期刊名称:JOURNAL OF COMPUTER AND SYSTEMS SCIENCES INTERNATIONAL
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal

SCOPE The Journal of Computer and System Sciences International (A Journal of Optimization and Control) is the leading scientific journal of the Russian Academy of Sciences in all areas of control theory and systems. The journal features papers on the theory and methods of control, as well as papers devoted to the study, design, modeling, development, and application of new control systems. The journal publishes papers that reflect contemporary research and development in the field of control. Particular attention is given to computer methods and technologies.The journal publishes proceedings of international scientific conferences and provides reviews by top experts from Russia and abroad on topical problems of modern investigations in control.
The Journal of Computer and System Sciences International is abstracted and/or indexed in: Academic OneFile, Compendex, Current Contents/Engineering, Computing and Technology, Digital Mathematics Registry, Gale, Google Scholar, Inspec, Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition, Mechanical Engineering Abstracts, OCLC, Science Citation Index Expanded (SciSearch), SCOPUS, Summon by Serial Solutions, Zentralblatt Math.
Instructions to Authors
Guide for Authors
MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSION
Original manuscripts must meet the following requirements. Manuscripts should be double-spaced, containing no more than 30 lines per page and leaving a left margin of about 25 mm. Pages should be printed on A4 paper on only one side. All pages should be numbered consecutively, starting with the title page. Figures, tables, photos, and the bibliography are attached on separate pages to the end of the manuscript. No corrections, additions, or extensions to the text or tables are allowed as sheets attached to the main pages of the manuscript. The title page of the paper should include a paper index in conformity with the Universal Decimal Classi- fication (UDC), the title, name(s) of the author(s), city and affiliation (address at which the study was conducted), and date of submission. For example,
UDC 621.865.8-5.001.5
A Virtual Environment for Designing Robot Service Control Systems
V. N. Zakharov, L. V. Litvintseva, and S. V. Ul’yanov Moscow, Computer Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, Artificial Intelligence Research Center, Program Systems Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences Received May 30, 2004
The paper should begin with an abstract, followed by an introduction (0. Introduction), which describes briefly the essence of the problem statement and possible application of the obtained results in practice. The main part of the paper should contain the mathematical formulation of the problem and the proposed method of its solution (1. Statement of the Problem). It should also be indicated what the difference between the problem proposed and already known problems is, as well as the advantages of the suggested method over existing ones. It is desirable that detailed derivations and proofs be provided as a separate appendix (Appendix), which may be dropped in the publication following a recommendation of the Editorial Board. If the appendix contains tables and figures, they are numbered consecutively. The text should be accompanied by short informal examples and ended with a discussion of the principal results (Conclusions). Papers submitted to the Editorial Board should be accompanied by a letter from the institution where the work was conducted, data on the authors (addresses and phone numbers), and RF expert certification. The names of institutions should be given in their complete form. Grants should be referenced in a footnote marked by an asterisk (*) on the first page. The manuscript should be submitted in three copies printed on an electronic typewriter or computer printer (in the latter case, a floppy diskette should be included). Numerical data should be presented as tables, with each table printed out on a separate page. The tables should be numbered with Arabic numerals in the order of mention in the text. A table number may be followed by its name. All table columns should be named and separated by vertical lines. No abbreviations of words are allowed in the tables. When a table is first mentioned in the text, its number should be marked in black ink in the left margin (for example, Table 1, etc.). Illustrations should also be submitted in three copies, while photos (printed out on glossy paper) must be submitted in two copies. The position of the first reference to figures in the text must be specified in black ink in the left margin (for example, Fig. 1, etc.). Each figure should be either produced on white paper, using black ink, or printed on a laser printer with a resolution of no less than 300 dpi. Graphs prepared on translucent paper are accepted, if the reverse side is free of letters or no strike-through occurs. Figures should be clear, and their captions should be marked in conformity with the text. The front-side of a figure (below it) should contain the name of the first author and the figure number. On photos, the author’s name and the figure number are indicated on the reverse side in soft pencil. The description of figures and photos in the text and their captions should correspond to their content. Figure captions should be printed on a separate page. The paper should be attached to a floppy diskette containing the figures in the TIFF graphical format. The table and figure data should not duplicate the text. Literature references are prepared in line with the following requirements. Cited literature is presented at the end of the paper (on a separate page) under the rubric References. References in languages using non- Latin scripts (Japanese, Chinese, etc.) should be given in Latin transcription. References should be listed in the text by a number in square brackets and should strictly match the number in the REFERENCES.
The following are the formats for citing references:
Journals: Name and initials of author(s). Title of paper // Name of journal. Year. Volume (if available). Issue. Pages (for example, J. Comp. Sys. Sci. Int., No. 4. 12–25 (2005));
Books: Name and initials of author(s). Title of book. City. Publishing company. Year;
Collections of articles (abstracts), proceedings of conferences (symposiums, meetings, workshops), etc.: Name and initials of the author(s). Title of work // Title of book of proceedings. City (Venue of meeting). Publishing company. Year.
