EvoScientist 0.0.1.dev2__py3-none-any.whl

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Files changed (107) hide show
  1. EvoScientist/EvoScientist.py +157 -0
  2. EvoScientist/__init__.py +24 -0
  3. EvoScientist/__main__.py +4 -0
  4. EvoScientist/backends.py +392 -0
  5. EvoScientist/cli.py +1553 -0
  6. EvoScientist/middleware.py +35 -0
  7. EvoScientist/prompts.py +277 -0
  8. EvoScientist/skills/accelerate/SKILL.md +332 -0
  9. EvoScientist/skills/accelerate/references/custom-plugins.md +453 -0
  10. EvoScientist/skills/accelerate/references/megatron-integration.md +489 -0
  11. EvoScientist/skills/accelerate/references/performance.md +525 -0
  12. EvoScientist/skills/bitsandbytes/SKILL.md +411 -0
  13. EvoScientist/skills/bitsandbytes/references/memory-optimization.md +521 -0
  14. EvoScientist/skills/bitsandbytes/references/qlora-training.md +521 -0
  15. EvoScientist/skills/bitsandbytes/references/quantization-formats.md +447 -0
  16. EvoScientist/skills/find-skills/SKILL.md +133 -0
  17. EvoScientist/skills/find-skills/scripts/install_skill.py +211 -0
  18. EvoScientist/skills/flash-attention/SKILL.md +367 -0
  19. EvoScientist/skills/flash-attention/references/benchmarks.md +215 -0
  20. EvoScientist/skills/flash-attention/references/transformers-integration.md +293 -0
  21. EvoScientist/skills/llama-cpp/SKILL.md +258 -0
  22. EvoScientist/skills/llama-cpp/references/optimization.md +89 -0
  23. EvoScientist/skills/llama-cpp/references/quantization.md +213 -0
  24. EvoScientist/skills/llama-cpp/references/server.md +125 -0
  25. EvoScientist/skills/lm-evaluation-harness/SKILL.md +490 -0
  26. EvoScientist/skills/lm-evaluation-harness/references/api-evaluation.md +490 -0
  27. EvoScientist/skills/lm-evaluation-harness/references/benchmark-guide.md +488 -0
  28. EvoScientist/skills/lm-evaluation-harness/references/custom-tasks.md +602 -0
  29. EvoScientist/skills/lm-evaluation-harness/references/distributed-eval.md +519 -0
  30. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/SKILL.md +937 -0
  31. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/references/checklists.md +361 -0
  32. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/references/citation-workflow.md +562 -0
  33. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/references/reviewer-guidelines.md +367 -0
  34. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/references/sources.md +159 -0
  35. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/references/writing-guide.md +476 -0
  36. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/README.md +251 -0
  37. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/aaai2026/README.md +534 -0
  38. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/aaai2026/aaai2026-unified-supp.tex +144 -0
  39. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/aaai2026/aaai2026-unified-template.tex +952 -0
  40. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/aaai2026/aaai2026.bib +111 -0
  41. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/aaai2026/aaai2026.bst +1493 -0
  42. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/aaai2026/aaai2026.sty +315 -0
  43. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/acl/README.md +50 -0
  44. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/acl/acl.sty +312 -0
  45. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/acl/acl_latex.tex +377 -0
  46. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/acl/acl_lualatex.tex +101 -0
  47. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/acl/acl_natbib.bst +1940 -0
  48. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/acl/anthology.bib.txt +26 -0
  49. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/acl/custom.bib +70 -0
  50. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/acl/formatting.md +326 -0
  51. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/colm2025/README.md +3 -0
  52. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/colm2025/colm2025_conference.bib +11 -0
  53. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/colm2025/colm2025_conference.bst +1440 -0
  54. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/colm2025/colm2025_conference.pdf +0 -0
  55. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/colm2025/colm2025_conference.sty +218 -0
  56. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/colm2025/colm2025_conference.tex +305 -0
  57. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/colm2025/fancyhdr.sty +485 -0
  58. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/colm2025/math_commands.tex +508 -0
  59. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/colm2025/natbib.sty +1246 -0
  60. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/iclr2026/fancyhdr.sty +485 -0
  61. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/iclr2026/iclr2026_conference.bib +24 -0
  62. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/iclr2026/iclr2026_conference.bst +1440 -0
  63. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/iclr2026/iclr2026_conference.pdf +0 -0
  64. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/iclr2026/iclr2026_conference.sty +246 -0
  65. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/iclr2026/iclr2026_conference.tex +414 -0
  66. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/iclr2026/math_commands.tex +508 -0
  67. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/iclr2026/natbib.sty +1246 -0
  68. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/icml2026/algorithm.sty +79 -0
  69. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/icml2026/algorithmic.sty +201 -0
  70. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/icml2026/example_paper.bib +75 -0
  71. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/icml2026/example_paper.pdf +0 -0
  72. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/icml2026/example_paper.tex +662 -0
  73. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/icml2026/fancyhdr.sty +864 -0
  74. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/icml2026/icml2026.bst +1443 -0
  75. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/icml2026/icml2026.sty +767 -0
  76. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/icml2026/icml_numpapers.pdf +0 -0
  77. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/neurips2025/Makefile +36 -0
  78. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/neurips2025/extra_pkgs.tex +53 -0
  79. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/neurips2025/main.tex +38 -0
  80. EvoScientist/skills/ml-paper-writing/templates/neurips2025/neurips.sty +382 -0
  81. EvoScientist/skills/peft/SKILL.md +431 -0
