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Citation systems
By
Steve Draper,
Department of Psychology,
University of Glasgow.
ToDo
Xref to here from crs.html
fix secondary refs issues in a) crs.html; b) L3 handbook?
DOI: start adding to my bibs; create vi macros for this, both for link
and btn UIDs
Do table
Do citation error lit. section.
A: The family of citation systems
Occasionally if I stumble across a citation format that is completely new to
me, I feel like an alien from another academic planet.
There is a great
wikiP page on
citation systems, summarising briefly the range in use; and giving me some
sense of where the bit I'm familiar with fits into a full landscape of
alternative systems. The only thing lacking is a diagram to sum the family up,
and that is the main purpose I'm attempting in this section. For all else,
read the wikiP entry.
The main source of strangeness to students is the short form of reference in
the text e.g. numbers for footnotes, or author-date. Least strange are the
details of the formats of the long citations in reference lists; and only some
trouble with knowing whereabouts to find that long information. Thus the table
here focusses primarily on the variations in short forms (or "keys").
I'll just note here that "Vancouver style" and "Harvard style" are not
maintained, exact referencing systems, but generic families of styles named
partly to give historical credit. Other styles mentioned here are fully
specified ones.
Further explanations are given, if you care, below the main table.
|
Table 1. Families of citation systems.
Organised by a) key type; b) Target location and target sort order
Informative keys |
Uninformative keys |
No keys |
|
Parenthetical |
Vancouver [keys are sequential numbers] |
[Keys are non-alphanumeric symbols] |
|
Key abbreviates Author-date |
Harvard = Author-date e.g. Smith (1933) |
Author-title e.g. (Austen Persuasion) |
IEEE / eng. no footnotes, all in the bib. "... word [3]" |
Footnote "word3" |
Footnote "word*" |
Citations are wholly in-line |
AMS e.g. [SM33] Ex.7 Case 1 |
APA and others Ex.3 Case 2 |
MLA Ex.N Case 3 |
Classical: ≈ ? title only E.g.
"Republic, V, 473c"
Ex.N Case 4 |
Linnaeus No bib; strong abbreviation Ex.N Case 5 |
Reference list sorted by Author Ex.N Case 6 |
Reference list sorted by number AMA
Ex.2,5 Case 7 |
Footnote and bib.
Footnote with keys, long form reference list; author-title keys between them Ex.N
Case 8 |
Long footnote, short footnotes refer back to earlier note.
e.g. "op.cit", "ibid" Ex.N Case 9 |
Footnotes on page only; no bib. Phil.? Ex.N Case 10 |
Footnotes with symbolic keys e.g.
* † ¶ Ex.N Case 11 |
Bluebook for law court documents Ex.8 Case 12 |
2 | 2 | 2 | ? | 1 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
Number of places |
bib | bib | bib | ? | main text | bib | bib | bib | footnote | footnote | footnote | main text |
Fullest info in which place |
1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Number of key systems |
no | yes | yes | yes | - | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | - |
Ref list sorted by key |
author | author | author | author | - | author | number | author | - | - | - | - |
Ref list sorted by: |
Table 4. Abbreviations
Type |
Abbrev. |
% |
Expansion |
None |
|
100 |
|
Moderate |
Smith |
36 |
Jonas F. Smith |
Substantial | Am.j.Phys |
33 |
American journal of physics |
Matt | 11 | The gospel according to St. Matthew |
Amoen. acad. 1. p.278 | 9 |
Linnæus, C. 1749. Amoenitates academicæ seu dissertationes
variæ physicæ, medicæ botanicæ antehac seorsim
editæ nunc collectæ et auctæ cum tabulis
æneis.
[Vol. 1]. - pp. [1-2], 1-563, Tab. I-XVII [= 1-17]. Holmiæ,
Lipsiæ. (Kiesewetter).
|
Radical |
[CFN06] |
10 |
Federico Camia, Luiz Renato G. Fontes, and Charles M. Newman, (2006) |
Gone |
[5] |
0 |
Not an abbreviation, just a symbol (full citation information in another place) |
Table 99. caption
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See also:
from this paper
Expansions, explanations, further notes on citation systems
I shall refer to as "documents" the pieces of writing using citation systems
e.g. books, articles in journals. a.k.a. "paper", "article" ...
Explain my dismissal or alt. treatment of Williams' implicit/explicit, and
his direct/indirect.
