Style for "Neuroscience Letters"
Unfortunately I couldn't find a style for "Neuroscience Letters" in the Citation Style Repository.
The style is very similar to the "Elsevier (with titles)" style with one important difference: The list of references should be alphabetical and then numbered.
I'm not familiar with creating or changing styles. Has somebody a style for "Neuroscience letters" or can sombody help me to change the style?
Here the information from the journal's homepage:
Reference style
Text: Indicate references by number(s) in square brackets in line with the text. The actual authors
can be referred to, but the reference number(s) must always be given.
Example: "..... as demonstrated [3,6]. Barnaby and Jones [8] obtained a different result ...."
List: The list of references is arranged alphabetically and then numbered (numbers in square
brackets).
Examples:
Reference to a journal publication:
[1] J. van der Geer, J.A.J. Hanraads, R.A. Lupton, The art of writing a scientific article, J. Sci. Commun.
163 (2000) 51–59.
Reference to a book:
[2] W. Strunk Jr., E.B. White, The Elements of Style, third ed., Macmillan, New York, 1979.
Reference to a chapter in an edited book:
[3] G.R. Mettam, L.B. Adams, How to prepare an electronic version of your article, in: B.S. Jones, R.Z.
Smith (Eds.), Introduction to the Electronic Age, E-Publishing Inc., New York, 1999, pp. 281–304.
The style is very similar to the "Elsevier (with titles)" style with one important difference: The list of references should be alphabetical and then numbered.
I'm not familiar with creating or changing styles. Has somebody a style for "Neuroscience letters" or can sombody help me to change the style?
Here the information from the journal's homepage:
Reference style
Text: Indicate references by number(s) in square brackets in line with the text. The actual authors
can be referred to, but the reference number(s) must always be given.
Example: "..... as demonstrated [3,6]. Barnaby and Jones [8] obtained a different result ...."
List: The list of references is arranged alphabetically and then numbered (numbers in square
brackets).
Examples:
Reference to a journal publication:
[1] J. van der Geer, J.A.J. Hanraads, R.A. Lupton, The art of writing a scientific article, J. Sci. Commun.
163 (2000) 51–59.
Reference to a book:
[2] W. Strunk Jr., E.B. White, The Elements of Style, third ed., Macmillan, New York, 1979.
Reference to a chapter in an edited book:
[3] G.R. Mettam, L.B. Adams, How to prepare an electronic version of your article, in: B.S. Jones, R.Z.
Smith (Eds.), Introduction to the Electronic Age, E-Publishing Inc., New York, 1999, pp. 281–304.
In the "Elsevier (with titles)" the references are numbered as they appear in the text.
Here an example from one article:
[1] Akopian A.N., Souslova V., England S., Okuse K., Ogata N., Ure J., Smith A., Kerr B.J., McMahon S.B., Boyce S., Hill R., Stanfa L.C., Dickenson A.H., Wood J.N. The tetrodotoxin-resistant sodium channel SNS has a specialized function in pain pathways. Nat. Neurosci. 1999;2(6):541–548.
[2] Babiychuk E.B., Draeger A. Annexins in cell membrane dynamics: Ca2+-regulated association of lipid microdomains. J. Cell Biol. 2000;150(5):1113–1123.
[3] Baker M.D., Poon W.-Y.L., Wood J.N., Okuse K. Functional effects of co-transfecting β-subunits 1, 1A and 3 with NaV1. 8 α-subunit in a COS-7 heterologous system. J. Physiol. 2004;555P:PC20.
[4] Bramham C.R., Messaoudi E. BDNF function in adult synaptic plasticity: the synaptic consolidation hypothesis. Prog. Neurobiol. 2005;76(2):99–125.
Thanks for your help!
The format of the bibliography is easy. The more difficult part is sorting the bibliography, assigning a citation number, and then inputting that citation number at the proper location in the paper.
Here are the steps that must be accomplished:
1) The bibliography must first be sorted alphabetically
2) Citation numbers must be assigned with [1] being assigned to the alphabetically first bibliographic record and [2] being assigned to the second bibliographic record and so on
3) The citation numbers must be inserted into the text in the correct location
Does anyone know if this has been used in another style?
Then I'll have to change the bibliography manually...
https://gist.github.com/raw/853040/8f2f9e0311e9d537f6fdaa17017b7d696897cf03/neuroscience-letters.csl
then drag the file neuroscience-letters.csl to any open FF window to install. Let me know how it goes.
1. Citations are not superscript, they are standard, e.g. [1]
2. If only two authors, format is " and " between authors rather than ", "
2. Journal is in italics
3. No ". " after Journal (unless it is there for a journal abbreviation)
4. Volume is in bold
5. "pp. " before page numbers
Thanks so much for your help!
So what we need here is a citation-number independent variable, that would increment from 1 with every new bibliographic entry.
@zaurak: have you used adamsmith's csl posted above and compared it to Neuroscience Letters requirements? While format of the bibliography entry needs some tweaking, the sorting is correct.
"List: The list of references is arranged alphabetically and then numbered (numbers in square brackets)."
This is how adamsmith's csl is currently set up.
The examples Neuroscience Letters gives following the sentence I provided above are confusing because they are examples of individual citations, NOT an example of how they should be sorted.
I'm getting This
[2] Feynman.....
[1] Wheeler......
Instead of
[1] Feynman.....
[2] Wheeler......
Obviously with the correct intex citations.
I hadn't actually tested this before - I'm getting the bibliography sorting correctly, i.e.
[1] Feynman.....
[2] Wheeler......
even when Wheeler is cited first. My guess would be that this might depend on the Zotero version. I've tested this on 2.0.9 - are you using the 2.1RC version zaurak?
Thanks
@adamsmith: do you think you'll get a chance to work on the style issues I posted on March 9th? thanks!
The style for Neuroscience Letters appears to be Elsevier (with titles), I'll add that asap.
You are correct - my notes from Mar 9 do not represent the Neuroscience Letters requirements. Since the Author's Guide is fairly vague, I tried to corroborate it with the online version of the references; however, the Author's Guide matches the print version -- which is what you had already setup in your last version of the CSL.
The only (small) differences I'm seeing now between my your CSL (using Mac OS X 10.6.7, Word 2007, Zotero 2.1.7, Zotero MacWord Integration 3.1.2) and the Author Guide/print version is:
-my in-text citation numbers are superscripted
-the bibliography citation number-to-bibliography indentation seems off
I don't know how important these differences are - but figured I'd let you know.
Yeah, I think the superscripting was a glitch unique to how my document was formatted. Thanks.
If I have any problems in the future, I'll post here. Thanks again for your help!
et-al-min="7" et-al-use-first="6"
from the style
http://www.zotero.org/support/dev/citation_styles/style_editing_step-by-step
you can ignore everything about changing filename and ID, etc. - you could even just open the style directly from the style director in the Zotero date folder using a text editor.
http://www.zotero.org/support/zotero_data