  82. EvoScientist/skills/peft/references/advanced-usage.md +514 -0
  83. EvoScientist/skills/peft/references/troubleshooting.md +480 -0
  84. EvoScientist/skills/ray-data/SKILL.md +326 -0
  85. EvoScientist/skills/ray-data/references/integration.md +82 -0
  86. EvoScientist/skills/ray-data/references/transformations.md +83 -0
  87. EvoScientist/skills/skill-creator/LICENSE.txt +202 -0
  88. EvoScientist/skills/skill-creator/SKILL.md +356 -0
  89. EvoScientist/skills/skill-creator/references/output-patterns.md +82 -0
  90. EvoScientist/skills/skill-creator/references/workflows.md +28 -0
  91. EvoScientist/skills/skill-creator/scripts/init_skill.py +303 -0
  92. EvoScientist/skills/skill-creator/scripts/package_skill.py +110 -0
  93. EvoScientist/skills/skill-creator/scripts/quick_validate.py +95 -0
  94. EvoScientist/stream/__init__.py +53 -0
  95. EvoScientist/stream/emitter.py +94 -0
  96. EvoScientist/stream/formatter.py +168 -0
  97. EvoScientist/stream/tracker.py +115 -0
  98. EvoScientist/stream/utils.py +255 -0
  99. EvoScientist/subagent.yaml +147 -0
  100. EvoScientist/tools.py +135 -0
  101. EvoScientist/utils.py +207 -0
  102. evoscientist-0.0.1.dev2.dist-info/METADATA +227 -0
  103. evoscientist-0.0.1.dev2.dist-info/RECORD +107 -0
  104. evoscientist-0.0.1.dev2.dist-info/WHEEL +5 -0
  105. evoscientist-0.0.1.dev2.dist-info/entry_points.txt +5 -0
  106. evoscientist-0.0.1.dev2.dist-info/licenses/LICENSE +21 -0
  107. evoscientist-0.0.1.dev2.dist-info/top_level.txt +1 -0
@@ -0,0 +1,662 @@
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+ %%%%%%%% ICML 2026 EXAMPLE LATEX SUBMISSION FILE %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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+
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+ \documentclass{article}
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+
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+ % Recommended, but optional, packages for figures and better typesetting:
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+ \usepackage{microtype}
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+ \usepackage{graphicx}
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+ \usepackage{subcaption}
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+ \usepackage{booktabs} % for professional tables
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+
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+ % hyperref makes hyperlinks in the resulting PDF.
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+ % If your build breaks (sometimes temporarily if a hyperlink spans a page)
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+ % please comment out the following usepackage line and replace
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+ % \usepackage{icml2026} with \usepackage[nohyperref]{icml2026} above.
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+ \usepackage{hyperref}
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+
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+
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+ % Attempt to make hyperref and algorithmic work together better:
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+ \newcommand{\theHalgorithm}{\arabic{algorithm}}
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+
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+ % Use the following line for the initial blind version submitted for review:
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+ \usepackage{icml2026}
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+
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+ % For preprint, use
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+ % \usepackage[preprint]{icml2026}
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+
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+ % If accepted, instead use the following line for the camera-ready submission:
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+ % \usepackage[accepted]{icml2026}
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+
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+ \usepackage{amsmath}
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+ \usepackage{amssymb}
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+ \usepackage{mathtools}
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+ \usepackage{amsthm}
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+
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+
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+ % if you use cleveref..
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+ \usepackage[capitalize,noabbrev]{cleveref}
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+
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+ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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+ % THEOREMS
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+ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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+ \theoremstyle{plain}
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+ \newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}[section]
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+ \newtheorem{proposition}[theorem]{Proposition}
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+ \newtheorem{lemma}[theorem]{Lemma}
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+ \newtheorem{corollary}[theorem]{Corollary}
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+ \theoremstyle{definition}
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+ \newtheorem{definition}[theorem]{Definition}
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+ \newtheorem{assumption}[theorem]{Assumption}
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+ \theoremstyle{remark}
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+ \newtheorem{remark}[theorem]{Remark}
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+
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+ % Todonotes is useful during development; simply uncomment the next line
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+ % and comment out the line below the next line to turn off comments
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+ %\usepackage[disable,textsize=tiny]{todonotes}
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+ \usepackage[textsize=tiny]{todonotes}
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+
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+ % The \icmltitle you define below is probably too long as a header.
