About IEEE MultiMedia
IEEE MultiMedia magazine was founded in 1994 and is the first IEEE publication in the multimedia area. IEEE MultiMedia serves the community of scholars, developers, practitioners, and students who are interested in multiple media types and work in fields such as image and video processing, audio analysis, text retrieval, and data fusion. Some readers are generalists, others specialists; they work in industry, business, the arts, and academia.
The magazine includes peer-reviewed articles, editorial comment, and conference and standards reports. Articles discuss research and advanced practice in multimedia hardware, software, systems, and their applications–spanning theory to working systems.
Scope of Interest
IEEE MultiMedia contains technical information covering a broad range of issues in multimedia systems and applications. Articles are expected to discuss research as well as advanced practice in hardware/software, ranging from theory to working systems. Especially encouraged are papers discussing experiences with new or advanced systems and subsystems. Acceptable papers must have a significant focus on aspects unique to multimedia systems and applications. These aspects are likely to be related to the special needs of multimedia information compared to other electronic data, for example, the size requirements of digital media and the importance of time in the representation of such media.
The primary goal of the magazine is to provide a forum for researchers and practitioners to present new findings and discuss experiences with multimedia systems and applications. In addition, the magazine keeps readers informed of the state of the art in the multimedia arena, including technical trends and research directions.
Submission Instructions:
IEEE MultiMedia magazine seeks original articles discussing research and advanced practices in hardware and software, spanning the range from theory to working systems. We encourage our authors to write in a conversational style, presenting even technical material clearly and simply. You can use figures, tables, and sidebars to explain specific points, summarize results, define acronyms, guide readers to other sources, or highlight items. Assume an educated general audience, and you will successfully communicate your ideas to generalists and specialists alike.
Articles submitted to IEEE MultiMedia should not exceed 6,500 words, including all text, the abstract, keywords, bibliography, and biographies. Each table and figure counts for 200 words. Please limit the number of references to the 20 most relevant (except for surveys, which may have up to 30 references). The abstract should be no more than 150 words and should describe the overall focus of your manuscript.
Before submitting, please read our author guidelines. When you are ready to submit, please go to the IEEE Author Portal.
For author information and guidelines on submission criteria, please visit IEEE MultiMedia’s Author Information page.
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