This is an example of a paper in LaTeX for the conference NeurIPS 2019, but it could be also useful for future editions of a such conference.
Be careful, revision process is double blinded, so, at submittion you shoud omit the author names.
I didn't use natbib because it produces some conflicts with other packages.
I modified the next in order to have a better visualization but using the format and instructions given by NerurIPS committee.
Replace :
\usepackage[final]{neurips_2019}
with:
\usepackage[nonatbib, final]{neurips_2019}
Add the package:
\usepackage{cite}
In order to add multiple authors in a better visualization, I used:
\author{
\textbf{AuthorName AuthorSurname $^1$, AuthorName AuthorSurname $^1$} \\
\textbf{AuthorName AuthorSurname $^1$ $^2$, AuthorName AuthorSurname $^2$}
\\
$^1$ Deppartament1, University1, Country1 \\
$^2$ Deppartament2, University2, Country2 \\
\texttt{\{email1, email2, email3\}@affiliation.edu}
\\
\texttt{email4@affiliation.edu}
}
Cite the papers using \cite{reference-name}
, example:
... we used the Caffe framework \cite{reference1}.
I added the next packages in order to have a better manage of the images.
\usepackage{float}
\usepackage{graphicx}
\usepackage{subfig}
Replace all the References section (included the subtitle) with:
\bibliography{references}{}
\bibliographystyle{plain}
Compile step by step as follows:
Step 1. Compite with PDFLaTeX
Step 2. Compile with BibTeX
Step 3. Compile with PDFLaTeX
Step 4. Compile with PDFLaTeX
Be careful when you submit your paper to ArXiV.
Submit the main LaTeX files in a .tag compressed file. In my case, such main files are: paper_neurips.tex, neurips_2019.sty, images (folder), paper_neurips.bbl (generated from the references.bib at Step 2 of compiling).
By: Dennis Núñez-Fernández
Website: http://dennishnf.com