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+ % Therefore, a short form for the running title is supplied here:
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+ \icmltitlerunning{Submission and Formatting Instructions for ICML 2026}
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+
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+ \begin{document}
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+
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+ \twocolumn[
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+ \icmltitle{Submission and Formatting Instructions for \\
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+ International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML 2026)}
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+
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+ % It is OKAY to include author information, even for blind submissions: the
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+ % style file will automatically remove it for you unless you've provided
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+ % the [accepted] option to the icml2026 package.
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+
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+ % List of affiliations: The first argument should be a (short) identifier you
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+ % will use later to specify author affiliations Academic affiliations
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+ % should list Department, University, City, Region, Country Industry
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+ % affiliations should list Company, City, Region, Country
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+
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+ % You can specify symbols, otherwise they are numbered in order. Ideally, you
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+ % should not use this facility. Affiliations will be numbered in order of
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+ % appearance and this is the preferred way.
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+ \icmlsetsymbol{equal}{*}
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+
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+ \begin{icmlauthorlist}
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+ \icmlauthor{Firstname1 Lastname1}{equal,yyy}
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+ \icmlauthor{Firstname2 Lastname2}{equal,yyy,comp}
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+ \icmlauthor{Firstname3 Lastname3}{comp}
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+ \icmlauthor{Firstname4 Lastname4}{sch}
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+ \icmlauthor{Firstname5 Lastname5}{yyy}
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+ \icmlauthor{Firstname6 Lastname6}{sch,yyy,comp}
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+ \icmlauthor{Firstname7 Lastname7}{comp}
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+ %\icmlauthor{}{sch}
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+ \icmlauthor{Firstname8 Lastname8}{sch}
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+ \icmlauthor{Firstname8 Lastname8}{yyy,comp}
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+ %\icmlauthor{}{sch}
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+ %\icmlauthor{}{sch}
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+ \end{icmlauthorlist}
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+
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+ \icmlaffiliation{yyy}{Department of XXX, University of YYY, Location, Country}
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+ \icmlaffiliation{comp}{Company Name, Location, Country}
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+ \icmlaffiliation{sch}{School of ZZZ, Institute of WWW, Location, Country}
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+
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+ \icmlcorrespondingauthor{Firstname1 Lastname1}{first1.last1@xxx.edu}
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+ \icmlcorrespondingauthor{Firstname2 Lastname2}{first2.last2@www.uk}
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+
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+ % You may provide any keywords that you find helpful for describing your
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+ % paper; these are used to populate the "keywords" metadata in the PDF but
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+ % will not be shown in the document
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+ \icmlkeywords{Machine Learning, ICML}
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+
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+ \vskip 0.3in
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+ ]
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+
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+ % this must go after the closing bracket ] following \twocolumn[ ...
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+
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+ % This command actually creates the footnote in the first column listing the
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+ % affiliations and the copyright notice. The command takes one argument, which
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+ % is text to display at the start of the footnote. The \icmlEqualContribution
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+ % command is standard text for equal contribution. Remove it (just {}) if you
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+ % do not need this facility.
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+
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+ % Use ONE of the following lines. DO NOT remove the command.
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+ % If you have no special notice, KEEP empty braces:
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+ \printAffiliationsAndNotice{} % no special notice (required even if empty)
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+ % Or, if applicable, use the standard equal contribution text:
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+ % \printAffiliationsAndNotice{\icmlEqualContribution}
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+
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+ \begin{abstract}
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+ This document provides a basic paper template and submission guidelines.
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+ Abstracts must be a single paragraph, ideally between 4--6 sentences long.
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+ Gross violations will trigger corrections at the camera-ready phase.
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+ \end{abstract}
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+
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+ \section{Electronic Submission}
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+
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+ Submission to ICML 2026 will be entirely electronic, via a web site
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+ (not email). Information about the submission process and \LaTeX\ templates
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+ are available on the conference web site at:
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+ \begin{center}
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+ \texttt{http://icml.cc/}
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+ \end{center}
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+
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+ The guidelines below will be enforced for initial submissions and
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+ camera-ready copies. Here is a brief summary:
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+ \begin{itemize}
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+ \item Submissions must be in PDF\@.
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+ \item If your paper has appendices, submit the appendix together with the
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+ main body and the references \textbf{as a single file}. Reviewers will not
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+ look for appendices as a separate PDF file. So if you submit such an extra
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+ file, reviewers will very likely miss it.
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+ \item Page limit: The main body of the paper has to be fitted to 8 pages,
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+ excluding references and appendices; the space for the latter two is not
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+ limited in pages, but the total file size may not exceed 10MB. For the
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+ final version of the paper, authors can add one extra page to the main
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+ body.
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+ \item \textbf{Do not include author information or acknowledgements} in your
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+ initial submission.
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+ \item Your paper should be in \textbf{10 point Times font}.
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+ \item Make sure your PDF file only uses Type-1 fonts.
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+ \item Place figure captions \emph{under} the figure (and omit titles from
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+ inside the graphic file itself). Place table captions \emph{over} the
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+ table.
