Scientific Style and Format, Council of Science Editors, 8th ed.
Scientific Style and Format: The CSE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers is a commonly consulted guide for writing science research papers. It outlines the standardized format to use when referring to references (also known as citations) within the text of a journal article, book, or other scientific publication. The CSE has three systems or methods for citing sources: name-year, citation-sequence, and citation-name.
Most LPC biology professors require students to use the CSE name–year option.
The two main components of properly documenting sources in the CSE name-year system:
This guide is meant as a general overview. For more in-depth help, please use the following resources, or contact an LPC librarian.
Citing is an important part of academic writing, content creation, and daily communications. We cite in order to:
Whenever you use someone else's work or ideas.
In general, there are three ways to incorporate information from your sources into your research project:
Each time you have incorporated information from your sources into your paper, you need to cite the source in the following two places:
The style guide will tell you exactly how to format each of these parts of citing, but the idea is the same across all of the styles.
While APA and MLA are two of the most common style guides for academic writing and publishing, there are MANY others (Style Guides) including CSE (Council of Science Editors). We also have styles for everyday citing -- think of the 'PC:@" or "camera emoji:@" in Instagram to give photo credit or think of an online article that links to other articles. These are not the formal academic citing styles from a published style guide like MLA & APA, but they do follow an accepted social guideline for how to correctly give credit to the original creator.