Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

eXtyles greatly reduces the time an editor must spend editing reference lists and bibliographies and helps ensure that your references are set up according to your organization’s preferred style. The Bibliographic References processing function automatically identifies a reference entry’s type (journal, book, etc.) and restructures references based on your organization’s publication style.

After you run the automatic processing via the Bibliographic References feature in eXtyles, author punctuation and style are replaced by the standard punctuation and style of an individual publication. This function can restructure most journal references (and book references, with the optional book processing module) that have no significant author errors with near-perfect accuracy. References that are not restructured are visually identified for manual editing.

How to use Bibliographic Reference Processing

Note

Before running Bibliographic Reference Processing, confirm that all references are correctly styled with your configuration's reference paragraph style and that Auto-Redact has been run.

  1. Select Advanced Processing from the eXtyles Menu
  2. Click Bibliographic References

After reference processing, a typical journal reference looks like this:

Info

The generic examples in this documentation are intended to illustrate various eXtyles features and will not exactly reproduce your organization’s editorial style. Your eXtyles Bibliographic References processing is customized for your editorial styles.



Panel

On this page

Table of Contents

Bibliographic Reference Processing and Validation

Child pages (Children Display)
depth2
pageBibliographic Reference Processing and Validation

Continue reading


Reviewing References

Overview of Tagging and Character Styles

Each component of the reference is identified and color-coded for easy proofing. The reference type tag specifies the type of reference that eXtyles has identified. Reference Processing can style and tag (i.e., apply colored character styles and provide granular XML tagging) certain types of references. Please note that restructuring non-journal references requires additional modules.

Possible reference types are:

Excerpt


TagReference TypeStyled/TaggedRestructured
<jrn>Journal articleYesYes
<bok>BookYes*Yes*
<edb>Edited book or book chapterYes*Yes*
<std>StandardYes**Yes***
<conf>Conference proceedingYes****No
<prpt>PreprintYesNo
<eref>Website or online articleNoNo
<lgl>Legal case or statuteNoNo
<ths>Thesis or dissertationNoNo
<other>Working paper, patent, map, or other documentNoNo
<unknown>Unsupported or otherwise unknown reference typeNoNo

*Tagging and restructuring book and book chapter references requires the additional Book Reference Processing module. 

**Tagging standard references requires the additional Standard Reference Processing module.

***Only references to standards from publishers with known designation formats (e.g., ISO, IEC, EN, BSI, DIN) are reformatted. References to standards from other publishers (e.g., ASTM, IEEE) have their elements color coded (i.e., identified with character styles), but no reformatting is done to avoid introducing errors in designations

****Tagging conference proceeding references requires the additional Conference Reference Processing module.


Tip

Contact eXtyles-support@inera.com to discuss how eXtyles can process your non-journal references!


Note

Reference types might occasionally be incorrectly identified as “bok” or “unknown.” Misidentification is usually the result of a punctuation error in the original reference or a pattern in the reference that eXtyles does not support.

Each element in a reference entry is identified and tagged appropriately by eXtyles during Bibliographic Reference Processing. The following table includes some examples of common reference components and their element names:

Element/Character StyleExample Text
bib_surnameKlingensmith
bib_fnameGJ
bib_articleGlucocorticoid treatment...
bib_journalJ Pediatr
bib_year1977
bib_volume90
bib_fpage996
bib_lpage1004

References appear in the correct style (element order, face markup, and punctuation) of the publication selected in the Document Information dialog.

If appropriate for your organization, in addition to fixing the order, punctuation, and face markup of references, eXtyles also corrects the abbreviation of journal names so that they match the editorial style and standard abbreviations used for online linking. Punctuation is added or removed according to your chosen publication style.




































Viewing References

If necessary, use the View/Hide Tags function on the eXtyles ribbon to turn the display of reference type tags (<jrn>, <bok>, etc.) on and off.

Warning

Do not delete the tags because they carry important information used by other functions on the Advanced Processing menu and they are also required to produce valid XML.

Reference Processing Query Insertion

If eXtyles adds queries (which appear as Word comments) during journal reference processing, an alert will appear after processing is complete to indicate the number of queries added. No alert is shown when queries have not been added.

Depending on your configuration, the following conditions can cause eXtyles to add queries during journal reference processing:

  • A journal title is found that is not in the eXtyles journal title database
  • The first page number is greater than the last page number
  • A reference has only a first page number and not a last page number
  • A reference has a page range of more than 100 pages
  • Too few authors appear before “et al.”
  • “Et al.” used in a publication whose style does not permit it
  • The reference does not have an article title

These warnings may or not appear in your organization’s specific eXtyles configuration.

Tip

Many of the warning messages inserted by Reference Processing are customizable! Contact eXtyles-support@inera.com to learn more.









Troubleshooting


...