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+ \item References must include page numbers whenever possible and be as
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+ complete as possible. Place multiple citations in chronological order.
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+ \item Do not alter the style template; in particular, do not compress the
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+ paper format by reducing the vertical spaces.
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+ \item Keep your abstract brief and self-contained, one paragraph and roughly
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+ 4--6 sentences. Gross violations will require correction at the
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+ camera-ready phase. The title should have content words capitalized.
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+ \end{itemize}
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+
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+ \subsection{Submitting Papers}
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+
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+ \textbf{Anonymous Submission:} ICML uses double-blind review: no identifying
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+ author information may appear on the title page or in the paper
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+ itself. \cref{author info} gives further details.
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+
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+ \medskip
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+
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+ Authors must provide their manuscripts in \textbf{PDF} format.
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+ Furthermore, please make sure that files contain only embedded Type-1 fonts
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+ (e.g.,~using the program \texttt{pdffonts} in linux or using
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+ File/DocumentProperties/Fonts in Acrobat). Other fonts (like Type-3)
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+ might come from graphics files imported into the document.
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+
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+ Authors using \textbf{Word} must convert their document to PDF\@. Most
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+ of the latest versions of Word have the facility to do this
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+ automatically. Submissions will not be accepted in Word format or any
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+ format other than PDF\@. Really. We're not joking. Don't send Word.
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+
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+ Those who use \textbf{\LaTeX} should avoid including Type-3 fonts.
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+ Those using \texttt{latex} and \texttt{dvips} may need the following
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+ two commands:
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+
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+ {\footnotesize
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+ \begin{verbatim}
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+ dvips -Ppdf -tletter -G0 -o paper.ps paper.dvi
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+ ps2pdf paper.ps
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+ \end{verbatim}}
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+ It is a zero following the ``-G'', which tells dvips to use
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+ the config.pdf file. Newer \TeX\ distributions don't always need this
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+ option.
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+
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+ Using \texttt{pdflatex} rather than \texttt{latex}, often gives better
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+ results. This program avoids the Type-3 font problem, and supports more
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+ advanced features in the \texttt{microtype} package.
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+
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+ \textbf{Graphics files} should be a reasonable size, and included from
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+ an appropriate format. Use vector formats (.eps/.pdf) for plots,
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+ lossless bitmap formats (.png) for raster graphics with sharp lines, and
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+ jpeg for photo-like images.
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+
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+ The style file uses the \texttt{hyperref} package to make clickable
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+ links in documents. If this causes problems for you, add
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+ \texttt{nohyperref} as one of the options to the \texttt{icml2026}
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+ usepackage statement.
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+
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+ \subsection{Submitting Final Camera-Ready Copy}
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+
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+ The final versions of papers accepted for publication should follow the
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+ same format and naming convention as initial submissions, except that
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+ author information (names and affiliations) should be given. See
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+ \cref{final author} for formatting instructions.
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+
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+ The footnote, ``Preliminary work. Under review by the International
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+ Conference on Machine Learning (ICML). Do not distribute.'' must be
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+ modified to ``\textit{Proceedings of the
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+ $\mathit{43}^{rd}$ International Conference on Machine Learning},
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+ Seoul, South Korea, PMLR 306, 2026.
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+ Copyright 2026 by the author(s).''
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+
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+ For those using the \textbf{\LaTeX} style file, this change (and others) is
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+ handled automatically by simply changing
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+ $\mathtt{\backslash usepackage\{icml2026\}}$ to
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+ $$\mathtt{\backslash usepackage[accepted]\{icml2026\}}$$
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+ Authors using \textbf{Word} must edit the
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+ footnote on the first page of the document themselves.
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+
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+ Camera-ready copies should have the title of the paper as running head
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+ on each page except the first one. The running title consists of a
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+ single line centered above a horizontal rule which is $1$~point thick.
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+ The running head should be centered, bold and in $9$~point type. The
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+ rule should be $10$~points above the main text. For those using the
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+ \textbf{\LaTeX} style file, the original title is automatically set as running
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+ head using the \texttt{fancyhdr} package which is included in the ICML
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+ 2026 style file package. In case that the original title exceeds the
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+ size restrictions, a shorter form can be supplied by using
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+
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+ \verb|\icmltitlerunning{...}|
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+
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+ just before $\mathtt{\backslash begin\{document\}}$.
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+ Authors using \textbf{Word} must edit the header of the document themselves.
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+
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+ \section{Format of the Paper}
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+
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+ All submissions must follow the specified format.
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+
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+ \subsection{Dimensions}
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+
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+ The text of the paper should be formatted in two columns, with an
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+ overall width of 6.75~inches, height of 9.0~inches, and 0.25~inches
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+ between the columns. The left margin should be 0.75~inches and the top
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+ margin 1.0~inch (2.54~cm). The right and bottom margins will depend on
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+ whether you print on US letter or A4 paper, but all final versions
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+ must be produced for US letter size.
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+ Do not write anything on the margins.
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+
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+ The paper body should be set in 10~point type with a vertical spacing
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+ of 11~points. Please use Times typeface throughout the text.
