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Plagiarism and Citing Sources (Health Affairs): Citing Sources

Created by Health Science Librarians

Citing Sources

Properly citing sources helps you avoid committing plagiarism. If you use someone else's research, thoughts or ideas to support your own arguments, you should properly acknowledge the author.

By acknowledging all sources that have informed your research, you are drawing a clear line between your original ideas and those of others.

Academic work, whether in the form of research papers, lab reports, exams, group rounds, or any other assignment, should ALWAYS contain proper citations!

If the information is available, most citations should include the following:

  • Title of article
  • Author name(s) or editor name(s)
  • Title of book, journal, or website
  • Volume and issue number
  • Date of publication
  • Page number(s)
  • Website URL

Citation Styles

Your citations will look different depending on which citation style you are using. Sometimes your instructor may require that you use a specific style such as NLM, APA, or AMA.

Citations styles vary from one academic field to another as well as from one publication to another. If you are writing a paper for a Sociology class, you might use a different style than you would for a Pharmacy class.

If you are submitting a paper to a scholarly journal, the publisher may request that your citations be in a particular style. Your professor may also let you know which format you will use in his or her class.

If you are unsure which citation style is most appropriate for the work you are doing, consult your professor, or a librarian.

A style guide (such as those available through the Health Sciences Library) can help you learn how to cite sources in a particular style.

Example

Original Source
Type of Item: Journal article retrieved through PubMed
Author: Paul Wicker
Title: Plagiarism: Understanding and Management
Journal: Journal of Perioperative Practice
Date of Publication: August 2007
Volume: 17
Issue: 8
Pages: 372, 377-382

NLM (National Library of Medicine)

In the reference list: 1.  Wicker P. Plagiarism: understanding and management. J Perioper Pract. 2007 Aug;17(8):372, 377-82.
In the text: (1)

APA (American Psychological Association)

In the reference list: Wicker, P. (2007). Plagiarism: Understanding and management. Journal of perioperative practice, 17(8), 372, 377-82.
In the text: (Wicker, 2007)

AMA / Vancouver (American Medical Association / Vancouver)

In the reference list: (1) Wicker P. Plagiarism: understanding and management. J.Perioper.Pract. 2007 Aug;17(8):372, 377-82.
In the text: (1)

Comparing reference managers

  EndNote
(Desktop)
Zotero Sciwheel (formerly F1000Workspace)
HSL Online Guides EndNote Zotero Sciwheel (formerly F1000Workspace)
Classes at HSL EndNote Classes   Sciwheel Classes
Cost $108 for students, faculty, & staff through UNC-CH
 
Zotero is free Free through UNC-CH
Notes See EndNote Basic guide for further details on the free online version   Use this link to create account.  Select No, I'm a new user then select password.
How is it used? Computer
+ Web
Computer
+ Web
Web
Major citation styles?
Annotation of PDFs
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Instructions for EndNote

Instructions for Zotero

Instructions for Sciwheel
Adds citation from a PDF
Sharing options X7 and above users have sharing options / email compressed libraries See group options here
 
Share unlimited projects and manuscripts
Free online storage EN21- three year access to EndNote Web with unlimited storage 700+ papers
(more space can be purchased)
Unlimited
Word Processor Microsoft Word

Microsoft Word
Google Docs
LibreOffice (all)

Microsoft Word
Google Docs
Manuscripts for Mac