My Library is a citation management tool that makes it easy to collect and organize content in the SPIE Digital Library.
Find a publication and select the “Save to My Library” button. You can then create or add the publication to a specific folder. An SPIE account is required to use this feature.
To access My Library, sign in with your SPIE account and click the arrow next to your name, located in the black bar at the upper right of the page, then select My Library.
The My Library section of your account is unrelated to your ability to access subscription content. Anyone with an SPIE account can use this tool, regardless of individual or institutional subscription status.
Yes! Both a user guide and an introductory video are available to learn more about using the SPIE Digital Library.
The SPIE Digital Library contains approximately:
513,000+ SPIE Conference Proceedings (papers, recorded presentations, and posters)
12,000+ volumes of SPIE Conference Proceedings
40,000+ SPIE Journal articles
460+ eBooks
Conference Proceedings
SPIE has published over 12,000 volumes of Conference Proceedings since 1963, with more than 513,000 papers. Currently, over 350 new Proceedings volumes and over 18,000 new papers/presentations are published annually.
Journals
The SPIE Digital Library includes all papers published since 1962 in SPIE's peer-reviewed Journals:
Advanced Photonics (2019-)
Advanced Photonics Nexus (2022-)
Journal of Applied Remote Sensing (2007-)
Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems (2015-)
Journal of Biomedical Optics (1996-)
Journal of Electronic Imaging, co-published with IS&T (1992-)
Journal of Medical Imaging (2014-)
Journal of Micro/Nanopatterning, Materials, and Metrology (2002-)
Journal of Nanophotonics (2007-)
Journal of Optical Microsystems (2021-)
Journal of Photonics for Energy (2011-)
Neurophotonics (2014-)
Optical Engineering (1962-)
Photonics Insights (2022-)
eBooks
The SPIE Digital Library includes more than 460 eBooks in four series, with 25 new titles added annually: SPIE Press Monographs, Tutorial Texts, Spotlight Series, and Field Guides.
The eBooks on the SPIE Digital Library are available only to users from institutions with eBooks subscriptions. Individuals who are not affiliated with subscribing institutions may purchase eBooks on SPIE.org; click any title to select among the available formats.
For more information, see About the SPIE Digital Library.
For ebooks in the Field Guide series and the Spotlight Series, users can download the entire ebook as a PDF. These ebooks tend to be short, with a small file size.
For ebooks in the Press Monograph series and Tutorial Text series, the ability to download the entire ebook as a PDF is not currently supported, so the chapters must be individually downloaded.
Please note that the ability to download ebook content from the SPIE Digital Library is available only to users from institutions with ebooks subscriptions. Individuals who are not affiliated with subscribing institutions may instead purchase ebooks on SPIE.org; click any title to select among the available print and electronic formats.
The "Open Access" icon means that the author of the paper paid for it to be accessible to everyone in order to promote knowledge transfer, education, and awareness of technology and industry developments in optics and photonics. A subscription is not required to download an article marked Open Access. To find out more about Open Access publications from SPIE, please see "SPIE Open Access and Free Resources."
Front Matter for older (2001 and earlier) volumes has not been digitized and published on the SPIE Digital Library. This material may be added in the future.
SPIE's Milestone Series is not available on the SPIE Digital Library. You can view the full list of Milestones and purchase print volumes on the SPIE.org "Milestone Series" webpage.
Some Proceedings volumes are not available in the SPIE Digital Library due to conference cancellation or lack of electronic publishing rights. Please see Proceedings Volumes Not Available Online for a list of these volumes and more information.
SPIE Journals and Proceedings follow an e-First publication model and thus use citation identifiers (CIDs) in place of traditional page numbering. A unique CID is assigned to each paper at the time of online publication, allowing us to build an online journal issue or proceedings volume one paper at a time, while retaining the ability to segment tables of contents by paper type or subject area. Utilization of CIDs allows papers to be fully citable as soon as they are published online, and connects the same identifier to all online and print versions of the publication.
In the SPIE Digital Library, the CID is displayed both within the metadata at the top of the paper's page (just beneath the authors' names), and within the full citation at the bottom of the page. In the full-text PDF file available online and in the printed article, the CID appears on each page of the paper; appended at the end of the CID is a hyphen followed by a consecutive page number. As an example, for the journal article with CID 023407, the PDF or printed pages would carry this page numbering: 023407-1, 023407-2, 023407-3, etc. The hyphen and additional digits should not be used when citing an article.
SPIE Journals use a six-digit CID article numbering system structured as follows:
Proceedings of SPIE use a seven-digit CID article numbering system structured as follows:
The first five digits correspond to the SPIE volume number.
The last two digits indicate publication order within the volume using a Base 36 numbering system employing both numerals and letters. These two-number sets start with 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 0A, 0B … 0Z, followed by 10-1Z, 20-2Z, etc.
To find the publication date of record for a Journal article or Conference Proceeding paper, navigate to that article's page and note the date above the title. The date is also included within the paper's citation, which appears at the very bottom of the page.
For Conference Proceedings, please note that the dates at the top of the volume's Table of Contents page indicate the first and last days of that conference -- not the publication date of the papers within that volume. The date within the individual paper's citation is the publication date of record, being the date that the manuscript was published on the SPIE Digital Library.
Each article or proceeding's page will include a tab labelled "Cited by."
The "Cited by" tab offers a link to the paper's search result in Google Scholar, where you can view all of the citations to the paper as analyzed by Google Scholar.
The "Cited by" tab may also have a list of citations from Lens.org or CrossRef; these lists may differ from Google Scholar's list of citations, as each tool analyzes citations slightly differently.
The "Cited by" tab may also have a list of Citing Patents, with this information supplied by Lens.org.