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+
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+ \subsection{Title}
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+
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+ The paper title should be set in 14~point bold type and centered
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+ between two horizontal rules that are 1~point thick, with 1.0~inch
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+ between the top rule and the top edge of the page. Capitalize the
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+ first letter of content words and put the rest of the title in lower
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+ case.
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+ You can use TeX math in the title (we suggest sparingly),
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+ but no custom macros, images, or other TeX commands.
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+ Please make sure that accents, special characters, etc., are entered using
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+ TeX commands and not using non-English characters.
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+
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+ \subsection{Author Information for Submission}
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+ \label{author info}
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+
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+ ICML uses double-blind review, so author information must not appear. If
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+ you are using \LaTeX\/ and the \texttt{icml2026.sty} file, use
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+ \verb+\icmlauthor{...}+ to specify authors and \verb+\icmlaffiliation{...}+
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+ to specify affiliations. (Read the TeX code used to produce this document for
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+ an example usage.) The author information will not be printed unless
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+ \texttt{accepted} is passed as an argument to the style file. Submissions that
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+ include the author information will not be reviewed.
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+
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+ \subsubsection{Self-Citations}
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+
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+ If you are citing published papers for which you are an author, refer
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+ to yourself in the third person. In particular, do not use phrases
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+ that reveal your identity (e.g., ``in previous work \cite{langley00}, we
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+ have shown \ldots'').
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+
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+ Do not anonymize citations in the reference section. The only exception are manuscripts that are
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+ not yet published (e.g., under submission). If you choose to refer to
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+ such unpublished manuscripts \cite{anonymous}, anonymized copies have
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+ to be submitted
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+ as Supplementary Material via OpenReview\@. However, keep in mind that an ICML
304
+ paper should be self contained and should contain sufficient detail
305
+ for the reviewers to evaluate the work. In particular, reviewers are
306
+ not required to look at the Supplementary Material when writing their
307
+ review (they are not required to look at more than the first $8$ pages of the submitted document).
308
+
309
+ \subsubsection{Camera-Ready Author Information}
310
+ \label{final author}
311
+
312
+ If a paper is accepted, a final camera-ready copy must be prepared.
313
+ %
314
+ For camera-ready papers, author information should start 0.3~inches below the
315
+ bottom rule surrounding the title. The authors' names should appear in 10~point
316
+ bold type, in a row, separated by white space, and centered. Author names should
317
+ not be broken across lines. Unbolded superscripted numbers, starting 1, should
318
+ be used to refer to affiliations.
319
+
320
+ Affiliations should be numbered in the order of appearance. A single footnote
321
+ block of text should be used to list all the affiliations. (Academic
322
+ affiliations should list Department, University, City, State/Region, Country.
323
+ Similarly for industrial affiliations.)
324
+
325
+ Each distinct affiliations should be listed once. If an author has multiple
326
+ affiliations, multiple superscripts should be placed after the name, separated
327
+ by thin spaces. If the authors would like to highlight equal contribution by
328
+ multiple first authors, those authors should have an asterisk placed after their
329
+ name in superscript, and the term ``\textsuperscript{*}Equal contribution"
330
+ should be placed in the footnote block ahead of the list of affiliations. A
331
+ list of corresponding authors and their emails (in the format Full Name
332
+ \textless{}email@domain.com\textgreater{}) can follow the list of affiliations.
333
+ Ideally only one or two names should be listed.
334
+
335
+ A sample file with author names is included in the ICML2026 style file
336
+ package. Turn on the \texttt{[accepted]} option to the stylefile to
337
+ see the names rendered. All of the guidelines above are implemented
338
+ by the \LaTeX\ style file.
339
+
340
+ \subsection{Abstract}
341
+
342
+ The paper abstract should begin in the left column, 0.4~inches below the final
343
+ address. The heading `Abstract' should be centered, bold, and in 11~point type.
344
+ The abstract body should use 10~point type, with a vertical spacing of
345
+ 11~points, and should be indented 0.25~inches more than normal on left-hand and
346
+ right-hand margins. Insert 0.4~inches of blank space after the body. Keep your
347
+ abstract brief and self-contained, limiting it to one paragraph and roughly 4--6
348
+ sentences. Gross violations will require correction at the camera-ready phase.
349
+
350
+ \subsection{Partitioning the Text}
351
+
352
+ You should organize your paper into sections and paragraphs to help readers
353
+ place a structure on the material and understand its contributions.
354
+
355
+ \subsubsection{Sections and Subsections}
356
+
357
+ Section headings should be numbered, flush left, and set in 11~pt bold type
358
+ with the content words capitalized. Leave 0.25~inches of space before the
359
+ heading and 0.15~inches after the heading.
360
+
361
+ Similarly, subsection headings should be numbered, flush left, and set in 10~pt
362
+ bold type with the content words capitalized. Leave
363
+ 0.2~inches of space before the heading and 0.13~inches afterward.