The attributes of citation systems expressed in the bottom rows of table 1
1. Number of places
There are three kinds of place within a document where citation information
may appear:
- In the main text (in-line). ("Main text")
- On the same page: ("Other text on page")
- In a footnote
- In a marginal note
- At the end
- List of references ("bib").
- List of end notes
(N.B. of course, information may also be held outside the document e.g. in
refrence works sometimes necessary to supplement what the document holds
explicitly.)
2. Which place is the fullest citation information held in?
I.e. are the fullest details in the bib, a footnote, or in the main text?
3. Number of systems of keys
Unless the citation information is all in one place, then there is some short
form or "key" that refers to the entry in another place that holds the
corresponding information. I.e. key → destination system.
E.g. "Smith (1933)" refers to the entry in the reference list of references,
sorted by author, and beginning "Smith,A.B. (1933)".
If more than 2 places are involved, then there must be more than one system of
keys involved in citation in the same document.
(If, as is fairly common, there is more than one kind of information with a key
system being used, then also there will be more than one system of
keys involved in citation in the same document e.g. footnotes for author
affiliation, and author-date for citations. However most of this page is only
concerned with citation systems.)
4. The list of references is sorted first by what?
Lists of references must be sorted somehow, but by which (primarily)?
- Author
- Chronological (i.e. by date)
- Title
- Publisher
- Order they are mentioned in the text
- Order of numerical, sequential key numbers (footnote number)
5. Level of abbreviation in the (first) key
Various degrees of abbreviation may be found, as shown in table 4. The most extreme is where there
is now no trace of the original meaningful material, just an arbitrary symbol
or number containing no information about what is cited, only where to find it
("gone").
6. Parenthetical material interacting with citation information?: yes/no.
xx
xxx
xx
The number of places with citation information: in-line; on the page in a
note (marginal or footnote); bib, end list or notes.
Where is the fullest information: in: in-line, bib, note
Number of key → destination systems (in each document).
Usually one; sometimes two.
The reference list (bib) sorted by:
{author, chronologically (by date), title, numerical tag }
..
Where is the fullest information: in: in-line, bib, note
Parenthetical material interacting with citation information?: yes/no.
level of abbreviation in the key: {none, moderate, substantial, radical }
Some framing information for table 1
There are four places citation information may be placed:
- In-text and in-line;
- Footnotes OR marginal notes (at the foot / side of the same page);
- End notes;
- A "References" section at the end ("bib").
Keys are what I call the short formats for linking a bit of
information in one of those places to the corresponding bit in another of
them. In most cases there are two places used in a system; but there are cases
of one and of three places used together.
If footnotes and a bib are used then there could be two types of key
used: in-text → footnote, and footnote → bib.
Presupposed knowledge, implicit referencing
In citations, some knowledge may be presupposed and so not given anywhere in the
document itself.
One case is where citation standards use abbreviations of journal names e.g.
"Am. J. Phys" for "American Journal of Physics"
in the "long" format in the reference lists.
[??Check this; give e.g.s.]
Another case is that many disciplines presuppose some common cases and often
do not provide a citation. E.g. bible scholars will cite "Exodus 5:3" and not
mention that this is part of the bible, and not the name of the Leon Uris novel;
physicists will discuss special relativity and not cite Einstein;
biologists will discuss evolution but not cite Darwin's Origin of the
species.
Abbreviations
None.
Slightly e.g. author-date
Substantial e.g. Linnaeus, "ProcRoySoc" / "JsocPsy"
Radical: AB69
Linnaeus
Linnaeus introduced a citation style, which was used by others for a while but
is now disused, in which there was no reference list (bibliography) given; but
strongly abbreviated references only were given in the text.
Chin. Lagerstr. 42. f. 3
Exod. XX:4
Amoen. acad. 1. p.278
=> Linnæus, C. 1749. Amoenitates academicæ seu dissertationes
variæ physicæ, medicæ botanicæ antehac seorsim
editæ nunc collectæ et auctæ cum tabulis æneis.
[Vol. 1]. - pp. [1-2], 1-563, Tab. I-XVII [= 1-17]. Holmiæ,
Lipsiæ. (Kiesewetter).
Gron. lap.
=> Gronovius, J. F. 1740. Index supellectilis lapideæ, quam collegit
Johannes Fredericus Gronovius. - pp. [1], 1-29. Lugduni Batavorum.
