Submission Information

The submission deadline for regular papers and long abstracts have now passed for IPCAI 2023

Important Dates

For regular paper submissions

Intention to submit deadline:  28 October  11 November, 2022 (11:59 pm, Pacific Time) 
Submission deadline:  4 November 15 November, 2022 (11:59 pm, Pacific Time)
First review round and early decisions to authors: 16 January, 2023 (11:59 pm, Pacific Time)
Revision and rebuttal  deadline: 6 February, 2023 (11:59 pm, Pacific Time)
Decision notifications: 5 March, 2023 (11:59 pm, Pacific Time)

Registration deadline for papers accepted at IPCAI: 8 March, 2023 (11:59 pm, Pacific Time). No extensions!


For long abstract submissions

Submission Deadline:  20 January, 2023 (11:59 pm, Pacific Time)
Decision notifications: 5 March, 2023 (11:59 pm, Pacific Time)

Registration deadline for accepted long abstracts at IPCAI: 8 March, 2023 (11:59 pm, Pacific Time). No extensions!

Please submit your contribution via the IPCAI submission system

Author Instructions for Regular Papers

Scope of regular papers

To understand if your submission fits in the scope of IPCAI, and for general submission information please refer to the Call for Papers.


Submitting with CMT

All IPCAI 2023 submissions are made using Microsoft’s Conference Management Toolkit (CMT).  One of the paper's authors must be allocated as the corresponding author (also called the submitting author) who is responsible for making the CMT submission on behalf of all the co-authors, with permission from all co-authors. The corresponding author is required to already have a CMT account, and they can be the corresponding author for more than one submission.


Once you've logged into CMT, a regular paper submission is created by the corresponding author as follows. First, select the IPCAI 2023 conference here, with the role of author, then press the 'create new submission' button, and select the regular paper track. You will then see additional submission instructions, and the submission form.  Once you have filled in mandatory form items, you create your submission by clicking the 'submit' button at the bottom of the submission form. You will then be assigned a unique submission ID for your paper.


You will be able to edit all information in the submission form, and upload/replace the manuscript pdf file and any supplementary material files with newer versions, up to the regular paper submission deadline. The manuscript file should not exceed 20 MB. The supplementary material files can be in the following formats:  doc, docx, pdf, mp4 or wmv. You are permitted to submit up to 3 supplementary material files. Each of these files should not exceed 50 MB.  


Corresponding authors should only create one submission per paper.  Any submission changes should be made by editing the submission that you first created.


There are two submission deadlines that corresponding authors must respect (see important dates above):


The intention to submit deadline

The purpose of this deadline is to assist handling of submissions by the program committee. By this deadline, you should have completed what we call an 'intention to submit'. Concretely, this is achieved when both the following have been done:


Other fields in the submission form may be completed, and submission files may be uploaded, but they are not required to be done by the intention to submit deadline.


The submission deadline

By this deadline, you should have completed all submission form items and uploaded all your submission files.


Domain conflicts

CMT uses two mechanisms for domain conflicts: 



The corresponding author should do both, as described here.

Author guidelines and formatting information

The manuscript file

Accepted IPCAI regular papers will be transferred to the International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery (IJCARS) for further revisions and published by Springer Nature as a full paper in the IPCAI special Issue of IJCARS, or (if required) in a regular journal issue. Therefore, authors of regular IPCAI papers should ensure their submission closely conforms to the IJCARS author guideline and requirements. All accepted papers will need to conform to the IJCARS guidelines and requirements for publication.


To ensure a smooth review and publication process, IPCAI submitting authors should read the IJCARS guidelines, and especially check the following are satisfied prior to submitting using CMT:


Supplementary material

Supplementary materials (if any) may be submitted in addition to the manuscript file. We encourage authors to submit supplementary material along with your submission to clarify your contribution with the reviewers, which may include video files. Note that the manuscript file should stand alone, and be fully understood without the need to refer to supplementary material. Supplementary material for accepted papers will only be available online. The supplementary material should conform to the IJCARS guidelines. 

