach such material as an appendix to their submission and indicate in their cover letter that this material is intended to be ancillary material included in the digital library, and how it is intended to be accessed. All ancillary material should be free from viruses.

Prior Publication Policy

The technical contributions appearing in ACM journals are normally original papers which have not been published elsewhere. Widely disseminated conference proceedings and newsletters are a form of publication.

The submitted manuscript should have at least 30% new material. The new material should be content material, not just the addition of obvious proofs or a few more straightforward performance figures. The submitted manuscript affords an opportunity to describe the novel approach in more depth, to consider the alternatives more comprehensively, and to delve into some of the issues listed in the other paper as future work. At the same time, it is not required that the submitted manuscript contain all of the material from the published paper. To the contrary: only enough material need be included from the published paper to set the context and render the new material comprehensible.

TRETS expects that papers submitted to it will not have been simultaneously submitted elsewhere. The corresponding author of a TRETS submission must inform the editor handling that submission about any paper by any author of the TRETS submission that (a) is in submission, (b) has been accepted for publication, or (c) has been published, that overlaps significantly (more than a page or so) with the TRETS submission. Such papers in categories (b) and (c) should be referenced by the TRETS submission and discussed in the related work section, as appropriate. The corresponding author should also inform the editor about any overlaps that occur while the paper is under consideration by TRETS. In all cases, the Editors-in-Chief will make the determination as to whether the overlap is acceptable and reserve the right to reject papers if these guidelines have not been followed.

ACM Plagiarism Policy

ACM has established a rigorous policy on plagiarism. Manuscripts found in violation of this policy will be immediately rejected. Authors of papers found to be in violation after publication face severe penalties. It is important that all authors and co-authors review this policy before submission. Note that this policy also covers the practice of self-plagiarism (i.e., reuse of one's own previously published material without reference to the original source).

For more information, see the ACM Policy on Plagiarism.

ACM Author-Izer Service

ACM Author-Izer is a unique service that enables ACM authors to generate and post links on either their home page or institutional repository for visitors to download the definitive version of their articles from the ACM Digital Library at no charge. Downloads from these sites are captured in official ACM statistics, improving the accuracy of usage and impact measurements. Consistently linking to definitive version of ACM articles should reduce user confusion over article versioning. ACM Author-Izer also extends ACM's reputation as an innovative "Green Path" publisher, making ACM one of the first publishers of scholarly works to offer this model to its authors. To access ACM Author-Izer, authors need to establish a free ACM web account. Should authors change institutions or sites, they can utilize the new ACM service to disable old links and re-authorize new links for free downloads from a different site.

Visit ACM Author-Izer


Editorial Board

Editorial Board

Editor in Chief Wayne Luk
Department of Computing
Imperial College
180 Queen's Gate
London SW7 2BZ England
wl in the domain doc.ic.ac.uk

Address: Department of Computing, Imperial College London, 180 Queen's Gate, London SW7 2BZ, England
Email: wl@doc.ic.ac.uk


Associate Editor in Chief Steve Wilton
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
University of British Columbia
Kaiser 4112
5500-2332 Main Mall
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4 Canada
stevew in the domain ece.ubc.ca

Mailing Address:

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
University of British Columbia
5500-2332 Main Mall
Vancouver, BC, Canada. V6T 1Z4
FAX: (604) 822-5949,
Office: Kaiser 4112
Email:stevew@ece.ubc.ca

 

Associate Editors

  • Jeff Arnold, Stretch, Inc.
  • Jason D. Bakos, University of South Carolina
  • Eduardo Boemo, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
  • Katherine Compton, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Oliver Diessel, University of New South Wales
  • Maya Gokhale, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Miriam Leeser, Northeastern University
  • Philip Leong, The University of Sydney
  • Viktor Prasanna, University of Southern California
  • Jonathan Rose, University of Toronto
  • Steve Trimberger, Xilinx
  • Roger Woods, The Queen's University of Belfast
Information Director
David Thomas
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Imperial College London
London, United Kingdom
d.thomas1 in the domain imperial.ac.uk

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