The student paper is a short report on the results of research work and must contain a description of the scientific research and the new results obtained. Submitted papers are subject to review and may be rejected either due to the quality of the content or due to poor presentation and formatting of the work.
Papers must be 2-4 pages in length. We use the IEEE conference template requirements for formatting. Please use the MS Word template from our website to format your paper. When formatting the text, do not use manual formatting; use the template's styles. The final work must be submitted in two formats: DOCX and PDF.
Each paper must have an Abstract that briefly in 3-4 sentences summarizes the paper's topic, the problem being solved, and what was achieved in the work.
The Introduction section should describe the problem, the task statement, and a description of what was proposed (done, investigated) in the work.
The next section, Related Work, should concisely describe what is already known about the problem being solved, including existing works, methods, and models.
The next section, Proposed Approach, contains information about the authors' approach to solving the stated task (the main essence of the work).
The next section, Experimental Setup and Results, should describe how the research was organized (e.g., description of test problems and datasets, algorithm settings, what information is collected during experiments), the research results, and discussions and conclusions about the results.
Finally, the Conclusions section should present conclusions about the goals achieved, the new knowledge obtained, and further works (what needs to be done next to develop your topic).
The author must provide References to primary sources for all terms, methods, algorithms, models, tasks, datasets, images, and photos that were not originally proposed by the author.
If the work contains images, ensure a resolution of no less than 150 DPI, preferably 300 DPI.
All formulas on separate lines and inline formulas within the text, as well as all mathematical symbols and variables, must be created using Word's equation editor; do not use plain text with italics