364
+
365
+ Finally, subsubsection headings should be numbered, flush left, and set in
366
+ 10~pt small caps with the content words capitalized. Leave
367
+ 0.18~inches of space before the heading and 0.1~inches after the heading.
368
+
369
+ Please use no more than three levels of headings.
370
+
371
+ \subsubsection{Paragraphs and Footnotes}
372
+
373
+ Within each section or subsection, you should further partition the paper into
374
+ paragraphs. Do not indent the first line of a given paragraph, but insert a
375
+ blank line between succeeding ones.
376
+
377
+ You can use footnotes\footnote{Footnotes should be complete sentences.}
378
+ to provide readers with additional information about a topic without
379
+ interrupting the flow of the paper. Indicate footnotes with a number in the
380
+ text where the point is most relevant. Place the footnote in 9~point type at
381
+ the bottom of the column in which it appears. Precede the first footnote in a
382
+ column with a horizontal rule of 0.8~inches.\footnote{Multiple footnotes can
383
+ appear in each column, in the same order as they appear in the text,
384
+ but spread them across columns and pages if possible.}
385
+
386
+ \begin{figure}[ht]
387
+ \vskip 0.2in
388
+ \begin{center}
389
+ \centerline{\includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{icml_numpapers}}
390
+ \caption{
391
+ Historical locations and number of accepted papers for International
392
+ Machine Learning Conferences (ICML 1993 -- ICML 2008) and International
393
+ Workshops on Machine Learning (ML 1988 -- ML 1992). At the time this
394
+ figure was produced, the number of accepted papers for ICML 2008 was
395
+ unknown and instead estimated.
396
+ }
397
+ \label{icml-historical}
398
+ \end{center}
399
+ \end{figure}
400
+
401
+ \subsection{Figures}
402
+
403
+ You may want to include figures in the paper to illustrate your approach and
404
+ results. Such artwork should be centered, legible, and separated from the text.
405
+ Lines should be dark and at least 0.5~points thick for purposes of
406
+ reproduction, and text should not appear on a gray background.
407
+
408
+ Label all distinct components of each figure. If the figure takes the form of a
409
+ graph, then give a name for each axis and include a legend that briefly
410
+ describes each curve. Do not include a title inside the figure; instead, the
411
+ caption should serve this function.
412
+
413
+ Number figures sequentially, placing the figure number and caption \emph{after}
414
+ the graphics, with at least 0.1~inches of space before the caption and
415
+ 0.1~inches after it, as in \cref{icml-historical}. The figure caption should be
416
+ set in 9~point type and centered unless it runs two or more lines, in which
417
+ case it should be flush left. You may float figures to the top or bottom of a
418
+ column, and you may set wide figures across both columns (use the environment
419
+ \texttt{figure*} in \LaTeX). Always place two-column figures at the top or
420
+ bottom of the page.
421
+
422
+ \subsection{Algorithms}
423
+
424
+ If you are using \LaTeX, please use the ``algorithm'' and ``algorithmic''
425
+ environments to format pseudocode. These require the corresponding stylefiles,
426
+ algorithm.sty and algorithmic.sty, which are supplied with this package.
427
+ \cref{alg:example} shows an example.
428
+
429
+ \begin{algorithm}[tb]
430
+ \caption{Bubble Sort}
431
+ \label{alg:example}
432
+ \begin{algorithmic}
433
+ \STATE {\bfseries Input:} data $x_i$, size $m$
434
+ \REPEAT
435
+ \STATE Initialize $noChange = true$.
436
+ \FOR{$i=1$ {\bfseries to} $m-1$}
437
+ \IF{$x_i > x_{i+1}$}
438
+ \STATE Swap $x_i$ and $x_{i+1}$
439
+ \STATE $noChange = false$
440
+ \ENDIF
441
+ \ENDFOR
442
+ \UNTIL{$noChange$ is $true$}
443
+ \end{algorithmic}
444
+ \end{algorithm}
445
+
446
+
447
+ \subsection{Tables}
448
+
449
+ You may also want to include tables that summarize material. Like figures,
450
+ these should be centered, legible, and numbered consecutively. However, place
451
+ the title \emph{above} the table with at least 0.1~inches of space before the
452
+ title and the same after it, as in \cref{sample-table}. The table title should
453
+ be set in 9~point type and centered unless it runs two or more lines, in which
454
+ case it should be flush left.
455
+
456
+ % Note use of \abovespace and \belowspace to get reasonable spacing
457
+ % above and below tabular lines.
