Resources for written reports and oral presentations
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Crediting others
- Proper citations are a hallmark of any solidly written report,
and are often useful in other forms of publications.
Citation
and Style Guides (2016) refers to several style guides; pick a
suitable style and use it consistently. Especially
see its section "Why cite?".
- If your report or presentation uses an active format such as PDF
or HTML, URLs in citations should be clickable.
- For citations, submit a working link to a freely-readable
copy if available, and also submit a working link to a URL based on
digital
object identifiers (DOIs) if available. Here is an example citation
using Vancouver
system format:
The citation's title hyperlinks to a freely-readable resource
<https://arxiv.org/pdf/1403.4910v5.pdf>.
"ACM Comput Surv" is a standard abbreviation for
ACM Computing Surveys,
"2016;49(2):29" contains the year, volume, issue, and article or
page numbers, and the DOI hyperlinks
to <http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2931098>.
Unfortunately, freely-available resources
are often preliminary or ephemeral or both; when available, a DOI
can permanently nail down the final, stable version even
if it's not freely readable. For more about DOIs, see
How
to share a link to an article with your students and
collaborators (2016).
- See
Web
of Science Journal Title Abbreviations for a list of
reasonably-standard journal-title abbreviations.
Written reports
Oral presentations
© 2006–2016 Paul Eggert.
See copying rules.
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