Klein. dub. =>
Klein, J. T. 1743. Summa dubiorum circa classes qvadrupedum et amphibiorum in
celebris domini Caroli Linnæi systemate naturæ: sive naturalis
qvadrupedum historiæ promovendæ prodromus cum præludio de
crustatis. Adjecti discursus: I. De ruminantibus. II. De periodo vitæ
humanæ collato cum brutis. - pp. [1-2], 1-50, [1-2]. Lipsiæ.
(Gleditsch).
"In his work, Linnæus referred to about 400 different older zoological
works and used cryptic abbreviations. The information contained in these older
works is part of many species taxa descriptions. In 2002, when we started
working, there was no literature list (the basic work of zoological taxonomy
was published without any list of references). We (the AnimalBase project
team) have tried to detect the publications behind the Linnean abbreviations.
In some cases Linnæus seemed to have consulted different editions
published in different years, but with most cited works it is clear what was
meant."
from
source page.
Cases (used in tables above)
Case 1: AMS = American Mathematical Society. Bib and keys of form
"[AB13]"
Case 2: APA = American psychological Association
Case 3: MLA = Modern Languages Association
Case 4: Classical
Classical: ≈ ? title only
E.g.
"Plato discussed the principle of the philosopher-king Republic, V, 473c"
No author, and universal cross-edition numbering of pages, paragraphs etc.
for a given classical author.
Case 5: Linnaeus
Case 6: Ieee, alpha sorted list
Case 7: AMA = American Medical Association, nmb sorted list
Case 8: footnote
Case 9: opcit footnotes
Case 10: no bib, footnotes only
Case 11: symbols
Case 12: In legal writing for US court documents, as opposed to academic
law articles, citations (of precedents in other cases) are "direct" i.e. given
in full in-line, in the main body of text.
Bluebook refers to the USA system:
Bluebook.
Example articles (used in tables above)
Ex.1 doi:10.1108/00220411111183564
Williams article on citation in biosciences. Author-date citing.
Ex.2
DNA paper by Watson & Crick, 1953. Endnotes (footnote numbers).
Ex.3
Botany article reporting a new species of violet. Author-date.
Ex.4
BMJ: medical citing by footnotes
Ex.5
BMJ: medical citing by footnotes: public mental health
Ex.6
Chernin on Harvard citation system
BMJ: medical citing by footnotes: public mental health
Ex.7
AMS Maths research paper. e.g. [Aiz96], [BM10], [GPS10a].
Ex.8
Example of in-line full citation in (USA) legal documents.
Ex.9
A sample page from Linnaeus using his highly abbreviated in-line citations.
A list of many of Linnaeus' highly abbreviated in-line
citations, with full expansions worked out by contemporary scholars.
(The distinctive version of case 5, Linnaeus' citation method, is that no
bibilography with full citations was given in the document(s).)
Check and pick a better sample page: one that has definite ref.s on.
Ex.10
ISIS: xx
Ex.11
Philosophical Issues: xx
Ex.12
College English: xx
Ex.13
Arethusa: xx
Ex.14
PLATO: xx
Ex.15
GermanHistory: xx
Ex.16
PMLA: xx
Ex.17
APA: Friston (2012).
Some outer framing points
Parenthetical information
It is a general aspect of writing that some parts of it are much more
important than others, and authors spend considerable effort in both sorting
that out for themselves, and signalling to their readers which are which.
However in general, they decide on what most readers will want to see, and
that defines what will be the main body of their article.
But then many authors (but not others; in many disciplines, but not all) have
some extra details which they feel a minority of their readers would like to
see. Where to put this? Various common mechanisms are: a clause, sentence,
or more in parentheses; appendices; footnotes; "supplementary materials" in
some online journals. Often these are bigger than the "main" article: the
journal "Science" is a case in point of the last of these. In book
publishing, the second?? edition to Oliver Sacks' "Awakenings"?? has a preface
where the author confesses that his publisher had pointed out that his
footnotes had grown so large that half the text was now in footnotes:
shouldn't he move it into the main text?
Parenthetical information needs to be linked to its parent text by some
system of keys, broadly similar to citation systems.
Although this web page is about citation notations,
there is sometimes major overlap between the mechanism for that and the
mechanism for another need: what I will call "parenthetical information". The
classic case is in History, where a single system of footnotes carries both
citation of sources and many other comments.
In fact many style standards use footnotes to cover copyright notices,
Authors' affiliations, whom to direct correspondence to, etc.; and a separate
citation system that doesn't use footnotes; see next subsection.