Submission confidentiality

In cases where confidential information is submitted to IPCAI, authors should do the following:

The assignment of reviewers and meta-reviewers will then be performed considering these restrictions. Throughout the review process, your submission will only be visible to the program chairs and the specific area chairs and reviewers responsible for the paper who also signed a confidentiality agreement. All other area chairs and reviewers will not have access to your submission.

Reproducible research

The authors should read and follow our reproducibility guidelines (see below), designed to improve the submission quality and promote reproducible research according to best practices. This will include completing a reproducibility checklist on CMT for your submission. We strongly recommend reading these guidelines prior to submission.  

Review process

Submissions are peer-reviewed in a single-blind process. We recommend you read the IPCAI reviewer guidelines (see below) before submitting, so you know what to expect. Your submission will be assigned to two meta-reviewers (primary and secondary), and be sent out for peer-review by qualified experts (typically 3). You will then receive these reviews and two meta-reviews. Based on these reviews, your paper will be given an early decision: either accept, reject, or revise. Accepted submissions will be directly transferred to IJCARS for submission to the IPCAI special issue of IJCARS. If your paper has received a revision, then you are invited to address the reviewer comments, and submit a revised version with a cover letter including responses to reviewer comments and manuscript changes. The revised paper will then be reviewed by the reviewers, meta-reviewers,, and a final accept or reject decision will be made. Accepted papers will then be transferred to IJCARS. All accepted papers will enter into a final review stage, conducted by IJCARS.

Author Instructions for Long Abstracts

Scope of long abstracts

To understand if your submission fits in the scope of IPCAI, and for general submission information please refer to the Call for Papers.

Submitting with CMT

All Long Abstract submissions are made using Microsoft’s Conference Management Toolkit (CMT). One author must be allocated as the corresponding author (also called the submitting author) who is responsible for making the CMT submission on behalf of all the co-authors, with permission from all co-authors. The corresponding author is required to already have a CMT account, and they can be the corresponding author for more than one submission.


Note that unlike IPCAI regular paper submissions, there is no ‘intention-to-submit’ phase for Long Abstracts. All submissions should be completed using CMT by the Long Abstract submission deadline.

Creating a submission

Once you've logged into CMT, a Long Abstract submission is created by the corresponding author as follows. First, select the IPCAI 2023 conference here, with the role of author, then press the 'create new submission' button, and select the ‘Long Abstract’ track. You will then see additional submission instructions, and the submission form. Once you have filled in mandatory form items, you create your submission by clicking the 'submit' button at the bottom of the submission form. You will then be assigned a unique submission ID for your long abstract.

Domain conflicts

To prevent any potential conflicts-of-interest in the submission review process, we use CMT’s domain conflicts mechanism. The corresponding author should input ‘Individually entered domain conflicts’ and ‘Domain conflicts per submission’ as described here. Your submission will not be considered for review if you have not inputted your domain conflicts, and it is the responsibility of the corresponding author to ensure all domain conflicts are inputted.

Modifying your submission

You will be able to edit all information in the submission form, and upload/replace the manuscript pdf file and any supplementary material files with newer versions, up to the long abstract submission deadline. 

One CMT entry per submission

The corresponding author should only create one submission on CMT for each Long Abstract they intend to submit. Any submission changes should be made by editing the submission that you first created.

Author guidelines and formatting information

The manuscript file

Your Long Abstract should be submitted as a single file (PDF), up to 4 pages in length (single-column), using LaTeX and the Springer Nature template. The 4 page limit applies to all content, including title, author information, short abstract, main body, acknowledgements and related statements, as well as references.If accepted, you will be offered to publish the manuscript as a Short Communication in the IPCAI special issue of the International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery (IJCARS). Therefore, authors should ensure their submission closely conforms to the IJCARS author guideline and requirements. All Long Abstract accepted submissions will need to conform to the IJCARS guidelines and requirements for publication in IJCARS as a Short Communication in the IPCAI special issue. Do not use the LNCS LaTeX template, as indicated in the original call for long abstracts. 


