Title: Citing
1Citing Referencing
- Dr Derek Scott
- d.scott_at_abdn.ac.uk
- Honours Class in Medical Sciences
- MSc Clinical Pharmacology
2Why do we need to cite references?
- Allows others to find the same information and to
trace what we have said. - Gives credit to those who came up with original
ideas or who actually did the work. - Demonstrates the background information upon
which your work is based.
3Everyone needs guidance
- You will notice that academic staff are just as
bad as students sometimes when it comes to citing
references or listing them (myself included). - If we see poor referencing, it rings alarm bells-
what else have you not bothered to check or do
properly in a piece of work? - Creates a bad impression from the start marker
is likely to look for further errors as well as
focusing on the good points. - This is not an exhaustive guide, and different
sources will have variations on what is contained
here, but this should help you avoid most of the
pitfalls.
4Plagiarism
- Becoming a major issue in universities.
- Currently, if you are caught cheating or
plagiarising others work, then your School does
not deal with it you go straight to the Senior
Vice-Principal! - He will decide whether it was bad practice or if
you were being deliberately deceptive. - Two strikes and youre out!
- If you are not sure what plagiarism is, then find
out at www.abdn.ac.uk/writing - If you do give information or ideas from
textbooks or other published material, you must
give a precise reference to the source, both at
the appropriate point in the text, and in your
list of references at the end of your work.
Direct quotations from published material should
be indicated by quotation marks and referenced in
the text as above.
5Citing referencing
- These are actually two different things, although
many people (including myself!) use the terms
interchangeably. - Citing is when you refer in the text to the
source of information used (i.e. the reference). - Referencing is where you create a list of the
source used.
6Reference Lists Bibliographies
- Every piece of work you submit should have a list
of references at the end. - The reference list includes all of the
papers/books etc. you cited in the text. - A bibliography tends to list the books etc. you
consulted whilst writing the essay, but you may
not have cited these. These items are more like
background reading. - We tend not to use bibliographies at level 3 and
4, since you should be focusing mainly on
advanced textbooks, reviews and peer-reviewed
papers for your information and you will already
have a lot of background knowledge. - You should be able to back all of your statements
up with evidence.
72 main forms of citing Harvard Vancouver
- Both commonly used.
- Pick one and stick to it!
- Do not mix and match throughout a piece of work.
- These two systems differ in how you cite the
reference in the text, and where the date goes
when you produce your reference list. - The School of Medical Sciences now demands the
Harvard system because quite often you will know
a paper by the authors name and not as reference
no. 71. - Unless told otherwise, it is up to you which you
use just make sure you do it properly. - However, for all work for School of Medical
Sciences, you MUST use Harvard!
8Harvard Style (Text)
- Cites author and date of publication
- Studies by Scott (1976), McEwan (1988) and
Bowser-Riley (2006) have shown. - This has been demonstrated in several studies
(Scott, 1976 McEwan, 1988 Bowser-Riley, 2006). - It has been concluded (Scott, 2006) that the
main. - .the findings of this work was controversial
(see Scott, 2006). - If you quote exact text from a piece of work, you
should give page numbers - Scott (2006, p.173)
- If you have two or more references with the same
author and year, you add letters after the dates - Scott (2006a) and Scott (2006b)
9Vancouver Style (numeric)
- Numbers in text which correspond to numerical
sequence of reference at end of piece of work. - Usual to start with 1 and progress, rather than
having the first citation as number 15 or
similar. - Scott4 and McEwan10, or Scott (4) and McEwan (9)
- Can also use numbers on their own
- It may be demonstrated4 or
- It may be demonstrated (4)
- Use the same number for the same reference e.g if
Rang et al. (2003) is number 1, then it is always
number 1. Do not give it another number just
because you have turned the page. If you want to
get into this amount of detail, then you have to
start giving chapter and page numbers.
10Harvard Style - Ref List
- Tchernitchko, D., Bourgeois, M., Martin, M. E.,
Beaumont, C. (2002). Expression of the two mRNA
isoforms of the iron transporter Nramp2/DMTI in
mice and function of the iron responsive element.
Biochem.J. 363, 449-455. - Teichmann, R. Stremmel, W. (1990). Iron uptake
by human upper small intestine microvillous
membrane vesicles. Indication for a facilitated
transport mechanism mediated by a membrane
iron-binding protein. J.Clin.Invest 86,
2145-2153. - Tennant, J., Stansfield, M., Yamaji, S., Srai, S.