458
+
459
+ \begin{table}[t]
460
+ \caption{Classification accuracies for naive Bayes and flexible
461
+ Bayes on various data sets.}
462
+ \label{sample-table}
463
+ \begin{center}
464
+ \begin{small}
465
+ \begin{sc}
466
+ \begin{tabular}{lcccr}
467
+ \toprule
468
+ Data set & Naive & Flexible & Better? \\
469
+ \midrule
470
+ Breast & 95.9$\pm$ 0.2 & 96.7$\pm$ 0.2 & $\surd$ \\
471
+ Cleveland & 83.3$\pm$ 0.6 & 80.0$\pm$ 0.6 & $\times$ \\
472
+ Glass2 & 61.9$\pm$ 1.4 & 83.8$\pm$ 0.7 & $\surd$ \\
473
+ Credit & 74.8$\pm$ 0.5 & 78.3$\pm$ 0.6 & \\
474
+ Horse & 73.3$\pm$ 0.9 & 69.7$\pm$ 1.0 & $\times$ \\
475
+ Meta & 67.1$\pm$ 0.6 & 76.5$\pm$ 0.5 & $\surd$ \\
476
+ Pima & 75.1$\pm$ 0.6 & 73.9$\pm$ 0.5 & \\
477
+ Vehicle & 44.9$\pm$ 0.6 & 61.5$\pm$ 0.4 & $\surd$ \\
478
+ \bottomrule
479
+ \end{tabular}
480
+ \end{sc}
481
+ \end{small}
482
+ \end{center}
483
+ \vskip -0.1in
484
+ \end{table}
485
+
486
+ Tables contain textual material, whereas figures contain graphical material.
487
+ Specify the contents of each row and column in the table's topmost row. Again,
488
+ you may float tables to a column's top or bottom, and set wide tables across
489
+ both columns. Place two-column tables at the top or bottom of the page.
490
+
491
+ \subsection{Theorems and Such}
492
+ The preferred way is to number definitions, propositions, lemmas, etc.
493
+ consecutively, within sections, as shown below.
494
+ \begin{definition}
495
+ \label{def:inj}
496
+ A function $f:X \to Y$ is injective if for any $x,y\in X$ different, $f(x)\ne
497
+ f(y)$.
498
+ \end{definition}
499
+ Using \cref{def:inj} we immediate get the following result:
500
+ \begin{proposition}
501
+ If $f$ is injective mapping a set $X$ to another set $Y$,
502
+ the cardinality of $Y$ is at least as large as that of $X$
503
+ \end{proposition}
504
+ \begin{proof}
505
+ Left as an exercise to the reader.
506
+ \end{proof}
507
+ \cref{lem:usefullemma} stated next will prove to be useful.
508
+ \begin{lemma}
509
+ \label{lem:usefullemma}
510
+ For any $f:X \to Y$ and $g:Y\to Z$ injective functions, $f \circ g$ is
511
+ injective.
512
+ \end{lemma}
513
+ \begin{theorem}
514
+ \label{thm:bigtheorem}
515
+ If $f:X\to Y$ is bijective, the cardinality of $X$ and $Y$ are the same.
516
+ \end{theorem}
517
+ An easy corollary of \cref{thm:bigtheorem} is the following:
518
+ \begin{corollary}
519
+ If $f:X\to Y$ is bijective,
520
+ the cardinality of $X$ is at least as large as that of $Y$.
521
+ \end{corollary}
522
+ \begin{assumption}
523
+ The set $X$ is finite.
524
+ \label{ass:xfinite}
525
+ \end{assumption}
526
+ \begin{remark}
527
+ According to some, it is only the finite case (cf. \cref{ass:xfinite}) that
528
+ is interesting.
529
+ \end{remark}
530
+ %restatable
531
+
532
+ \subsection{Citations and References}
533
+
534
+ Please use APA reference format regardless of your formatter or word processor.
535
+ If you rely on the \LaTeX\/ bibliographic facility, use \texttt{natbib.sty} and
536
+ \texttt{icml2026.bst} included in the style-file package to obtain this format.
537
+
538
+ Citations within the text should include the authors' last names and year. If
539
+ the authors' names are included in the sentence, place only the year in
540
+ parentheses, for example when referencing Arthur Samuel's pioneering work
541
+ \yrcite{Samuel59}. Otherwise place the entire reference in parentheses with the
542
+ authors and year separated by a comma \cite{Samuel59}. List multiple references
543
+ separated by semicolons \cite{kearns89,Samuel59,mitchell80}. Use the `et~al.'
544
+ construct only for citations with three or more authors or after listing all
545
+ authors to a publication in an earlier reference \cite{MachineLearningI}.
546
+
547
+ Authors should cite their own work in the third person in the initial version
548
+ of their paper submitted for blind review. Please refer to \cref{author info}
549
+ for detailed instructions on how to cite your own papers.
550
+
551
+ Use an unnumbered first-level section heading for the references, and use a
552
+ hanging indent style, with the first line of the reference flush against the
553
+ left margin and subsequent lines indented by 10 points. The references at the
554
+ end of this document give examples for journal articles \cite{Samuel59},
555
+ conference publications \cite{langley00}, book chapters \cite{Newell81}, books
556
+ \cite{DudaHart2nd}, edited volumes \cite{MachineLearningI}, technical reports
557
+ \cite{mitchell80}, and dissertations \cite{kearns89}.
558
+
559
+ Alphabetize references by the surnames of the first authors, with single author
560
+ entries preceding multiple author entries. Order references for the same
561
+ authors by year of publication, with the earliest first. Make sure that each
562
+ reference includes all relevant information (e.g., page numbers).
