AAD X: Abstracts
All presenters:
Send your abstract as a LaTeX file (or plain text). If you do know how to work directly with a LaTeX file, then please use our template. Otherwise, please lay out your abstract in the following order:
- title of presentation (first letter and proper nouns only capitalized)
- presenter's name
- text of abstract
- references
- physical address (a university name is fine)
- email address
- web address, if possible
In LaTeX, please do not use your own specially defined control sequences; rather, replace them with the definitions. (All abstracts will be compiled together as one document.)
Send your abstract, as an attachment, with the name
yourlastname.tex (or yourlastnamez.tex, where
z is the initial of your first name) to antalya2008@bilgi.edu.tr.
Write abstract in your subject line.
Contributed presentations
If you want to contribute a talk or a poster, then please submit an abstract, in the manner described above, before March 10, 2008. Your abstract should be detailed (with references as appropriate), but accessible to a general mathematical audience. Feel free to write a couple of pages.
We may have to ask some people to present posters rather than scheduled talks. If you prefer to present a poster, let us know. Presenters of posters should be available for questions at certain times during the meeting.
LaTeX problems
From past experience, here I record some misunderstandings that some people seem to have about LaTeX. The comments assume that one has \usepackage{amsmath} in the preamble of one's document (so that one has access to the main features of AMS-LaTeX):
- One should italicize words by means of the command \emph{...}, not by putting the words in math-mode with $...$. (Why not? Because the spacing between letters is different in math mode.)
- One should not try to control vertical space with commands like \medskip. Just let blank lines determine paragraph breaks. (The gap between paragraphs is the length parskip, which can be changed with the \setlength command; this is done in our template file, and it is done also with \usepackage{parskip}.)
- To display mathematics, use \[...\] or \begin{equation*}...\end{equation*} (rather than the center environment, for example; if you use \begin{equation}...\end{equation}, then your display will be assigned a number).
- Theorem-like environments can be defined with the \newtheorem command (as in the template).
- If you don't like the counters used with the enumerate environment, you can change them globally, as for example with \renewcommand{\theenumi}{\roman{enumi}} \renewcommand{\labelenumi}{(\theenumi)}.
- If you want references of the form [5, Theorem 1.2], you can get this with \cite[Theorem~1.2]{key5} (where key5 is the key that you have assigned to the 5th item in your bibliography).
- You assign a key to a bibliographic item by entering the item in the bibliography as (for example) \bibitem{key5} Some article.... These bibliographic items are normally in the environment called thebibliography; for more control, this is changed to ourbiblio in the template. So that different people do not assign the same key to different items, you are asked to use your name in your keys. This doesn't mean you should use the expression “yourname” in your keys; just use your actual name (or some other expression unique to you). If the writer of this page were giving a talk, his third bibliographic entry would begin \bibitem{pierce3}....
