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Citations

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Citations Why we need them in academic papers Part of the process of building on other people s work; peer-review To follow up (interested want to know more) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Citations


1
Citations
  • Why we need them in academic papers
  • Part of the process of building on other peoples
    work peer-review
  • To follow up (interested want to know more)
  • To verify (curious, skeptical about finding,
    skeptical about accuracy of paraphrase)
  • High concentrations of exogenous dopamine has
    been proven to restore the sensitivity of D2
    receptors to normal (Seeman, Guan and Van Tol,
    1993) my reaction was Really?? The reference
    allowed me to check
  • To know to whom to attribute a finding or
    conclusion (we reject statements such as Its
    widely known its been established)
  • In fact, in academic writing, very little
    accepted on authority or as common knowledge

2
  • Example from Introductory section of recent
    article on advances is diagnosis of Alzheimers
    Disease (Ikonomovic, Klunk, Abrahamson, Mathis,
    Price, Tsopelas et al., 2008)
  • Clinically symptomatic Alzheimers disease can
    be diagnosed with high accuracy at academic
    centres (Lopez et al., 2000a), but diagnosis in
    the community is less accurate (Pearl, 1997).
    Non-Alzheimers disease dementia cases are not
    infrequently misdiagnosed as Alzheimers disease
    (Mayeux et al., 1998)
  • These authors have expertise in field of
    Alzheimers diagnosis, yet..
  • Implication gtgtgtgt

3
  • If you state Marijuana is the most widely used
    psychoactive drug among todays youth.
  • Whats your source? Why should we have confidence
    in that statement Something youve assumed or
    stating because you heard it somewhere? Q. is
    where?
  • In fact, not true

4
Examples of unattributed statements from student
papers
  • A lot of the stress causing panic attacks is
    sub-conscious. A person doesnt realize their own
    thoughts
  • aside from poor phrasing and grammaticity older
    view not widely believed Id like to know
    source- what led student to this belief? Was it
    an appropriate reference?
  • Cocaine is another kind of strong drug how
    defined?. It is more powerful than marijuana.
    by what criterion? Reference?

5
Examples from student papers where having proper
citation was useful/important
  • .

6
In-text (within-text) citations
  • These are the brief references to sources that
    appear in the body of the text
  • In APA format, they provide just enough info to
    unambiguously lead reader to the full reference
    in the bibliography
  • To learn where theyre used, and how they vary,
    carefully examine an article done in APA format
  • e.g., see Michael Bozarths article in Reader (p.
    51-58), Pleasure systems in the brain
  • Then consult an APA within-text citation guide as
    needed (see link on my Brain Behavior
    homepage)

7
  • Dont remember where its permissible to use et
    al.? look it up!
  • Quick summary
  • In text Up to 5 authors- name all 1st time give
    just lead authors name followed by et al. if
    you cite again.
  • More than 5 authors Use the lead author et
    al. format from the start
  • In bibliography Up to 6 authors Name all of
    them (dont mimic ProQuest format!)
  • More than 6 authors List 1st 6, followed by et
    al.

8
Is APA-style the correct format
  • Whats wrong with superscripts endnotes?
  • Why isnt naming the first 4 authors of a
    multi-author article good enough? (ProQuest does
    it- surely theyre not wrong!
  • Not wrong simply different formats
  • There are good reasons to use a consistent format
  • Why APA?
  • Because we have decreed it!
  • Truly, because most widely used in psychology and
    social sciences

9
The need for a consistent citations format
  • Information you need for citing a reference may
    come from variety of sources
  • notes you wrote on scrap of paper when reading
    article onscreen or a book
  • printout of an article located through ProQuest
    or PubMed
  • article reprinted in the course Reader
  • The formats in which the bibliographic
    information appears may differ from source to
    source gtgt

10
  • Typical Proquest citation info
  • An examination of the role that intercollegiate
    athletic participation plays in academic
    achievement Maloney, Michael T, McCormick,
    Robert E., Kinsbourne, Barry J. The Journal of
    Human Resources. Madison Summer 1993. Vol. 28,
    Iss. 3 p. 555 (16 pages)
  • How this should appear in APA format (academic
    journal reference)
  • Maloney, M.T., McCormick, R.E. Kinsbourne, B.J.
    (1993). An examination of the role that
    intercollegiate athletic participation plays in
    academic achievement. The Journal of Human
    Resources, 28 (3), 555-570.

11
gtgtgt general problem
  • Many students copy information blindly
  • Dont include information just because you have
    it (e.g. ProQuest lists it).
  • e.g., Proquest lists location of publisher of
    academic journal- but you dont need (shouldnt
    use) this info for article citation
  • Learn the APA requirements for the type of source
    youre citing
  • Note they differ for academic journals,
    magazines, books, web documents, etc.
  • Pull out just the info you need look up anything
    thats missing (in the article itself!)
  • translate where necessary

12
APA citations Common misunderstandings, common
errors
  • A journal article found in an online database or
    on a website requires the same information as for
    the original
  • PLUS retrieved from statement

13
  • A very common error
  • Copeland, J. (2005). Cannabis-related problems
    and their management. Retrieved March 9, 2006
    from Proquest database
  • Whats missing?
  • The name of the journal (and volume number and
    page references)
  • Why its important discuss
  • Gives reader quick info about the source gtgt
    establishes reliability (and appropriateness)

14
  • The proper reference
  • Copeland, J. (2005). Cannabis-related problems
    and their management. Drugs and Alcohol Today, 5,
    20-25. Retrieved March 9, 2006 from Proquest
    database
  • What this info told me
  • Not a peer-reviewed journal
  • Quite unreliable
  • The retrieved from statement supplies
    supplemental information. Purpose
  • May help reader access article
  • To resolve possible issues where online version
    differs from print version

15
  • An even worse example of a bibliography citation
  • http//bjp.rcpsych.org/cgi/reprint/183/3/
  • (this was the entire citation!)

16
Another common error
  • Arnold, P.D. Richter, P.A. (2001, November).
    Is obsessive-compulsive disorder an autoimmune
    disease? Journal of the Canadian Medical
    Association, 165 (10), 1353-1358.
  • Whats the problem here?
  • In APA format, you dont include the month for
    academic/scientific journals
  • Picky-picky?
  • Not really Its an important clue as to nature
    of source e.g., would be used for magazine like
    Discover

17
As previously noted
  • Dont copy information blindly
  • Establish the nature of your source (journal
    article article in multi-author book with
    editor anonymous online article, etc.
  • Review the APA requirements for the type of
    source youre citing (Learn the most common
    ones!)
  • Note they differ for academic journals,
    magazines, books, web documents, etc.
  • From the information at hand, pull out just the
    info you need, look up anything missing.

18
  • Tip Always use the .pdf version of of an article
    if available
  • More accurate representation of the original
  • Can get the publication info from the article
    title and header/footers
  • Tip Proquests APA formatted citations are NOT
    READY FOR PRIME TIME! Many errors.
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