Journal of Perceptual Imaging® 1(1): page numbers, year
©Society for Imaging Science and Technology (OR other, as selected) to be filled in by JPI

JPI Template: Title goes here

Author Name 1

Department/Institute, University/Company, City, State/Province 12345, Country; e-mail; ORCID ID, if applicable

Author Name 2

Department/Institute, University/Company, City, State/Province 12345, Country; e-mail; ORCID ID, if applicable

Author Name 3 etc.

Department/Institute, University/Company, City, State/Province 12345, Country; e-mail; ORCID ID, if applicable

Abstract. You may use this template to submit papers for review for the Journal of Perceptual Imaging. As JPI will be printed in 2 column format, this may not help you determine length, but may be easier to work in; for a better sense of length, choose the 2 column format.Actual length is determined when the article is typeset. Abstract text is 8pt Helvetica justified. Text in blue inserted by publisher at time of publication. ©Year Society for Imaging Science and Technology or other copyright choice If CCBY, Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI. [DOI: 10.xxxxx/J. Percep.Imaging,Year. Identifier] TO BE FILLED IN BY JPI.

Index Terms: subject, term, keyword, etc.

Received date; accepted for publication date; published online date; Associate Editor: Name. JPI code. To be filled in by JPI.

1. HEADING

Headings are 10 pt Times Bold ALL CAPS flush left and are numbered 1, 2, 3, etc.

Body text is 10pt Times (or Times New Roman) justified. You can use this to help you determine the length of your paper. You may also submit your manuscript using a single column if that is easier for you. Figures should be arranged to fit in a single or double column. Captions go below figures. Figures, graphs, tables, and equations are numbered and called out in the text in the order in which they are referenced in the document. Tables use a condensed font.

NOTE: Refrences are listed in alphabetical order at the end of the manuscript and are called out in the text using brackets [1], [2], [3], etc.

1.1 Subheading for Subsections

Subheads are 10pt Times Bold Italic Sentence Case flush left and are numbered 1.1, 1.2 , 1.3, etc. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. [4] Nam cursus. Morbi ut mi. Nullam enim leo, egestas id, condimentum at, Morbi ut mi. laoreet mattis, massa. [3] Sed eleifend nonummy diam. Morbi ut mi. Praesent mauris ante, elementum et, bibendum at, posuere sit amet, nibh.

Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. In posuere felis nec tortor [5]. Pellentesque faucibus. Ut accumsan ultricies elit. Maecenas at justo id velit placerat molestie. Donec dictum lectus non odio. Cras a ante vitae enim iaculis aliquam.[1] Mauris nunc quam, venenatis nec, euismod sit amet, egestas placerat, est. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas.

Integer quis urna. Nam eget lacus. Aliquam erat volutpat. Quisque dignissim congue leo.

x = (n/1) × rt [n = 0.1, 0.2, …] .(1)

Mauris vel lacus vitae felis vestibulum volutpat. Etiam est nunc, venenatis in, [2] tristique eu, imperdiet ac, nisl. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. In iaculis facilisis massa. Etiam eu urna.

1.1.1 Tertiary Heading

Tertiary heads are 10pt Times Italic Sentence Case flush left and are numbered 1.1.1, 1.1.2 , 1.1.3, etc. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. [6] Sed porta. hendrerit quis, leo. Pellentesque rutrum malesuada neque.

  • Step 1
  • Step 2
  • Step 3

Nunc tempus felis vitae urna. Suspendisse quam leo, molestie sed, luctus quis, feugiat in, pede. Fusce tellus. Sed metus augue, convallis et, vehicula ut, pulvinar eu, ante.

Mauris vel lacus vitae felis vestibulum volutpat. Etiam est nunc, venenatis in, tristique eu, imperdiet ac, nisl. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. In iaculis facilisis massa. Etiam eu urna. Sed porta. Suspendisse quam leo, molestie sed, luctus quis, feugiat in, pede. Fusce tellus. Sed metus augue, convallis et, vehicula ut, pulvinar eu, ante. Integer orci tellus, tristique vitae, consequat nec, porta vel, lectus. Nulla sit amet diam.

2. DISCUSSION

Curabitur vel mi sit amet magna malesuada ultrices. Ut nisi erat, fermentum vel, congue id, euismod inelit. Fusce ultricies, orci ac feugiat suscipit, leo massa sodales velit, et scelerisque mi tortor at ipsum. Proin orci odio, commodo ac, gravida non, tristique vel, tellus. Pellentesque nibh libero, ultricies eu, sagittis non, mollis sed, justo. Praesent metus ipsum, pulvinar pulvinar, porta id, fringilla at, est.[5]

Phasellus felis dolor, scelerisque a, tempus eget, lobortis id, libero. Donec scelerisque leo ac risus. Praesent sit amet est. In dictum, dolor eu dictumporttitor, enim felis viverra mi, eget luctus massa purus quis odio. Etiam nulla massa, pharetra facilisis, volutpat in, imperdiet sit amet, sem.

3. CONCLUSION

Vestibulum ligula augue, bibendum accumsan, vestibulum ut, commodo a, mi. Morbi ornare gravida elit. Integer congue, augue et malesuada iaculis, ipsum dui aliquet felis, at cursus magna

nisl nec elit. Donec iaculis diam a nisi accumsan viverra. Duis sed tellus et tortor vestibulum gravida. Praesent elementum elit at tellus.

Header 1 / Header 2 / Header 3
Line 1 / data / xy
Line 2 / data / xy
Line 3 / data / xy
Line 4 / data / xy

4. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Curabitur metus ipsum, luctus eu, malesuada ut, tincidunt sed, diam. Donec quis mi sed magna hendrerit accumsan. Suspendisse risus nibh, ultricies eu, volutpat non, condimentum hendrerit, augue. Etiam eleifend, metus vitae adipiscing semper, mauris ipsum iaculis elit, congue gravida elit mi egestas orci. Curabitur pede.

5. REFERENCES

  1. H. P. Le, Progress and trends in ink-jet printing technology, J. Imaging Sci. Technol. 42, 46 (1998).
  2. E. M. Williams, The Physics and Technology of Xerographic Processes (John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1984) p. 30.
  3. Gary K. Starkweather, “Printing technologies for images, gray scale, and color,” Proc. SPIE 1458: 120 (1991).
  4. Linda T. Creagh, “Applications in commercial printing for hot melt ink-jets,” Proc. IS&T’s 10th Int’l. Congress on Adv. In Non-Impact Printing Technologies (IS&T, Springfield, VA 1994) pp. 446-448.
  5. ISO 13655-1996 Graphic technology: Spectral measurement and colorimetric computation for graphic arts images (ISO, Geneva),
  6. Society for Imaging Science and Technology website, accessed October 2003.

J. Perceptual Imagingvolume page numberIssue info