K., Sharp, P. (2002). Effects of copper on the
expression of metal transporters in human
intestinal Caco-2 cells. FEBS Lett. 527, 239-244. - Thomas, J. A., Buchsbaum, R. N., Zimniak, A.,
Racker, E. (1979). Intracellular pH measurements
in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells utilizing
spectroscopic probes generated in situ.
Biochemistry 18, 2210-2218. - Thwaites, D. T., McEwan, G. T.A. , Brown, C. D.,
Hirst, B. H., Simmons, N. L. (1993a).
Na-independent, H-coupled transepithelial
beta-alanine absorption by human intestinal
Caco-2 cell monolayers. J.Biol.Chem. 268,
18438-18441. - Thwaites, D. T., Brown, C. D., Hirst, B. H.,
Simmons, N. L. (1993b). H-coupled dipeptide
(glycylsarcosine) transport across apical and
basal borders of human intestinal Caco-2 cell
monolayers displays distinct characteristics.
Biochim.Biophys.Acta. 1151, 237-245. - Thwaites, D. T., Brown, C. D., Hirst, B. H.,
Simmons, N. L. (1993c). Transepithelial
glycylsarcosine transport in intestinal Caco-2
cells mediated by expression of H-coupled
carriers at both apical and basal membranes.
J.Biol.Chem. 268, 7640-7642. - Thwaites, D. T., Hirst, B. H., Simmons, N. L.
(1994). Substrate specificity of the
di/tripeptide transporter in human intestinal
epithelia (Caco-2) identification of substrates
that undergo H-coupled absorption.
Br.J.Pharmacol. 113, 1050-1056. - Thwaites, D. T., McEwan, G. T. A., Simmons, N.
L. (1995). The role of the proton electrochemical
gradient in the transepithelial absorption of
amino acids by human intestinal Caco-2 cell
monolayers. J.Membr.Biol. 145, 245-256. - Thwaites, D. T., Cavet, M., Hirst, B. H.,
Simmons, N. L. (1995). Angiotensin-converting
enzyme (ACE) inhibitor transport in human
intestinal epithelial (Caco-2) cells.
Br.J.Pharmacol. 114, 981-986.
11Vancouver style - ref list
- Tchernitchko, D., Bourgeois, M., Martin, M. E.,
Beaumont, C. (2002). Expression of the two mRNA
isoforms of the iron transporter Nramp2/DMTI in
mice and function of the iron responsive element.
Biochem.J. 363, 449-455. - Teichmann, R. Stremmel, W. (1990). Iron uptake
by human upper small intestine microvillous
membrane vesicles. Indication for a facilitated
transport mechanism mediated by a membrane
iron-binding protein. J.Clin.Invest 86,
2145-2153. - Tennant, J., Stansfield, M., Yamaji, S., Srai, S.
K., Sharp, P. (2002). Effects of copper on the
expression of metal transporters in human
intestinal Caco-2 cells. FEBS Lett. 527, 239-244. - Thomas, J. A., Buchsbaum, R. N., Zimniak, A.,
Racker, E. (1979). Intracellular pH measurements
in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells utilizing
spectroscopic probes generated in situ.
Biochemistry 18, 2210-2218. - Thwaites, D. T., McEwan, G. T.A. , Brown, C. D.,
Hirst, B. H., Simmons, N. L. (1993).
Na-independent, H-coupled transepithelial
beta-alanine absorption by human intestinal
Caco-2 cell monolayers. J.Biol.Chem. 268,
18438-18441. - Thwaites, D. T., Brown, C. D., Hirst, B. H.,
Simmons, N. L. (1993). H-coupled dipeptide
(glycylsarcosine) transport across apical and
basal borders of human intestinal Caco-2 cell
monolayers displays distinct characteristics.
Biochim.Biophys.Acta. 1151, 237-245. - Thwaites, D. T., Brown, C. D., Hirst, B. H.,
Simmons, N. L. (1993). Transepithelial
glycylsarcosine transport in intestinal Caco-2
cells mediated by expression of H-coupled
carriers at both apical and basal membranes.
J.Biol.Chem. 268, 7640-7642. - Thwaites, D. T., Hirst, B. H., Simmons, N. L.
(1994). Substrate specificity of the
di/tripeptide transporter in human intestinal
epithelia (Caco-2) identification of substrates
that undergo H-coupled absorption.
Br.J.Pharmacol. 113, 1050-1056. - Thwaites, D. T., McEwan, G. T. A., Simmons, N.
