You aren't expected to turn in a print-ready manuscript. Formatting will be done as part of the production process. However, we do have guidelines that will expedite the process and create a higher-quality book.
As stated in the publication agreements made with SPIE Press, authors are responsible for obtaining all necessary reproduction permissions or licenses from publishers. Some publishers require several weeks to process permissions requests, and some requests involve a payment, so publisher permissions should be obtained early, at the time of writing and selecting figures, to avoid potential delays or changes to the book farther along in the process.
Many publishers grant reprint permission via the Copyright Clearance Center (CCC). The permissions portal is generally found on the publisher’s abstract webpage of the article, chapter, or book containing the figure or table of interest. With the abstract webpage open, look for the permissions link, which is often a button that reads © or Permissions or Get Rights and Content or Copyright or Permissions and Reprints, Tools, etc. An author account will need to be set up in the CCC.
When an author submits a manuscript to SPIE Press for technical review, it is expected that the source for every figure that was not created for this manuscript is included in the Reference lists at the end of the chapters, and a citation is added to each caption of the “borrowed” or adapted figure.
Send copies of all the permissions received to your SPIE staff editor.
Tips
o As you place figures in your manuscript, keep track of them—as you would text references—with full citation information.
o Any material taken from another source is subject to the laws of the country in which the material was published and should be considered copyrighted; contact the publisher for more information.
o Any material taken from a U.S. military or government publication is considered to be in the public domain (not copyrighted), but you still must credit the original source of the material. Contact the publishing agency for citation verification, if necessary.
o Internet images:
Copyrighted data used for creating new figures, tables, or graphs
Q. If an author creates a table, graph, or figure based on someone else's data, does the author need to get permission to publish the new table, graph, or figure? (Is this considered a "derivative" work according to copyright law?)
A. Yes. It is someone's else's data; the mere fact of retyping or redrawing it doesn't change that. You could always excerpt or summarize the data and attribute the source without getting permission. The degree of completeness may be a factor.
Q. If an author recreates a table, graph, or figure based on someone else's table, graph, or figure, but the general concept it represents has also been presented in a number of different sources, could this be considered plagiarism?
A. It depends, but as long as the data is specific to someone else's research, permission is necessary. You could always excerpt or summarize the data and attribute the source without getting permission. The degree of completeness may be a factor.
Journal and conference papers:
1. M. Clearspeak, "How to prepare a manuscript for publication," Proc. SPIE 311, 315-320 (1996).
2. M. Black and D. White, "Capitalize only the first word of a paper title," J. Edit. Soc. Am. 3(2), 3-5 (1995).
Book:
3. C. Green, Capitalize Each Word in a Book Title, 2nd Ed., Nitpick Press, Milwaukee, Wisconsin (1996).
Chapter in an edited book:
4. D. Blue, "Chapter titles should be in sentence case," in The Fundamentals of Correct Copyediting, J.D. Salinger, Ed, SPIE Press, Bellingham, Washington, 493-582 (1995).