Reference to a patent should be accompanied by the number of the bulletin in which it was published. The international system of units (SI) is the preferred system for expressing units in manuscripts. All abbreviations should be explained as they first appear in the text. Formulas should meet the following requirements. Formulas are numbered using the decimal system; only those formulas that were referenced in the text should be numbered. The numbering format should be double according to the sections: (1.1) in Section 1, (2.1) in Section 2, etc. All formulas and letters should be printed out or written plainly by hand in black ink in large lettering, with a clear marking of all the peculiarities of the text (indices, bold, italic, etc.) and an explanation of them once in the margins of the page. All symbols that are similar in shape (for example, g and q, J and I, l and e, etc.) should be written out carefully; a distinction should be made between the letter “o” and the figure “0” (zero), for which purpose zero is underlined with a square bracket. One should avoid mixing Cyrillic and Latin letters in a single index. Russian indices should be explained as they first appear in the text. For all alphabets, uppercase and lowercase letters with similar shapes should be marked in pencil: with two lines under the letter for capital letters and two lines over the letter for lowercase letters (for example, and , and ). Powers and indices are marked by an ark with pencil— downwards for superscripts and upwards for subscripts (for example, and ). Greek letters should be underlined in red pencil; boldface and Gothic letters, in blue pencil; and handwritten letters, in yellow pencil. The theorems, definitions, corollaries, lemmas, and footnotes within the article should be numbered consecutively in Arabic numerals. When an author(s) is encouraged to resubmit a paper, this does not mean that the manuscript has already been accepted for publication. When it is necessary to reject a manuscript, the Editorial Board reserves the right to return the manuscript without reviews.
ELECTRONIC SUBMISSION
1. General Remarks
An electronic version of manuscripts can be submitted to the Editorial Board together with its hard copy. Both versions must be identical. For reliable and prompt communication, it is desirable that the author provide his e-mail address and fax number. The electronic version of a manuscript should contain a file with the article text and files with the figures. If the text and figures are combined into a single file, the files with figures should be submitted separately. The set of files should be accompanied by an inventory (file, possibly) containing the following essential data: format of the floppy diskette, type of operating system, text editor used, names of the files, name of the journal, name of the paper, and names and initials of the author(s). The files can be submitted either on 3.5' (or 5.25') floppy diskettes or by email or FTP. Both MS-DOS and Apple Macintosh formats are acceptable. To avoid technical problems, it is suggested that floppy disks be tested for the record.). If the paper is submitted via the Internet, the author should first contact the Editorial Board and, then, Computer Support Service at the Nauka-Interperiodica publishing company by phone 7 (495) 333-9302 or e-mail: comedt@maik.ru
2. Preparation of the Electronic Version
2.1. The main text. It is desirable to prepare the main text of the paper in the TextOnly format. Lines within a paragraph should not contain the symbol of carriage return (normally, produced by the Enter button). Otherwise, the text may become unusable. Manuscripts can be submitted in Microsoft Word (any version) or TEX formats, with indication of the proper version of the desktop-publishing system. In due course, the list of acceptable formats will be expanded; for now, the authors are strongly advised to follow the above-mentioned formats.
2.2. Illustrations.In electronic form, both scanned and computer-produced black and white illustrations are acceptable.
Authors are asked to follow these guidelines in preparing the graphics files:
halftone photos and line graphs should preferably be in TIFF format; however, JPEG and GIF can also be used;
vector graphs and figures (prepared with the help of vector-graphics systems) should preferably be in EPS format.
The resolution requirements for TIFF are the following:
600 dpi for scanned line graphs;
at least 200 dpi for scanned halftone figures and photos.
Graphics files should be named so that it becomes clear to which paper they belong and what their actual number within the text is. Each file should contain only a single figure.
Editorial Board
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Evgenii A. Fedosov State Research Institute of Aviation Systems, Moscow, Russia
DEPUTY EDITORS-IN-CHIEF:
Felix L. Chernousko Institute for Problems in Mechanics, Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS), Moscow, Russia
Vladimir I. Kukhtenko State Research Institute of Aviation Systems, Moscow, Russia
EXECUTIVE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Larisa V. Vishnyakova State Research Institute of Aviation Systems, Moscow, Russia
EDITORIAL BOARD Innokentii N. Beloglazov, Zhukovskii Air-Force Academy, Moscow, Russia; Nikolai N. Bolotnik, Institute for Problems in Mechanics, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Boris E. Fedunov, State Research Institute of Aviation Systems, Moscow, Russia; Alexander M. Formal’skii, Moscow State University, Institute of Mechanics, Moscow, Russia; Yurii F. Golubev, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia; Mikhail N. Krasil’shchikov, Moscow Institute of Aviation, Moscow, Russia; Petr D. Krutko, Bauman State Technical University, Moscow, Russia; Olga A. Mishulina, Moscow Engineering Physics Institute, Moscow, Russia; Natal’ia M. Novikova, Computer Center, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Yurii S. Osipov, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia; Vladimir G. Peshekhonov, State Research Center of Russia, Central Scientific and Research Institute “Elektropribor”, St. Petersburg; German G. Sebryakov, State Research Institute of Aviation Systems, Moscow, Russia; Andrei N. Sirotin, Moscow Institute of Aviation, Moscow, Russia; Vladimir I. Tsurkov, Computer Center, RAS, Moscow, Russia; Vadim N. Vagin, Moscow Power Engineering Institute (Technical University); Stanislav N. Vassilyev, Institute of Control Sciences, RAS, Moscow; Vasilii A. Yaroshevskii, Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute; Sergei Yu. Zheltov, State Research Institute of Aviation Systems, Moscow, Russia
STAFF EDITOR Marina V. Andzhievskaya EDITORS OF THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION Konstantin I. Kii, Cand. Sci. (Phys.–Math.), and Evgenii V. Pankrat’ev, Cand. Sci. (Phys.–Math.)
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