Zombse

The Zombie Stack Exchanges That Just Won't Die

View the Project on GitHub anjackson/zombse

Would an agreement on a centralized style for citations be practical?

Given the large number of possible styles for citations in many different fields (APA, MLA, AP, IEEE, etc.), it's difficult for academics and information science professionals to keep track.

It would clearly be beneficial to standardize some of these styles between fields (while leaving old citations as-is to save efforts). Would this be practical, given the different uses of information in each of these academic disciplines?

jonsca

Comments

Answer by Joe

It would be beneficial, but there's too many different groups who all think they know what the right way is to do things, and as it works for them, they have no reason to change.

Maybe I'm a bit cynical, as I work in science archives, and we're actually trying to get standards considered for data & software citation ... but the way that you subset data varies by discipline (it's not as simple as page numbers), so we're likely going to end up with many incompatable citation standards.

I would suggest that you use citation management software, and if you want people to cite your work, offer the necessary metadata in BibTeX. You can then emit your list of references in whatever format a particular journal needs.

Comments

Answer by Jakob

The Citation Style Language (CSL) is one approach to standardize citation styles by formal description of these styles. This allows to support zillions of citation styles as citations can automatically be created in any style that has been formally defined. In a nutshell, CSL works as illustrated below:

                        citation style 
                        (defined in CSL)
                               |
                               v
 bibliographic data  ---> CSL processor ---> citation
(in CSL input format)                        (in the specific style)

Up to now there are more than 2000 citation styles defined in CSL. CSL can be compared to BibTeX without the quirks that BibTeX derived from TeX.

Comments

Answer by Jenn Riley

Rather than answering your question directly, I'll propose an alternative tactic. As we see with library metadata inching towards semantic web technologies, we're realizing that pre-agreement on standards and formatting among different communities is indeed *IM*practical. The lesson therefore is that our investment in the standards might be better made in technologies that allow the domain differences to effectively work together. Rather than spend lots of time defining the "right" way, spend that time understanding how several fit-for-purpose ways can interoperate. I'd like to think that same principle would apply to citation styles.

Comments