APA In-text Citations adding author initials
Hello Zotero,
First, let me say how invaluable Zotero has been in writing my dissertation. I really love your program (and use it over the Refworks my university provides).
I am having a small problem. I have several author names that are showing up cited as (Initial. Author, Year).
For example, I have Ramlo cited many times in my dissertation, but in some citations, she comes up as (S. Ramlo, 2005) or (S.E. Ramlo, 2008). APA 6th shows it should just be (Ramlo, Date).
Is it because in my Standalone, I have Ramlo sometimes imported as S. Ramlo, sometimes imported as S.E. Ramlo, sometimes as Sue Ramlo? And I need to change them all to no initials so the program doesn't see it as different authors?
Thanks!
Amy
First, let me say how invaluable Zotero has been in writing my dissertation. I really love your program (and use it over the Refworks my university provides).
I am having a small problem. I have several author names that are showing up cited as (Initial. Author, Year).
For example, I have Ramlo cited many times in my dissertation, but in some citations, she comes up as (S. Ramlo, 2005) or (S.E. Ramlo, 2008). APA 6th shows it should just be (Ramlo, Date).
Is it because in my Standalone, I have Ramlo sometimes imported as S. Ramlo, sometimes imported as S.E. Ramlo, sometimes as Sue Ramlo? And I need to change them all to no initials so the program doesn't see it as different authors?
Thanks!
Amy
I appreciate the quick response!
Amy
I, too, am having a similar issue and am not understanding the solution based on the feedback here. With multiple sources that include the same author, I've gone into my in-browser (Firefox) Zotero and changed all author listings for one author to be the same style (e.g.: "Corbett, K."). I'd hoped this would then change the various in-text citations to only show (Corbett, year). However, they all continue to show (K. Corbett, year) now. Are you advising that I just erase the first name/initial in the Zotero listing for each source? Or is there some way to change a setting for all in-text citations to not include initials? Thank you!
Also, as I say just above, ideally you'd go with first full names instead of initials in Zotero, since many other citation styles prefer those.
As for why this isn't working for you, hard to say. There are basically three possibilities:
1.) There is indeed another Corbett cited as a first author somewhere in your work. In that case, K. Corbett is the correct citations
2.) You missed one in Zotero. Note e.g. that Zotero is currently quite picky and will consider Corbett, K and Corbett, K. two distinct authors.
3.) At least one of the references isn't linked to its corresponding Zotero item anymore but is instead updating from references stored in the document.
You could look at the bibliography, which may help you identify 1 for sure and may even give you clues for 2 and 3 (e.g. if one entry is sorted in the wrong place -- but I'm not sure that would necessarily be the case). If that doesn't help, inserting them in a fresh document for testing would help to rule out 2. As a last resort for 3.) you can check item field codes by pressing (in Word) alt+F9 (alt+Fn+F9 on a Mac -- same key combinations to hide them again) to look at the bibliographic data Zotero is using for citations.
Or switching to a different citations style -- Chicago autor-date, e.g., which uses full first names in the bibliography might be an option.
I'd start by looking at the bibliography. I think authors
First thing I'd try
Thank you for the fuller explanation, and potential solutions, got it!
Best,
Todd
I am having this issue on citations that do not share a year, only the same two authors. I am using APA, and my in-text citations are: "J. Arditti & Few, 2006" and "J. Arditti & Few, 2008" vs. "Arditti & Few, 2006 or "Arditti & Few, 2008".
I am at a loss, and any help would be appreciated!
Should I try to disable the name disambiguation?
Thank you!!
The real issue was that the citations included initials in *all* citations after editing the database entries to make them consistent. This wasn't fixed by refreshing citations. I think that's the same problem as described by others above.
The solution was to change the document settings to a different citation style (from APA to Chicago in my case, but it probably works with any combination) and back again. This seems to cause the citations to be rebuilt properly, and they now display correctly without initials.
If you're seeing something different, we'd want to see an except of the document (emailed to support@zotero.org with a link to this thread) from before and after changing the style back and forth.