Bibliographic Referencer
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A bibliographic referencer is a publication referencer that is a direct referencer.
- AKA: Citation.
- Context:
- It must have an Author Referencer.
- It must have a Publication Title Referencer.
- It must have a Publication Date Referencer.
- It can have
- a Publication Edition Reference to a Publication Edition.
- a Publisher Reference to a Publisher (esp. in a Book Citation).
- a Periodical Reference to a Periodical (esp. in an Article Citation).
- a Page Range Reference to a Page Range.
- a Passage Reference to a Passage (esp. in a Canonical Bibliographic Citation).
- It can be a:
- Citation Record in a Citation Database;
- Citation String in a Document.
- …
- Example(s):
- a Research Paper Citation String.
- (Gilheany, 1998) ⇒ Steve Gilheany. (1998). “Preserving Information Forever and a Call for Emulators.” In: Proceedings of Digital Libraries Conference and Exhibition: The Digital Era: Implications, Challenges and Issues.
- Citation Record:
<author> Brodley, C. E. & Utgoff, P. E. </author> <year> (1992), </year> <title> Multivariate versus univariate decision trees, </title> <type> Technical Report COINS TR 92-8, </type> <institution> Department of Computer Science, University of Massachusetts,</institution>,<address> Amherst, MA, </address>
- a Research Paper Citation String.
- Counter-Example(s):
- an Internal Citation Mention (which points to an string which points to a document).
- See: Entity Record, Co-citation Relation, BiRO Ontology, Citation Analysis, Citation Search Service.
References
2011
- (Wikipedia, 2011) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibliographic_citation
- Broadly, a citation is a reference to a published or unpublished source (not always the original source). More precisely, a citation is an abbreviated alphanumeric expression (e.g. [Newell84]) embedded in the body of an intellectual work that denotes an entry in the bibliographic references section of the work for the purpose of acknowledging the relevance of the works of others to the topic of discussion at the spot where the citation appears. Generally the combination of both the in-body citation and the bibliographic entry constitutes what is commonly thought of as a citation (whereas bibliographic entries by themselves are not).
- A prime purpose of a citation is intellectual honesty; to attribute to other authors the ideas they have previously expressed, rather than give the appearance to the work's readers that the work's authors are the original wellsprings of those ideas.
- …
- Bibliographies, and other list-like compilations of references, are generally not considered citations because they do not fulfill the true spirit of the term: deliberate acknowledgment by other authors of the priority of one's ideas.
2007
- http://www.lib.fsu.edu/help/libraryterms
- Bibliographic Citation (or bibliographic reference): identifying information about a publication, used in catalogs and indexes as well as in lists of "literature cited" or "references" in scholarly publications. Formats vary, but a book citation generally includes information on the author, title, publisher, and date of publication; an article citation includes author, title, date, and information on the periodical in which it was published.
2006
- http://library.fandm.edu/glossary.html
- Bibliographic Citation: The information which identifies a book or article. Information for a book usually includes the author, title, publisher, and date. The citation for an article includes the author, title of the article, title of the periodical, volume, pages, and date.
- Citation: Same as bibliographic citation.
1965
- (Martyn, 1965) ⇒ John Martyn. (1965). “An Examination of Citation Indexes.” In: Proceedings of the Aslib (17)6. doi:10.1108/eb050021