ICMPC10: Submission Page
User-ID:
9999
Name:
System Manager
Submission type:
Spoken paper : empirical
2007/11/01 00:00:00 +09:00
Editing Submission #1036
Before Editing the Submission: Changing Submission Category
If you wish to change the category of this submission, select the radio button of the intended category, and click the
Change Category
button.
Spoken paper
Poster presentation
Editing Submissions
Enter the
title
,
authors/speakers
,
topic areas
,
keywords
and
body of the abstract
of your submission.
When finished, click "submit" (or "save")
at the bottom
.
Jan. 31, 2008
is the
(new)
deadline for all submissions (
click here for details
).
Please observe the limit of
400 words
for all abstracts.
Exceeding the limit by a small number of words does not matter, but excessively long (or short) abstracts will be warned, and might be regarded to your disadvantage in the review process.
Title of Structured Abstract
Title:
Authors
Enter the Author Name(s) and email address (see below note) in the following boxes; in the order they appear in the author list.
By default, your name has been set as the first author (although you can change the order).
The last and first names are
required
. Write "none" if there is no first name.
To change the number of lines, write the number in the
Number of Authors
box and click the
change
button.
Number of Authors:
Last Name
(required)
First Name
(required)
Middle Name
(optional)
Email
(optional)
notify
1.
;
2.
;
3.
;
4.
;
5.
;
Notes
If an email address is given ...
and
the
notify
box is checked, then all the notification mail about this submission will also be sent to the specified co-authors.
and
its owner is registered in this system (using it as the primary email address), then the co-author can view (but cannot modify) this submission.
The submitter will always receive notification mails, regardless of the above setting.
Please keep the number of authors small (preferrably, within 5).
Topic Areas
Check 1 to 3 of the topic areas listed below that are most relevent to your submission.
(at least one, and up to three)
If there are area names that you feel more suitable, enter them in the
Other
box.
(this is not included in the checked item count)
This information will be used in the reviewing and conference program planning processes.
Pitch, scale and melody
Harmony and tonality
Rhythm, meter, and timing
Timbre and orchestration
Aesthetic perception and response
Emotion in music
Memory and music
Music improvisation, composition, and performance
Sight-reading and memorization
Music acoustics and psychophysics
Music and neuroscience
Music education
Musical development
Music, meaning, and language
Social psychology of music
Ecological psychology of music
Cognitive Musicology
Music therapy
Ethnomusicology
Computational models
Cross-cultural approach
Pedagogy, promotion, and publicity for music psychology
Other:
Keywords
Enter keywords that best describe your submission (at least 1; up to 5).
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Structured Abstract (Spoken paper : empirical)
Enter text for each section in the text window below the section headings.
Insert blank lines between paragraphs --
i.e.
blank lines are paragraph delimiters.
To enforce line breaks (as when making lists), put "<>" (less-than & greater-than sign) at the line break point.
Alternatively, check the
No-format
box to show the text
as-is
, as you have written in the text window.
Use only ASCII (iso-8859-1) characters.
To change the size of text windows, enter the desired value(s) in the
Width
and
Height
boxes, and click the
change
button. All boxes will have the same width, so there is only one
Width
box (at the top).
Background
No-format Width:
Height:
This is an example of a structured abstract for an empirical research. The "Background" section is for writing how previous work and related studies connect with the motivation, aim, and significance of the presented work. You can refer to your own work if necessary. As a note on formatting:<> blank lines like the above are for separating paragraphs. Within a paragraph, the text is formatted to fill the page width, and inserting line-breaks will have no effect. To force line-breaks within a paragraph, put "<>" at the end of the line, like this:<> This sentence, thus, is started in a new line.
Aims
Height:
In this section, write the direct aims, objectives and goal of the presented work. Make the description clear so that the obtained results can be objectively evaluated on their goal achievement and significance.
Method
Height:
In this section, present sufficient (if not detailed) information about how the experiment(s) is conducted. This includes descriptions of the experimental method, conditions and settings; who the subjects are, how the data is analyzed, etc.
Results
Height:
in this section, write the main results obtained in the experimental study. Although presenting detailed data is not necessary (and impossible within the given word limit), provide concrete figures characterizing the main results, instead of giving obscure, abstract descriptions like: "the subjects were seen to have a general tendency to do so-and-so".
Conclusions
Height:
In this section, summarize the presented work, together with remarks on the novelty and significance of the work. If space permits, provide prospective remarks on how the present work can/will be extended.
When You're Finished ...
First check if all items are properly entered:
Title
Authors
Topic Areas
Keywords
Structured Abstract (text body)
Please observe the limit of
400 words
for all abstracts.
Exceeding the limit by a small number of words does not matter, but excessively long (or short) abstracts will be warned, and might be regarded to your disadvantage in the review process.
Submitting your abstract
Click the
Submit
button to submit your abstract. Submitted abstracts are registered to the system, and become visible to the Programming Committee and your co-authors. You can edit/withdraw your submission later, if necessary.
A submission notice mail will be sent to you and other recipients.
Saving (but not submitting) your draft
Click the
Save
button to save your draft (=this page). Saved drafts can be worked on later, but cannot be viewed by others. Drafts of submitted abstracts (see above) are saved automatically.
The title and at least one author must be specified for saving drafts.
The
Save
button is not shown when an already submitted work is being edited.
Previewing your draft
Click the
Preview
button to preview your abstract. Your draft
is not
saved upon preview.
To continue working on this submission, return to this page by clicking the
Return
buttons at the top and bottom of the preview page. Your browser's return key will have the same effect.
The
Reset
button will reset all input to the initial state (beware!).
The
Close
button closes this page (thus returning to the top page).