Style Request: American Statistical Association
Hi, I need the style of the American Statistical Association for Zotero, but I cannot find it anywhere.
This is a link to ASA information on the style: http://www.amstat.org/publications/pubdump/ASASTYLE_GUIDE.PDF
Berk, K. N. (1978), “Comparing Subset Regression Procedures,”
Technometrics, 20, 1–6.
I am not sure about the boot style, I think it is:
Little, R. J. A., and Rubin, D. (2002), "Statistical Analysis with Missing Data" (2nd ed); Hoboken; Wiley.
Thank you.
This is a link to ASA information on the style: http://www.amstat.org/publications/pubdump/ASASTYLE_GUIDE.PDF
Berk, K. N. (1978), “Comparing Subset Regression Procedures,”
Technometrics, 20, 1–6.
I am not sure about the boot style, I think it is:
Little, R. J. A., and Rubin, D. (2002), "Statistical Analysis with Missing Data" (2nd ed); Hoboken; Wiley.
Thank you.
This is an old discussion that has not been active in a long time. Before commenting here, you should strongly consider starting a new discussion instead. If you think the content of this discussion is still relevant, you can link to it from your new discussion.
I'd assume most statisticians write in LaTeX, so no one has ever requested this.
http://www.oxfordjournals.org/our_journals/jssam/for_authors/ms_prep.html
Since I am not a Statistician, rather a methodologist, I did not use Latex to prepare the manuscript.
I edited this thread to conform to a style request. Note I was not sure how to use intalics in the style examples I gave above.
Citations:
Campbell, J. L., and Pedersen, O. K. (2007), "The Varieties of Capitalism and Hybrid Success," Comparative Political Studies, 40 (3), 307-332, DOI: 10.1177/0010414006286542.
Mares, I. (2001), "Firms and the Welfare State: When, Why, and How Does Social Policy Matter to Employers?," in Varieties of Capitalism. The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage, eds. P. A. Hall and D. Soskice, New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 184-213.
In-text citations would be (Campbell and Pedersen 2007) and (Mares 2001). Reference list is left aligned (no hanging indent) with a space between references.
Online AmStat Style Guide: http://journals.taylorandfrancis.com/amstat/asa-style-guide/
Example: http://www.amstat.org/publications/jse/v22n3/watkins.pdf
Journal of Consumer Research is a very good fit until then.
I'm submitting to the same journal. What did you end up doing?
I think anyone can make a style, but maybe. I'm thinking of Mendeley.
Did you submit with the alternatve style suggested above?
Thanks in advance
I used the Journal of Consumer Research style and then made many, many manual changes to my document to turn it into the AmStat style. For subsequent submissions to statistics journals I have not cared about the reference formatting. My submissions are still in review, so I don't know if the editors care so much about the format.
@adamsmith
There are a lot of journals that use the AmStat format style (why it's different from every other style is a different question!). Has any progress been made on including it in Zotero?
I've created an amstat style available from here now: https://www.zotero.org/styles?q=id:american-statistical-association