Difference between revisions of "Bibliographic/Styles"
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===APA (American Psychological Association)=== | ===APA (American Psychological Association)=== | ||
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[http://www.fsu.edu/style_guides.html 5th edition (2001)] (brief [http://www.isr.bucknell.edu/Research_Tools/Citation_guides/ summary] of the APA citation style) | [http://www.fsu.edu/style_guides.html 5th edition (2001)] (brief [http://www.isr.bucknell.edu/Research_Tools/Citation_guides/ summary] of the APA citation style) | ||
Revision as of 10:45, 31 May 2006
Page Under Construction
Contents
- 1 Style Manuals and Related WebLinks
- 1.1 APA (American Psychological Association)
- 1.2 Chicago Manual of Style Documentation
- 1.3 Citing an Electronic Source
- 1.4 MLA (Modern Language Association)[2]
- 1.5 ASA (American Sociological Association) www.asanet.org
- 1.6 Harvard System
- 1.7 CBE Style
- 1.8 German Style Convention Links
- 1.9 French Web links
Style Manuals and Related WebLinks
APA (American Psychological Association)
www.apastyle.org 5th edition (2001) (brief summary of the APA citation style)
Chicago Manual of Style Documentation
The Chicago Manual of Style is a very comprehensive book which describes two documentation styles, one using notes and bibliographies, the other using author-date citations and lists of references. The Chicago Manual also gives guidelines for spelling and punctuation and discusses the treatment of numbers, quotations, illustrations, tables, foreign languages, mathematical symbols, abbreviations, and so on.[1]
Turabian, an 11 page concise summary of the Chicago Manual of Style citation methods.
Citing an Electronic Source
MLA (Modern Language Association)[2]
The MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers (1999) by Joseph Gibaldi. The MLA Handbook advises that you acknowledge sources "by keying brief parenthetical citations in your text to an alphabetical list of works that appears at the end of the paper" . Widely used by writers in literature, language studies, and other fields in the humanities, the MLA style of documentation allows writers to keep texts "as readable and as free of disruptions as possible." For a brief summary of this citation style [3]
ASA (American Sociological Association) www.asanet.org
For a brief summary of this citation style see http://www.isr.bucknell.edu/Doing_Research/Research_Aids/Citation_Guides.html
Harvard System
http://www.bournemouth.ac.uk/academic_services/documents/Library/Citing_References.pdf
CBE Style
Scientific Style and Format: The CBE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers, published by the Council of Biology Editors (now the Council of Science Editors) in 1994. Many writers in the natural sciences use the citation style recommended in the CBE Manual, which also gives advice for styling and formatting scientific papers, journals, and books for publication. Its editors offer two methods for citing and documenting sources: the citation-sequence system and the name-year system. See http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/online/cite8.html
German Style Convention Links
(Thanks to Moritz) http://www.bui.fh-hamburg.de/projekt/din1505/ http://www.ub.fu-berlin.de/service/einfuehrungen/basic/zit_linksammlung.html http://www.uni-duesseldorf.de/ulb/zit.html http://www.haw-hamburg.de/pers/Lorenzen/bibtex.html
French Web links
(thanks to Sophie) Guide de présentation des thèses et mémoires http://www.unice.fr/UrfistDEH/pages/Theses/normes.html These links are about UNIMARK : which relates to the use of SGML/XML in bibliographic data management based upon MARC formats (used in Library catalogs) http://www.oasis-open.org/cover/marc.html http://www.valdoise.fr/biblio/bdvo/coinbib/iso2709/p5.htm http://rameau.bnf.fr/guide/rameau4_1.htm http://www.oasis-open.org/cover/marc.html http://morinn.free.fr/ Reference Sheet for Natbib "The natbib package is a reimplementation of the LATEX \cite command, to work with both author-year and numerical citations. It is compatible with the standard bibliographic style files, such as plain.bst, as well as with those for harvard, apalike, chicago, astron, authordate." It provides a useful list of the range of citations required for citation entry. http://merkel.zeneo.net/Latex/natbib.php