563
+
564
+ Please put some effort into making references complete, presentable, and
565
+ consistent, e.g. use the actual current name of authors. If using bibtex,
566
+ please protect capital letters of names and abbreviations in titles, for
567
+ example, use \{B\}ayesian or \{L\}ipschitz in your .bib file.
568
+
569
+ \section*{Accessibility}
570
+
571
+ Authors are kindly asked to make their submissions as accessible as possible
572
+ for everyone including people with disabilities and sensory or neurological
573
+ differences. Tips of how to achieve this and what to pay attention to will be
574
+ provided on the conference website \url{http://icml.cc/}.
575
+
576
+ \section*{Software and Data}
577
+
578
+ If a paper is accepted, we strongly encourage the publication of software and
579
+ data with the camera-ready version of the paper whenever appropriate. This can
580
+ be done by including a URL in the camera-ready copy. However, \textbf{do not}
581
+ include URLs that reveal your institution or identity in your submission for
582
+ review. Instead, provide an anonymous URL or upload the material as
583
+ ``Supplementary Material'' into the OpenReview reviewing system. Note that
584
+ reviewers are not required to look at this material when writing their review.
585
+
586
+ % Acknowledgements should only appear in the accepted version.
587
+ \section*{Acknowledgements}
588
+
589
+ \textbf{Do not} include acknowledgements in the initial version of the paper
590
+ submitted for blind review.
591
+
592
+ If a paper is accepted, the final camera-ready version can (and usually should)
593
+ include acknowledgements. Such acknowledgements should be placed at the end of
594
+ the section, in an unnumbered section that does not count towards the paper
595
+ page limit. Typically, this will include thanks to reviewers who gave useful
596
+ comments, to colleagues who contributed to the ideas, and to funding agencies
597
+ and corporate sponsors that provided financial support.
598
+
599
+ \section*{Impact Statement}
600
+
601
+ Authors are \textbf{required} to include a statement of the potential broader
602
+ impact of their work, including its ethical aspects and future societal
603
+ consequences. This statement should be in an unnumbered section at the end of
604
+ the paper (co-located with Acknowledgements -- the two may appear in either
605
+ order, but both must be before References), and does not count toward the paper
606
+ page limit. In many cases, where the ethical impacts and expected societal
607
+ implications are those that are well established when advancing the field of
608
+ Machine Learning, substantial discussion is not required, and a simple
609
+ statement such as the following will suffice:
610
+
611
+ ``This paper presents work whose goal is to advance the field of Machine
612
+ Learning. There are many potential societal consequences of our work, none
613
+ which we feel must be specifically highlighted here.''
614
+
615
+ The above statement can be used verbatim in such cases, but we encourage
616
+ authors to think about whether there is content which does warrant further
617
+ discussion, as this statement will be apparent if the paper is later flagged
618
+ for ethics review.
619
+
620
+ % In the unusual situation where you want a paper to appear in the
621
+ % references without citing it in the main text, use \nocite
622
+ \nocite{langley00}
623
+
624
+ \bibliography{example_paper}
625
+ \bibliographystyle{icml2026}
626
+
627
+ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
628
+ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
629
+ % APPENDIX
630
+ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
631
+ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
632
+ \newpage
633
+ \appendix
634
+ \onecolumn
635
+ \section{You \emph{can} have an appendix here.}
636
+
637
+ You can have as much text here as you want. The main body must be at most $8$
638
+ pages long. For the final version, one more page can be added. If you want, you
639
+ can use an appendix like this one.
640
+
641
+ The $\mathtt{\backslash onecolumn}$ command above can be kept in place if you
642
+ prefer a one-column appendix, or can be removed if you prefer a two-column
643
+ appendix. Apart from this possible change, the style (font size, spacing,
644
+ margins, page numbering, etc.) should be kept the same as the main body.
645
+ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
646
+ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
647
+
648
+ \end{document}
649
+
650
+ % This document was modified from the file originally made available by
651
+ % Pat Langley and Andrea Danyluk for ICML-2K. This version was created
652
+ % by Iain Murray in 2018, and modified by Alexandre Bouchard in
653
+ % 2019 and 2021 and by Csaba Szepesvari, Gang Niu and Sivan Sabato in 2022.
654
+ % Modified again in 2023 and 2024 by Sivan Sabato and Jonathan Scarlett.
655
+ % Previous contributors include Dan Roy, Lise Getoor and Tobias
656
+ % Scheffer, which was slightly modified from the 2010 version by
657
+ % Thorsten Joachims & Johannes Fuernkranz, slightly modified from the
658
+ % 2009 version by Kiri Wagstaff and Sam Roweis's 2008 version, which is
659
+ % slightly modified from Prasad Tadepalli's 2007 version which is a
660
+ % lightly changed version of the previous year's version by Andrew
661
+ % Moore, which was in turn edited from those of Kristian Kersting and
662
+ % Codrina Lauth. Alex Smola contributed to the algorithmic style files.