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Article in a journal Rapaport, William J(1986) Philosophy of artificial intelligence eaching Philosophy 9.2: 103-120 Here9.2: 103-120means"Volume 9, issue 2, pages 103 to 120. If the page numbering does not start afresh in each issue, do not give the issue numl Note that you must list all the pages the article occupies, not just the pages you cited article in a book Rapaport, William J.(2008) Philosophy of artificial intelligence. In John Doe and William F Nusquam, eds, Studies in the philosophy of artificial intelligence, pp. 103-122. Dordrecht: Reidel Article in proceedings of a well-known conference: Doe, John P(1988)Prolog optimization systems. Proceedings, AAAI-88.128145 If the conference is not well-known, handle the proceedings volume like a book of articles, identifying its editors and publisher Unpublished paper Doe, John P.(1964)Giant computers of the future. Department of Computer Science, University of Tasmania Paper retrieved from a web site(and not otherwise published): Doe, John P(2008) Giant computers of the present http://www.utan.edu.au/cs/doe/giant.pdf eference is to also give the date on which the item was retrieved Reprinted article: Doe, John P. (1987) Prolog optimizers. Reprinted in L. C. Moe, ed Prolog optimization, pp. 101-105. New York: Columbia University You can get more information about Chicago/Cambridge/ Harvard scientific citation format from the Chicago Manual of Style, available in most libraries Do not expect different style guides to agree 100%; you can get away with following any of them as long as you are consistentArticle in a journal: Rapaport, William J. (1986) Philosophy of artificial intelligence. Teaching Philosophy 9.2:103–120. Here “9.2:103–120” means “Volume 9, issue 2, pages 103 to 120.” If the page numbering does not start afresh in each issue, do not give the issue number. Note that you must list all the pages the article occupies, not just the pages you cited. Article in a book: Rapaport, William J. (2008) Philosophy of artificial intelligence. In John Doe and William F. Nusquam, eds., Studies in the philosophy of artificial intelligence, pp. 103–122. Dordrecht: Reidel. Article in proceedings of a well-known conference: Doe, John P. (1988) Prolog optimization systems. Proceedings, AAAI-88, 128–145. If the conference is not well-known, handle the proceedings volume like a book of articles, identifying its editors and publisher. Unpublished paper: Doe, John P. (1964) Giant computers of the future. Department of Computer Science, University of Tasmania. Paper retrieved from a web site (and not otherwise published): Doe, John P. (2008) Giant computers of the present. http://www.utan.edu.au/cs/doe/giant.pdf. APA’s preference is to also give the date on which the item was retrieved. Reprinted article: Doe, John P. (1987) Prolog optimizers. Reprinted in L. C. Moe, ed., Prolog optimization, pp. 101–105. New York: Columbia University Press, 1998. You can get more information about Chicago/Cambridge/Harvard scientific citation format from the Chicago Manual of Style, available in most libraries. Do not expect different style guides to agree 100%; you can get away with following any of them as long as you are consistent. 9
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