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guide to the vancouver referencing style for the wolfson school this is a guide to the vancouver referencing style used within the wolfson school and provides examples of different information ...

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              Guide to the Vancouver  referencing style for the
                                                    Wolfson School
               This is a guide to the Vancouver referencing style used within the Wolfson School and provides 
               examples of different information sources and is based on the SAGE UK style guide . Vancouver 
               is a numerical referencing style.
               Always check your course handbook and/or module outline for any further guidance, as your 
               lecturers may prefer you to use a different style of referencing
               1. Introduction
               When writing a piece of work you should provide references to the sources used. A reference is 
               the detailed bibliographic description of the item from which you gained your information. In 
               simple terms, this means the details of the items that you have used, e.g. author, title, date of 
               publication. References should be labelled in your text using a number in round  ( ) or  square 
               brackets [ ]. They are then given in full, in the order that they have appeared in your work, in a 
               reference list at the end of your work. 
               Any other items read for background information but not referred to in the text should be given in 
               full at the end of your work in a bibliography. Check with your tutor that a Bibliography is 
               required for your work.
               References are used to:
               •  Enable the reader to locate the sources you have used;
               •  Help support your arguments and provide your work with credibility;
               •  Show the scope and breadth of your research;
               •  Acknowledge the source of an argument or idea. Failure to do so could result in a charge of 
                  plagiarism.
             Plagiarism
             Plagiarism is defined by Loughborough University, Regulation XVIII, Academic Misconduct, as 
             “submitting work as the candidate's own of which the candidate is not the author.  This includes 
             failure to acknowledge clearly and explicitly the ideas, words or work of another person whether 
             these are published or unpublished.” For more information on how to avoid plagiarism please see: 
             http://learn.lboro.ac.uk/mod/page/view.php?id=549505
               Collecting and organising references
               It is often not easy to retrieve sources after you have written your text. For this reason it is 
               best to keep a good record of everything that you use. Reference management software, 
               such as Mendeley, will help you organise your references according to different citation styles
               and to add the citations to your text. For further information about reference management and
               help using Mendeley, please see our reference management guide at:  
               http://learn.lboro.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=3539
               2.  Citations in the text (also known as In-text Citations)
             Page | 1                                                             University Library -  Mar 2018
              All ideas taken from another source regardless of whether directly quoted or paraphrased need 
              to be referenced in the text of your assignment. To link the information you use in your text to its 
              source (book, article, etc.), put a number  in round brackets ( ) or in square brackets [ ] at the 
              appropriate point in your text. You should insert the citation number directly after a source is 
              referred to in your text, even if this is in the middle of a sentence and within punctuation.
                e.g. There is some evidence (1)  that these figures are incorrect                                                     
              The Vancouver style encourages substituting reference numbers for the author’s name wherever 
              possible.
                e.g. (1) has provided evidence that these figures are incorrect.                                                       
              It is acceptable to place a citation number at the end of a paragraph if the entire paragraph is 
              referring to the same source.
              Numbers are sequentially allocated to sources as they appear in the text. However, if referring to a 
              source that you have already cited the original number is used again.
              e.g. There is some evidence (1) that these figures are incorrect. However, (2) suggests 
                    an alternative theory. But on reflection the original evidence (1) has the 
                    advantage of a large study.
              If you refer to two or more different sources at the same time then write a number for each 
              separated by a comma. Numbers should be in brackets and placed after punctuation marks such 
              as full stops or commas.
                e.g.  …this has been discovered in a number of recent studies. (3, 10, 14                                       
              Secondary referencing
              When an author quotes or cites another author and you wish to cite the original author you
              should first try to trace the original item. However, if this is not possible, you must acknowledge
              both sources in the text, but only include the item you actually read in your reference list.
              e.g.  Smith’s 2009 study cited in (1) shows that…
             