To ensure a smooth review and publication process, submitting authors of Long Abstracts should read the IJCARS guidelines, and especially check the following prior to submission:

Supplementary material

Supplementary materials (if any) may be submitted in addition to the manuscript file. We encourage authors to submit supplementary material along with your submission to clarify your contribution with the reviewers, which may include video files. Note that the manuscript file should stand alone, and be fully understood without the need to refer to supplementary material. Supplementary material for accepted papers will only be available online. The supplementary material should conform to the IJCARS guidelines.


The supplementary material files must be uploaded using CMT, and be in the following formats: doc, docx, pdf, mp4 or wmv. You are permitted to submit up to 3 supplementary material files. Each of these files should not exceed 50 MB.

Submission confidentiality

In cases where confidential information is submitted to IPCAI, authors should do the following:


The assignment of reviewers will then be performed considering these restrictions. Throughout the review process, your submission will only be visible to the program chairs and the specific area chairs and reviewers responsible for the paper who also signed a confidentiality agreement. All other area chairs and reviewers will not have access to your submission.

Review process

Long Abstract submissions are peer-reviewed in a single-blind process with normally 2 reviewers. There is no rebuttal stage, so after review, your submission will either be accepted or rejected. You will be notified of the reviews and the verdict via CMT. If the long abstract is accepted, authors will have the option to submit their work as a Short Communication to IJCARS, and inclusion in the IPCAI IJCARS special issue proceedings. 

IPCAI 2023 Reproducibility Checklist 

Checklist motivation


IPCAI is dedicated to publishing high quality, reproducible and responsible research following best practices. Motivated by the success and increasing use of reproducibility checklists in other major conferences, this year, we request authors to complete a reproducibility checklist as part of the submission on CMT. The reproducibility questions are given below.


The main purpose of the checklist is to help verify that the materials, methods and analysis presented in an IPCAI paper are clearly defined, and that, ideally, the results and conclusions can be reproduced independently given full access to these resources. The resources should be described in the paper itself or via supplementary material for additional details (especially, wherever possible, by linking to data, and the software implementations of algorithms and analysis used in the paper).


A good IPCAI paper will strive for the highest level of reproducibility, however, experimental setups described in IPCAI often comprise complex hardware and software setups, and it must be kept in mind that full independent reproducibility cannot always be ensured, despite best efforts by the authors. Access to all materials needed to reproduce results may not be possible, and the use of proprietary systems that are subject to licence restrictions is common in IPCAI.  For instance, reported software run-times require implementation on specific hardware, which is part of the experimental material that would be needed for exact reproduction, which generally cannot be shared. Additionally, the implementation can be so large that checking (or even running) code implementations is often neither sufficient for full reproducibility and unfeasible.  In such cases where full reproducibility is impossible, it is expected that the results are reproducible in principle. That is, when the experimental materials and implementation are not readily available, the paper should be described in sufficient detail that reproducibility would likely be attained given access to such resources by field experts. The checklist questions below are designed to promote this important aspect.  


Reproducibility Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: How are the checklist responses used during the reviewing process?

The checklist is designed to remind authors of items they could address in their submissions to help the reviewers to understand and evaluate the work, similar to a pre-flight checklist or pre-surgery checklist. The checklist responses are visible to reviewers and the review form will ask reviewers to rate a submission with respect to whether the submission includes enough information for reproducibility. However, the reviewers will rate the submission based on the submission itself, not simply based on the checklist responses. Also, the checklist responses are visible to Program Chairs, who might take them into consideration when making the final accept/reject decisions.

Q2: If our paper addresses all the items on the checklist, is that sufficient for reproducibility?