L. (1995). The role of the proton electrochemical
gradient in the transepithelial absorption of
amino acids by human intestinal Caco-2 cell
monolayers. J.Membr.Biol. 145, 245-256. - Thwaites, D. T., Cavet, M., Hirst, B. H.,
Simmons, N. L. (1995). Angiotensin-converting
enzyme (ACE) inhibitor transport in human
intestinal epithelial (Caco-2) cells.
Br.J.Pharmacol. 114, 981-986.
12Quotations
- I try to avoid these wherever possible.
- Try to put things into your own words so that you
can show the reader that you understand what is
being said and that you have interpreted it
correctly. - Also decreases the chance of you plagiarising
work. - If you must do it, then put quotation marks
around the phrase or sentence. - Scott (1990, p.19) has proposed it is possible
that babies are created by means of magic dust
gathered from under cabbagesbut it might be
that this has yet to be proven beyond doubt. - The quotation is part of the text and is
surrounded by quotation marks. - The three full stops indicate an omission,
whilst the square brackets show that you have
added your own words to the original quotation.
13Books
- AUTHOR (Date). Title. Edition. Place Publisher.
- SCOTT, D.A.(2006). The physiology of metal
transport. 2nd Ed. London Churchill-Livingstone. - Check the inside pages of the book for this
information do not just copy what is on the
cover.
14Books with multiple authors
- 3 or less
- SCOTT, D.A., MCEWAN, G.T.A. PAGE, K. (1999). A
History of Aberdeen Bars. London Longman
Educational Publishers. - 4 or more
- SCOTT, D.A., et al. (2006). My Secret Life As a
Fighter Pilot. Oxford Oxford University Press. - HOWEVER, whilst many people will find this
acceptable, it is more professional to give all
authors in your reference list. - School of Medical Sciences demands the full list
in submitted work.
15Books with editors
- SCOTT, D.A., ed. (2004). How to Bluff Your Way as
a University Lecturer. Aberdeen Aberdeen
University Press. - Scott is not the author here, he is just the
editor of a publication that contains
contributions from many authors.
16Anonymous Works
- If you cannot find an author (but please try hard
to find one), then use Anon.. - ANON. (2004) Famous Scandals in the Institute of
Medical Sciences. London Penguin Books. - However, this is exceptionally rare.
17Editions Dates
- Always be sure to include the year of
publication. - If you are citing a book, then you must include
the edition number if there has been more than
one. - This is important as new editions contain major
revisions to the text and images.
18Referencing Journals
- Based upon Journal of Physiology and University
of Aberdeen standard format - AUTHORS (YEAR). Title. Journal. Volume, Pages.
- Note that Journal title is in italics and volume
is in bold to make them stand out. All authors
are also listed, as is title of paper. - TENNANT, J., STANSFIELD, M., YAMAJI, S., SRAI, S.
K., SHARP, P. (2002). Effects of copper on the
expression of metal transporters in human
intestinal Caco-2 cells. FEBS Lett. 527, 239-244. - SCOTT, D.A., MCARDLE, H.J. MCEWAN, G.T.A.
(2002). Electrogenic divalent cation transport in
cultured human intestinal Caco-2 epithelia.
J.Physiol. 539P, S076. - SCOTT, D.A., MCARDLE, H.J. MCEWAN, G.T.A.
(2003). Identification of two pH-dependent,
Zn2-induced electrogenic transport pathways in
human intestinal Caco-2 epithelia. J.Physiol.
547P, PC61.
19Biomedical Sciences Recommended Styles
- Journal of Physiology
- British Journal of Pharmacology
- These are the recommended journal styles to
follow since they cover most of the disciplines
followed by BMS degree schemes, and they have an
exceptionally rigorous peer-review process. - The School of Medical Science approved format is
based upon J. Physiol. And the University
Librarys Guide to Referencing Citing. - Journal of Physiology, in particular, is ruthless
when it comes to citing references properly. - Look at these journals if you want to see
examples of good practice or if you are unsure. - Different departments/journals have slightly
different citation/referencing styles, so you may
see different layouts. i.e. whether they include
all authors or the title of the paper etc. - If you use a package like Refworks, you must be
sure you set it up correctly and you define what
referencing style you want double-check though,
because the packages can still get it wrong! - If you are studying in a department/field which
has specialist journals or referencing
conventions, your supervisor will have told you
about this. - If you are not sure, then ask!
20Authors initials
- Authors initials come after their surnames.