There are many xx
Multiple systems of keys in one article
Two major reasons for having multiple key systems in a single article are:
a) Having one for parenthetical information e.g. author addresses,
and another for citations.
b) Having a 3-place citation system, and different key types for 1 → 2, and 2
→ 3.
Modern style standards often cover multiple citation methods
So you can't just say "APA" style and know that it requires just one key method.
B: False citations: the literature on citation errors
Demand
Why cite?
(From http://integrity.mit.edu/citing-your-sources/avoiding-plagiarism-cite-your-source)
- To point your readers to sources that may be useful to them.
- To allow your readers to check your sources, if there are questions.
- To show your readers that you have done your research.
- To give credit to others for work they have done.
Even if the demand for citing is artificially created, it is nevertheless
useful and used. Doing it helps other students, scholars, and researchers.
xxxx
C: My odd notes on APA style
DOIs should be give as last thing in a citation
e.g. "doi:10.1016/j.jad.2012.11.026" (and w/w/o a live link).
APA says: http://www.umuc.edu/library/libhow/apa_examples.cfm#secondary
no secondary sources: inline you mention the secondary, but only list the one
you got e.g. "Fred's study (as cited in Smith, 2005) .."
Can add in bib:
"(Original work written 1930-1934)"?
"(Original work published 1920)" appended to bib citation
http://rdc.libguides.com/content.php?pid=51657&sid=379131
"(Laplace, 1814/1951, p. 148)"
Laplace, P. S. (1951). A philosophical essay on probabilities
(F. W. Truscott & F. L. Emory, Trans.). New York, NY: Dover.
(Original work published 1814).
Ed means editor; ed. means edition
Trans. pp. Vol. No. Pt.; use arabic nmbs even if vol was in Roman.
Minimal capitalisation in titles: first char, start of subtitle,
proper names only.
Spaces before, after, and between initials.
E.g. "S. W. Draper" & "Draper, S. W. ".
Smith (1999) or Smith [ca. 1999] if only moderately certain.
Full-stop after: title; auth+date+(eds.); journal+vol+pp // publisher.
Publisher names: as short as possible e.g. "Erlbaum"
but "Harvard University Press".
Place, zip code: "Cambridge MA" if you are publishing in USA, else what
your journal likes locally. [APA section 6.30 p.187]
Parens around: date; Not-publisher; Ch. and pp for a ch in a book;
Not-pp,ch for journals.
Sq. brackets seem to be for a) describing something non-std [Brochure]
[Review of ....] [Editorial]; b) Approx info e.g. [ca. 1989] for an estimated
date. c) In general, used as parens inside parens.
Always give doi if available. Append to end of ref.; after full-stop,
with no full-stop of its own. " doi:10.3456/2345.45.245"
"Retrieved from http:e/t/c" as last element (no period).
In J.Strath (Ed. & trans.),
title [Editorial] if no author
Z: References
General
APA (2010)
Publication manual of the American Psychological Association
(6th ed.). (Washington: APA)
[Glasgow University library: GUL5; psychol B235 AME3]
wikiP page on citation systems
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citation
Lipson,C. (2011) Cite right: A quick guide to citation styles — MLA,
APA, Chicago, the sciences, professions, and more (2nd ed.).
(Chicago: University of Chicago press).
[Glasgow University library: GUL9; GenLit C300.F56 LIP]
Williams,R.B. (2011) "Citation systems in the biosciences: A history,
classification and descriptive terminology"
Journal of documentation vol.67 no.6 pp.995-1014
URL
doi:10.1108/00220411111183564
Citation error literature
Bugeja, Michael and Daniela V. Dimitrova. Vanishing Act: The Erosion of
Online Footnotes and Implications for Scholarship in the Digital Age. Duluth,
Minnesota: Litwin Books (2010)
Raymond Hubbard and J. Scott Armstrong (1994). "Replications and Extensions in
Marketing: Rarely Published But Quite Contrary".
International Journal of Research in Marketing 11 (3): 233-248.
doi:10.1016/0167-8116(94)90003-5.
Malcolm Wright and J. Scott Armstrong (2008). "The Ombudsman: Verification of
Citations: Fawlty Towers of Knowledge?". Interfaces (INFORMS) 38 (2): 125-139.
doi:10.1287/inte.1070.0317.
See here for more:
http://www.psy.gla.ac.uk/~steve/best/edujokes.html#badcite
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