Not necessarily. IPCAI research is quite varied and no checklist could cover all the items necessary to reproduce all papers. Use your best judgement to include items relevant for your work, regardless of whether they are in the reproducibility checklist.

Q3: As the corresponding (submitting) author, am I required to fill out the reproducibility checklist in the full-paper submission form?

Yes. You won’t be able to submit the full paper without filling out the reproducibility checklist first. Note that some items in the checklist may not be relevant to your submission. 

Q4: As the corresponding author, I have completed the checklist in the submission form. Am I required to address those items explicitly in the submission itself (i.e., in the main paper or supplementary material)?

The items from the checklist are not required to be addressed explicitly in a submission, but authors will surely find their submission is of higher quality if they do so for items that are relevant to their work. Please use your best judgement to determine what checklist items are relevant to your work and what items should be addressed explicitly in the submission itself.

Q5: As the corresponding author, should we address checklist items in the main paper or in the supplementary materials?

It depends on which place is more appropriate. For example, important values such as the number of model parameters and the size of training data should be included in the main paper, whereas less important ones can be included in the appendix in supplementary material. This is the same kind of decision you have to make for other types of information such as math formulas. Just remember that reviewers have access to supplementary materials.

Q6: As the corresponding author, should we submit code and/or data as part of supplementary materials?

IJCARS, and the IPCAI special issue, have a type 1 research data policy. That is, where possible and applicable, authors are encouraged to deposit data that support the findings of their research in a public repository. Authors who do not have a preferred repository should consult Springer Nature’s list of repositories and research data policy. The same is true for code, where authors are encouraged to make code that supports findings publicly available, including setup, dependencies and execution instructions. Public code and data links can be referenced in the main text or in the or supplementary materials.  As per the author guidelines. Statements about public access to resources, i.e., data, code or other materials, should be collected in one place: the Declarations section under the 'Data, code and/or material availability' heading, including access links.

Q7: As a reviewer, should I lower my rating of a submission if it doesn’t address some checklist items in the submission?

Please see Q1 above. Reviewers should use their best judgement to determine whether certain checklist items should be addressed in the submission.


Checklist questions


The checklist is closely aligned to the one used at MICCAI 2022 with additional questions relevant for IPCAI. Questions in black font are from the MICCAI 2022 reproducibility checklist. Questions in red font are new to IPCAI 2023. Questions should be answered on CMT with ‘Yes’, ‘No’ or ‘Not applicable'. An optional free text field can be used for further clarification by the authors.  Some of the new IPCAI questions concerning clinical research and statistical methods have been based on A CHecklist for statistical Assessment of Medical Papers (CHAMP), and we recommend that you also consult that paper. 

1.  For all experimental setups/studies, check if you include

2.  For all experiments involving users/testers of a system, surveys, or questionnaires, check if you include

3.  For all preclinical experiments e.g., with phantoms, animal studies, or in-silico studies, check if you include

4.  For all clinical studies, check if you include

5. For all hardware and systems, check if you include


6. For all statistical analysis

7. For all models and algorithms, check if you include

8. For all datasets used, check if you include:

9. For all code related to this work that you have made available or will release if this work is accepted, check if you include:

10. For all reported experimental results, check if you include:


Sources

These guidelines use the following sources: 


Reviewer Guidelines for Regular Papers

Firstly, thank you to each person who has volunteered to review for IPCAI 2023! To maintain a high-quality technical program, we rely very much on the time and expertise of our reviewers. 


Pre-review checklist

As soon as you get your reviewing assignment from CMT, please ensure that:


If issues with any of the above points arise, please let the meta-reviewer know right away by contacting them through the CMT system.


What to look for


Writing the review


Post-review checklist

After your review, check that you 


Ethics for reviewing papers


Conflicts of interest

You have a conflict of interest if any one of the following items are true:


Additional Sources

https://cvpr2022.thecvf.com/reviewer-guidelines 

https://miccai2021.org/en/REVIEWER-GUIDELINES.html