Citation Matching automates the lengthy process of comparing and matching in-text citations with their references, including bibliographic reference entries as well as objects such as figures, tables, and boxes that are called out within the text.
In addition to matching citations and callouts with their references and objects, Citation Matching performs the following tasks automatically:
Identifies all in-text bibliographic citations for which there is not a matching reference entry.
Identifies all reference entries for which there is not at least one in-text citation.
Identifies all figure, table, box, and appendix callouts for which there is not a matching figure, table, box, or appendix title.
Identifies all figure legends, box legends, table titles, and footnotes (unlinked and plain text) for which there is not at least one callout.
Each of these issues, if it occurs, is automatically indicated by eXtyles in your document with the insertion of an author query in the form of a Word comment. The actual citations and callouts in the manuscript are indicated with color coding to aid in proofing.
Using Citation Matching
To use Citation Matching:
Be sure that you have first run Bibliographic Reference processing.
Select Citation Matching from the eXtyles Advanced Processing menu. You will see a dialog asking you to select the bibliographic citation style used in the document.
Select the appropriate style, which for WTO will be the first option: Name/date in parentheses or brackets
Click OK.
You can also run Citation Matching on objects only. To do this, select the final option “No References; match objects (figures, tables)” from the Citation Style dialog.
Citation Matching Query Insertion
If eXtyles adds queries during Citation Matching, an alert will appear after processing is complete to indicate the number of queries added. An alert is also shown when queries have not been added to indicate that Citation Matching completed successfully.
Citation Matching Failures
Citation Matching automatically applies the character style cite_bib to all reference citations in text. Occasionally, eXtyles will fail to automatically apply this style during Citation Matching. In such cases, the character style “cite_bib” should be applied by hand from the Word Styles menu (Home > Styles).
Similarly, Citation Matching automatically applies the character styles cite_fn (for footnotes), cite_fig (for figures), cite_box (for boxes) and cite_tbl (for tables) to all callouts in the text. Occasionally, eXtyles will fail to automatically apply these styles during Citation Matching. In such cases, the appropriate style must be applied by hand from the Word Styles menu to the callout. Citation Matching can then be run again to ensure the accuracy of these hand-applied styles.
Common Causes of Query Insertion
Citation-matching queries may be inserted for many reasons. The following describes common queries that you might encounter after running Citation Matching.
Figure and Table Matching
Citation to another article: Citation Matching incorrectly sees citations to figures and tables in other articles, such as “See figure 1 in some external report”, as part of the current document. Queries about such false-positives are incorrect and should be removed by deleting the Word comment.
Incorrect styling: Citation Matching relies on correct styling of paragraphs. Make sure the figure legends and table titles are styled correctly if you see erroneous queries.
Reference Matching
Content that “looks” like a name-date citation: eXtyles may incorrectly identify text that is not a citation as missing a reference entry, and warn about it. For example, in the phrase “Those who live through severe hurricanes (Katrina 2005) may choose to get flood insurance” eXtyles may think that “Katrina 2005” is a name-date citation, and warn when no corresponding reference is located. These false-positives can be ignored.