Help:Citation & Bibilography Format

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Citations

  • Citations within the text should include the author’s last name and the year of publication, for example [Gottlob, 1992].
  • Treat multiple authors as in the following examples:
[Brachman and Schmolze, 1985] (for two authors)
[Baumgartner et al., 2001] (for more than two authors)
  • Append lowercase letters to the year in cases of ambiguity: [Levesque, 1984a].
  • Collapse multiple citations as follows: [Gottlob et al., 2002; Levesque, 1984a].
  • If the author portion of a citation is obvious, omit it, e.g., Nebel [2000].

Bibliography

Articles in a Journal

  1. Author(s) (first name last name), or name of organization
  2. Title of article
  3. Title of Journal (in italic)
  4. Volume, number, and, if available, part
  5. First and last pages of article
  6. Date of issue

Example:

[Gottlob, 1992] Georg Gottlob. Complexity results for nonmonotonic logics. Journal of Logic and Computation, 2(3):397–425, June 1992.


Articles in Proceedings

  1. Author(s) (first name last name), or name of organization
  2. Title of article
  3. Title of Proceedings (in italic)
  4. First and last pages of article
  5. Location
  6. Date
  7. Publisher

Example:

[Levesque, 1984b] Hector J. Levesque. A logic of implicit and explicit belief. In Proceedings of the Fourth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, pages 198– 202, Austin, Texas, August 1984. American Association for Artificial Intelligence


Books

  1. Author(s) (first name last name), name of organization, or editors
  2. Title of book
  3. Edition number (if applicable)
  4. Name of publisher
  5. Place of publication (city) 
  6. Year of publication 
  7. First and last page of reference (if applicable)

Example:

[Abelson et al., 1985] Harold Abelson, Gerald Jay Sussman, and Julie Sussman. Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs. MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1985.

Theses, dissertations, and other unpublished works

  1. Author(s) (first name last name), or name of organization
  2. Title
  3. Type of publication ("Master's thesis", "Dissertation")
  4. Organization or University
  5. Place of publication
  6. Year of publication
  7. First and last page of reference (if applicable)

Example:

[Diessner, 1969] Alfred Diessner, Studies on Compressed Gas Insulation, Master's thesis, Stanford University, 1969.


Web Resources

  1. Author/editor
  2. Title (or description) of the site
  3. Name of any institution or organization associated with the site
  4. Creation date and/or Access date
  5. URL

Example:

[Ruch, 2002] Allen B Ruch, The Modern Word. Created at: May 5, 2002. Retrieved at: June 6, 2004. http://www.TheModernWord.com/gabo.

References