The IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers (TCAS-I) publishes regular papers in areas of relevance to the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society, namely the theory, analysis, design, and practical implementation of circuits, and the application of circuit techniques to systems and signal processing. The topics of interest covered include:
Analog, Digital, and Mixed Signal Circuits and Systems.
Nonlinear Circuits and Systems.
Circuits and Systems for Communications.
Power Electronics and Systems.
Software for Analog and Digital Circuits and Systems.
Control aspects of Circuits and Systems.
The technical content of submitted papers is expected to have a clear connection to the general theme of circuits and systems. For areas that may contain subjects at the borderline with the domain of competence of other IEEE Societies, such as Communications, Control, and Signal Processing it is expected that papers submitted to TCAS-I will focus on the impact that a particular signal processing or communications algorithm or control theoretical result, may have on the design/implementation/performance of the corresponding circuit or system. Similarly, for papers that belong to the category Power Electronics and Systems, TCAS-I should only receive papers that clearly exploit circuit theoretic methodologies in their analysis/design or present significant results in the integrated circuit implementation. Papers not following these recommendations may be immediately returned to the authors.
Submitted papers are expected to contain new results, ideas, or innovations that advance significantly the state-of-the-art. Authors submitting a paper undertake that the same paper has not been submitted, accepted, published, or copyrighted elsewhere.
Peer Review
The articles in this journal are peer-reviewed in accordance with the requirements set forth in the IEEE Publication Services and Products Board Operations Manual. Each published article was reviewed by a minimum of two independent reviewers using a single-blind peer review process, where the identities of the reviewers are not known to the authors, but the reviewers know the identities of the authors. Articles will be screened for plagiarism before acceptance.
Visit the IEEE Author Center, which provides general guidelines regarding the submission of text and graphics, as well as templates, and instructions on how to submit multimedia materials. Most of the information is in the form of a convenient, downloadable PDF file.
The Journals page provides a listing of our publications and a link to each publication’s Web page. There, you will find the scope of each publication, contact information for obtaining more details, the frequency of its publication, a description of the topics covered, associated page charges, and contact information such as the Editor-in-Chief, or associate editors. Some publications also supply a link to their Society’s Web site for more specific information regarding that publication’s review and submission processes.
The IEEE provides templates that can be used for all final submissions. All of these templates are available for download at the Create Your IEEE Journal Article page page.
Please contact the editorial office of the journal to which you submitted your work for information regarding where it is in the submission process.
Using the right keywords in your article can make your article more easily and reliably discoverable—which leads to a broader readership for your article. Using the IEEE Thesaurus can help you find the best-standardized keywords to fit your article. Use the thesaurus access request form for free access to the IEEE Thesaurus.
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