- Do not give some authors their full names, and
others just initials it is sloppy and looks
silly. - When citing authors names in text, you do not
give names, initials, qualifications or titles,
just surname and year e.g. Scott et al. (2006)
21Example of how to cite in a piece of text
- The following passage was copied from my PhD
thesis. Note how I back up major findings or
statements at appropriate points in the text. - The initial characterisation of Divalent Metal
Transporter 1 (DMT1) in 1997 by Gunshin et al.
(1997) generated much interest in the field of
metal biology since this protein was expressed in
a variety of tissues, and was reported as
carrying a multitude of divalent metal ions. The
discovery of transporters like DMT1 has led to a
better understanding of certain genetic disorders
such as hereditary haemochromatosis (Rolfs et
al., 2002) and acrodermatitis enteropathica (Kury
et al., 2002) (disorders of iron and zinc
transport, respectively) and animal disease
models such as the microcytic anaemia (mk) mouse
(Fleming et al., 1997), the lethal milk (lm)
mouse (Huang Gitschier, 1997) and the Belgrade
(b) rat (Fleming et al., 1998). - If you have a paragraph or piece of text with no
references in it, double-check it to make sure
you it is just basic information and that you
have not missed anything out.
22- Application of phorbol esters has been reported
to cause a Na-dependent alkalinisation of rat
jejunum microclimate pH (McSwine et al., 1998).
This was thought to be mediated via PKC. It was
also demonstrated that Na absorption via NHE3
might be inhibited by increased levels of
cytosolic Ca2, possibly mediated by
Ca2/calmodulin-dependent kinases (Shimada
Hoshi, 1988). McSwine et al. (1998) also studied
the intestinal cell line C2, and showed that
elevated levels of cGMP caused inhibition of NHE3
activity. These increased levels of cGMP may
occur pathophysiologically during exposure to the
heat-stable E. coli STa enterotoxin. Inhibition
of NHE3 by cGMP (Semrad et al., 1990) has been
demonstrated to cause an elevation of the
microclimate pH when studied in vivo in rat
(McEwan et al., 1988 McKie et al., 1988 Shimada
Hoshi, 1988) and pig (McEwan et al., 1990b).
23Websites
- Be VERY careful when using a website as a
reference. - They can be useful, but how can you tell that the
information is updated, accurate or
peer-reviewed? - Some sites are more reliable than others e.g.
government sites or universities, but again, you
should really try to stick to papers or books
that have been reviewed by experts to make sure
that the info is correct. - Websites are great for pictures etc., but you
still have to give the authors credit.
24Citing websites
- To refer to a specific web document in your text,
you must cite either the author name as usual and
year (if available), or the name of the
organisation responsible for the website and the
year. - Three different Honours specialties are available
on the BSc BiomedSci degree at the University of
Aberdeen (School of Medical Sciences, University
of Aberdeen, 2005). - I would list this in the references as
- School of Medical Sciences, University of
Aberdeen. online. Available from
http//www.abdn.ac.uk/sms/documents/bio_sci.doc
Accessed 21 Mar 2006
25Referencing websites
- The standard form is
- AUTHOR or EDITOR (year). Title online. Place of
publication Publisher. Available at ltURLgt
Accessed date. - Some of these identifiers are not always
available. - Publisher is usually the organisation that hosts
the site, but the place of publication and
publisher are optional. - You need to provide the date accessed since web
pages may be updated frequently, so can change. - If a web page does not have an author, then
reference it by title.
26Examples of referencing websites
- For a specific website
- School of Medical Sciences, University of
Aberdeen. online. Available from
www.abdn.ac.uk/sms Accessed 21 Mar 2006 - For a document on a website
- SCOTT, D.A. MCEWAN, G.T.A. (2004) A history of
biomedical sciences. online. Available from
www.abdn.ac.uk/sms/history Accessed 21 Mar 2006 - For a specific web page
- DEPARTMENT FOR EDUCATION AND EMPLOYMENT (2000).
Student loans guidance on terms and conditions
from April 2000. online. Available from
http//www.dfee.gov.uk/loan2000/index.html
Accessed 23rd March 2006
27Epubs/online access
- This is a curious one because it is an article
that has been released electronically before it
has been published in paper form. You can tell
this because it either says that it is an "epub
ahead of print" or "online first". This happens
when they want to get an important article out
into the public domain quickly. - If we follow the same referencing style used by
Journal of Physiology, it should be written (note
that the initials of an author come after their
surnames when referencing) - SASSI, A., MARCORA, S.M., RAMPININI, E.,
MOGNONI, P. Â IMPELLIZZERI, F.M. (2006)
Prediction of time to exhaustion from blood
lactate response during submaximal exercise in
competitive cyclists. European Journal of Applied
Physiology. March. 1 - 7 (Epub ahead of print). - Usually you would have a volume number instead of
the March in the reference, but that has to wait
until the paper volume is published.
