A: No, you need not be a MICCAI Society member to submit to MICCAI. No payment is needed to register or submit a paper. If your paper is accepted, the presenter of your paper must pay the conference registration fee to participate and present at the conference.
A: To submit an "Intention-to-submission”, you must create an entry (i.e., a submission) on the submission platform (Microsoft CMT).
There should be one submission for each paper you intend to submit.
You must include a draft title of your paper, an abstract, a list of co-authors, a list of domain conflicts, select subject areas and the name and email address of the co-author who will participate as a reviewer. This co-author must complete the reviewer signup form before the intention-to-submit deadline.
Note that student reviewers must have published a first-authored paper in MICCAI or a related journal or conference venue (e.g., MedIA, IEEE TMI, ISBI, IPMI, CVPR, etc.) in order to be eligible reviewers.
All required questions on the submission form must be answered, or it will not allow you to submit. You will be able to make changes to all fields on the submission form until the final submission deadline.
Please refer to our full submission guidelines here for all requirements. If this is your first time submitting to MICCAI, please also consult the following two documents:
A: Yes, all successful submissions will be listed on your author console. All authors will also receive a confirmation email on the day after the deadline (February 28, 2025).
A: No. At this stage, only 8 pages of content (maximum) + 2 pages of references (maximum) will be allowed. Any paper exceeding the maximum allowable page in either category will be rejected. If your paper is accepted, we allow an extra ½ page to incorporate changes recommended by the reviewers.
*New in 2025* Please note that you are not required to include an acknowledgement section for double-blind review process. If and when your paper is accepted, reinsert the acknowledgement and the disclaimer clause in your final camera-ready version.
A: The required font size, margins, and line spacing are embedded in the provided templates. Authors must use either the LaTeX or the MS Word templates provided by MICCAI 2025. Any modification to the template (including font size, spacing, and margins) is strictly prohibited for MICCAI submissions and will result in your paper being desk-rejected.
A: We are concerned about modifications to margins, line spacing, font type, and font size of the paper only. If an author wishes to use other packages, it is the author's responsibility to ensure the additional package does not alter the template.
A: You can format your table (multi-rows/columns, width, height) any way you like as long as the table does not extend beyond the margins. Modifying the default spacing before and after tables/figures, however, is NOT allowed. Please note that the smallest font size allowed is 8pt in a table.
A: No. This is considered a modification of the template.
A: No. You cannot wrap text around figures or tables. This is considered a modification of the template.
A: No. The template has already been anonymized for submission. You may not remove the anonymous author or institution lines to save space.
A: New in 2025, you are not required to include your Acknowledgments and Disclosure of Interest sections for the initial submission. If you include them, they will be counted as part of the 8-pages.
A: The bibliography section does NOT need to start on a new page.
A: The bibliography can be sorted alphabetically or by order of appearance. The default Springer style lists references alphabetically. However, some authors prefer to sort them in order of appearance. If that is your preference, it is the author's responsibility to determine how to list references in order of appearance.
A: Yes. Every field on the submission form can be modified until the final submission deadline (February 27, 2025). This includes the abstract section and the author section. We ask that you fill out the list of authors, list of domain conflicts, and subject areas of your paper as accurately as possible by the intention-to-submit deadline for pre-screening.
A: Anonymization generally refers to the process of removing identifying information. See section 3 of this document for more information.
A: If the data set is publicly available, you do not have to anonymize it. In general, any information that can be used to identify the authors and their affiliations should be removed for the review phase.
A: To ensure a fair and unbiased review process, it is essential for authors to provide the full list of co-authors and a comprehensive domain conflict list when submitting their papers. This information is critical for identifying and avoiding potential conflicts of interest between reviewers and any of the co-authors. Without this data, there is a risk of assigning your paper to a reviewer who may have personal, professional, or domain-related conflicts with one or more co-authors, which could compromise the integrity of the review. By submitting a complete author list and conflict information, you help maintain the quality and fairness of the peer-review process. See Section 4 of this document on conflicts of interest and how to correctly list domain conflicts.
If you do not disclose full authorship and domain conflicts and a conflict of interest is later detected, (i.e., the paper was accepted by a reviewer who wasn't supposed to review the paper), the review is invalidated, and your paper may be rejected, even though it has been accepted.
A: If you have one, please add it to your user profile. We use your DBLP ID to ensure your paper is not assigned to a reviewer who has previously published with you or your co-authors. See also the answers above on conflict of interest and domain conflicts.
A: Your co-authors can opt not to receive conference emails in their CMT account profile. Please be reminded that all communications to the authors will be sent via CMT. The primary author of a paper must be able to receive conference emails.
A: No. Please submit all author information at the time of submission. Adding new authors to a paper after acceptance requires permission from the program committee and may be declined. If you accidentally omitted an author or a domain conflict on the submission form, you must notify us immediately. If you need to add a co-author to your paper, please notify us as soon as possible with your request. You must state in your email why this author was not included and this author's contribution to the paper. Make sure to copy all authors of your paper in your email to avoid dispute.
A: If and when your paper is accepted, you can add a footnote in your final paper to indicate co-authorships.
A: You will be able to remove your submission in CMT on or before the final submission deadline of February 27th by clicking the "delete submission" link on your author console. Note that this action cannot be undone. After February 27th, please submit a formal request to withdraw your submission by sending an email to submissions@miccai.org. Please copy all authors in your email to avoid dispute. Please state your paper ID and paper title in your email.
A: Please inform us by emailing submissions@miccai.org, and we will remove your co-author from the reviewer roster. If you do not inform us and if your co-author does not submit their assigned reviews, it will be noted, and your co-author will not be invited to review for MICCAI again.
A: Anyone from an institution you and/or your co-authors have collaborated with in the past 3 years should not review your paper. The email domains of your institution, your co-author's institution, and your collaborators' institutions should be listed under the submission domain conflicts. The "Other conflicts" field is for you to declare conflicts with an individual or an institution that is not your collaborator. For example, your former thesis supervisor, who might be active in the MICCAI community but has not collaborated with you in recent years, should be included in the other conflicts field.
A: After creating your submission, you should see a "submit supplementary material" link in your author console in CMT. The acceptable format is .zip. Your videos along with the README files should be zipped.
Supplementary materials must also be properly anonymized and must not exceed two pages. Captions should not exceed 100 words.
Please note that while the reviewers will have access to supplementary material, they are under no obligation to review it, and the paper must contain all necessary information and illustrations within the content.
A: To share your codes, you can provide a link to your code repository. If you are sharing your code/data via a public repository at the time of submission, please be advised that it will be subject to the same anonymity rules as the paper, i.e. no information should be available to identify the author(s) of the repository/paper.
There are online resources available for reference such as:
https://anonymous.4open.science/
https://www.micahsmith.com/blog/2019/10/anonymize-github-repos-double-blind/
We are not responsible for the content of these materials. It is the author's responsibility to determine how anonymity is achieved.
A: MICCAI Proceedings are published in Springer's Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Authors may publish an extended version of their accepted proceedings paper as a journal article provided the following principles are adhered to:
Each year, a selected number of accepted MICCAI papers are invited to submit an extended version of the study as journal articles to a special issue in MedIA and IJCARS.
A: Please see section 3c of Springer's License to Publish form. You can post your submitted version, the version before peer review, on arXiv but you cannot post your camera-ready version to arXiv during the embargo period (twelve (12) months after first publication). Authors should include a link to the version on SpringerLink once this becomes available.