            Then cite (1) (Jones) in full in your reference list.
              Images, tables etc.
              You should provide an in-text citation for any images, illustrations, photographs, diagrams, tables, 
              figures or pictures that you reproduce in your work, and provide a full reference as with any other 
              type of work. 
                e.g.  (1: p.22)  or Table illustration checklist (8: p.22)                                                                                                                           
              3.  Reference List
            Page | 2                                                        University Library -  Mar 2018
      Full references of sources used should be listed at the end of your work as a reference list. This 
      list of references is arranged sequentially in the order that they appeared in your work. Whenever
      possible, elements of a reference should be taken from the title page of the publication. Each 
      reference should give the elements and punctuation as found below. Authors should be cited by 
      family name, then initials. Note there is no comma between the family name and initials or 
      spaces between the initials.
      3.1 References – Books
      Books
      Author’s last name(s)  Author’s initial. Title of book: subtitle if there is one.  Edition – if not the 
      1st. Place of publication: Publisher, year of publication, Series and volume number (where 
      relevant)
        e.g. Silvester PP, Ferrari RL. Finite elements for electrical engineers. 3rd ed. Cambridge:                
      Cambridge University Press, 1996.
      For books which have multiple authors all authors need to be mentioned.
      e.g. Ashby M, Shercliff H,  Cebon D. Materials: engineering, science, processing and 
      design.
         2nd ed. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann, 2010.
      Books with one or more editor(s) – Include the abbreviation ed. or eds. after their 
      last name. Editor (s) name (ed./eds.). Title. Edition. Place of Publication: Publisher, 
      year of publication.
        e.g. J. Kim (ed.) Advances in nanotechnology and the environment. Singapore: Pan Stanford, 
      2012. 
      Chapters in books
      Chapter Author(s), Title of chapter. In: Editor(s) lastname inital (eds)  Book title. Edition. Place of 
      publication: Publisher, year of publication, pages. (use pp.)
      e.g. Li CW, Wang GJ. MEMS manufacturing techniques. In: Bhansali S, Vasudev A 
      (eds.) MEMS for Biomedical Applications. Cambridge: Woodhead, 2012, pp.192-
      217.
      Note: Electronic books should be cited exactly the same as print, following the rules above but
      provide the URL of the book to help your readers locate the text.
      3.2 References – other sources
      Journal articles
      Author(s). Title of article. Title of journal  year of publication;   volume number (issue number): 
      page numbers.
      e.g. Bertotti G. General properties of power losses in soft ferromagnetic materials. IEEE Trans. Magn. 
        1998; 24: 621‐630.
      Page | 3                  University Library -  Mar 2018
      For articles written by more than one author, up to 3 authors are listed, if more than 3 authors 
      represent the rest by et al.
      Abbreviate the journal title where appropriate, check the http://scieng.library.ubc.ca/coden/ website 
      for more information.
      Note: If you are referencing an electronic journal article, check with your tutor if they want 
      you to reference it as print or include the URL of the journal and date accessed.
       Papers in conference proceedings
      Author(s). Title of paper. In: Editor/organization (ed.). Title of the conference proceedings. 
      Place and date of conference (unless included in title), Place of publication: Publisher. Year. 
      pages, use pp.
     e.g. Al-Azzawi W, Al-Akaidi M. Robust stability of solar-power wireless network control 
        system with stochastic time delays based on H2 norm. In: IET Conference on wireless
        sensor systems (WSS 2012), June 2012, pp.1-6.
      Reports
      Author/editor. Title. Organisation, Report Number, Year of Publication, Place of publication: 
      Publisher.
     e.g. Citigroup Ltd. How to make your money work for you. Report for the Department of 
        Finance, Report no.123345, 13 June 2011. Oxford:OUP.
      Standards
       Number of the standard:date. Title of the standard.
     e.g. BS ISO 8178-2:2008. Reciprocating internal combustion engines. Exhaust  emission 
        measurement. Measurement  of  gaseous and particulate exhaust  emissions under field 
        conditions.
      Patents
      Inventor. Title of the patent. Patent number, Country where patent is registered, Year.
     e.g. Wilkinson JP. Nonlinear resonant circuit devices.  Patent 3 624 125, USA, 1990. 
      Newspaper articles
      Author(s). Title of article. Newspaper  title, Day and Month and Year (abbreviated), page numbers, 
      use
      p. or pp. (where there is no page number e.g. an online newspaper use the source).
      e.g. Gillespie J, Whalley E. Flight of the robo-bee to save fruit crops. The 
         Sunday Times, 7 Oct 2012, p.9.
      Page | 4                  University Library -  Mar 2018
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...Guide to the vancouver referencing style for wolfson school this is a used within and provides examples of different information sources based on sage uk numerical always check your course handbook or module outline any further guidance as lecturers may prefer you use introduction when writing piece work should provide references reference detailed bibliographic description item from which gained in simple terms means details items that have e g author title date publication be labelled text using number round square brackets they are then given full order appeared list at end other read background but not referred bibliography with tutor required enable reader locate help support arguments credibility show scope breadth research acknowledge source an argument idea failure do so could result charge plagiarism defined by loughborough university regulation xviii academic misconduct submitting candidate s own includes clearly explicitly ideas words another person whether these published u...

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