28Government Publications
- GREAT BRITAIN. OFFICE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
(2001). Assessment of renewable energy
technologies. London The Stationery Office.
29Theses
- SCOTT, D.A. (2004). Characterisation and
regulation of iron- and zinc-evoked electrogenic
transport in human intestinal epithelial cells.
Ph.D. thesis, University of Aberdeen.
30Things you havent actually read
- Sometimes you cannot get hold of an article that
someone else has cited, but is interesting enough
to mention in your work. - If you really cannot get a hold of this article
and read it for yourself, you can cite what
another author said about it. - Lets say that Scott had an article which McEwan
and Smith referred to in their paper. You have
not actually read what Scott said, only what the
other two authors wrote about it. - You would include McEwan and Smith in the
reference list, not Scott. - The findings of Scott (see McEwan Smith, 2004)
was controversial in light of - If you are using the numerical style, it would
be - The findings of Scott (see McEwan Smith15) was
controversial in light of
31Et al.
- When you have 4 or more authors, it is sometimes
acceptable to use et al. as an abbreviation,
rather than listing all of the authors names. - et al. should always be in italics since it is
the short form of the Latin phrase, et alia
(and others) - (Scott et al., 2004) or it was shown by Scott et
al. (2004) that - Note the comma when the author and date are in
the same brackets, but not when they are
separated. - ALL Latin terms e.g. in vivo, in utero etc.
should be in italics. - Some people will not insist upon this, but it is
the correct way to format Latin words in text.
32All authors or et al. in the reference list?
- Many people list up to 3 authors.
- Scott (2006)
- Scott Bloggs (2006)
- Scott, McEwan Bloggs (2006)
- Past this, and then a lot of people will use et
al. (and others). - I (and J.Physiol. And the School of Medical
Sciences) tend to still give a complete author
list in my reference list just for completeness. - Particularly common in large multi-centre studies
where publications have many contributors i.e.
identification of genes, large-scale physics
experiments etc.
33Journal abbreviations
- Journals have approved abbreviations for their
names that may be used in referencing. - There are the odd exceptions to this rule e.g.
Gut - J.Physiol. for Journal of Physiology.
- Br. J. Pharmacol.
- J. Biol. Chem.
- Biochim. Biophys. Acta
- PubMed has a list of these.
- If you cant find this, then try and find the
homepage of the journal you are interested in,
and see if it has it there. - If all else fails, just use the full name.
- Whatever you use full titles or abbreviations
stick to it throughout your reference list if you
can. - If you are being very conscientious, you should
really give the full title of the journal as it
avoids confusion.
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35Images - referencing
- If you obtain a picture or graph from the
internet or publication, then you need to cite
where it came from, usually in the legend for
that figure. - By legend, I mean the small bit of text that is
usually under a figure, explaining what it shows. - This is just as important as citing references in
the text. - UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (1999). Major
volcanoes in Ecuador. online image. Available
from http//vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Ecuador/
mays/map ecuado volcanoes.htmi Accessed 30 Jan
2001
36Example of referencing a figure
Figure 1.7.1 (a) Immunohistochemical
localisation of DMT1 in the small intestine of
rats fed an iron-deficient diet. The intense
black staining in the apical membranes of
enterocytes at the villus tips denotes where DMT1
is expressed. Image taken from Oates et al.
(2000).
37Consistency
- Use one citation system and stick to it.
- If you use authors initials, rather than complete
names, then do this for every reference. - Use either or and, but not both.
38Take-home messages
- If you are not sure, ask your supervisor.
- FOLLOW THE RULES LAID DOWN BY THE SCHOOL
DEPARTMENT THAT THE WORK IS BEING SUBMITTED TO!!! - Look at a journal and see how they do it.
- Look at the end of chapters in textbooks because
many of them have reference lists that you can
model your own on. - Always include references and a list at the end
of the piece of work. - Buy a simple referencing guide for a quid from
the University bookshop. - At level 3 Advanced textbooks, reviews and
peer-reviewed papers (lecture notes for basic
info, but dont cite lecture notes as a
reference!). - Level 4 5 Mostly reviews and papers (sometimes
advanced textbooks for basic info). - Remember with reviews do not cite them, try and
read the original article they reviewed and cite
that instead. Relying heavily on reviews for the
majority of your information is bad practice and
looks as if you dont know the topic that well.