AI-Assisted LaTeX for academic researchFormatting papers & building journal / conference templates
A hands-on session on formatting research papers in LaTeX and building your own journal or conference templates — with AI tools doing the heavy lifting.
Why this workshop matters
Most academic journals and conferences now require or strongly prefer LaTeX for final submission — it's the format that renders equations, figures, and citations exactly the way reviewers and typesetters expect.
The problem is that most researchers still draft in Word, then lose days wrestling with templates, references, and formatting rules just before a deadline.
This session shows how AI tools shortcut that process: converting a Word manuscript into clean LaTeX, generating boilerplate, debugging errors, and adapting existing publisher templates — so you spend your time on the research, not the typesetting.
- IEEE conferences LaTeX preferred
- Springer journals LaTeX preferred
- Elsevier journals LaTeX preferred
- ACM proceedings LaTeX required
Who benefits from this
What's covered
Why LaTeX for academic research, and how AI speeds up document preparation.
Getting started with Overleaf and essential LaTeX document structure.
Title, authors, affiliations, abstract, headings, figures, tables, equations, references, and BibTeX citations.
Transforming a Word manuscript into LaTeX, using AI tools to generate and refine the code.
Understanding publisher templates and modifying them to meet submission guidelines — IEEE, Springer, Elsevier, and more.
Creating a reusable journal or conference template, customizing layout, fonts, headings, and styles.
AI-assisted code generation and debugging LaTeX errors.
Resource person
Adi Shankara Institute of Engineering and Technology, Kalady, Kerala
Register
Indian participant
Certificate and session recording included.
Foreign participant
Certificate and session recording included.
