You are here

Reminders about paper submission - updated

Final deadline of 11 November is very close.
Do not wait the last minute to start submitting your contribution!
Here is an update on reminders concerning paper submission:

  • The submission procedure is described in details at www.ifac2017.org/submit. Please read the instructions carefully before sending questions to the IPC. The ipc@ifac2017.org mailbox may well be saturated at some point.
  • In case you have been invited to do so, do not forget to choose "Invited session paper" as submission type, and enter the code provided by the session organizer. Be aware that the session code is not the same as the session ID. The session code is composed of a sequence of five alphanumeric characters, while session ID is a number between 1 and 1000.
  • Check the open invited track topics at www.ifac2017.org/OIT. If you feel your contribution falls in one of these topics you may submit your contribution as "Open Invited Track paper" and please use the code corresponding to the track as listed at www.ifac2017.org/OIT.
  • If a code does not work, it might be because you selected the wrong submission type. "Open Invited Track paper" submission cannot be entered to the system when choosing "Invited session paper" type.
  • Deadline will not be changed. 11 November is the final deadline.
  • The submission site remains open until date change in the Pacific. Server time can be checked when connecting to the ifac.papercept.net page dedicated to IFAC 2017 submissions.

Do not wait the last minute to start submitting your contribution!

To avoid and last minute difficulties, we recommend to start the submission procedure as soon as possible. The corresponding author has the possibility to update the submitted information, including the paper submission type, and the PDF files, as long as the deadline has not been reached.


Other reminders:

Other deadlines:

Some statistics about submissions on 9 November, 11pm in Toulouse:

As a total of 306 papers are planned to be submitted to invited sessions, these figures are expected to represent 62% of the total. Many more contributions to come!