"Title of Article," by Author First Initial, from the figure reproduced in your text. Year, Journal Title, Volume (issue), page number (link or doi if from an ejournal). Copyright Year by Copyright Holder's Name.
Author's surname, title of the work, volume (year published), and pages DOI Number was used. Example: Abbott, B. J., et al. (1999). Journal of the American Medical Association 282(18):1485-1486.
Last name, initial name, and middle name of the author First and last names of the author "Article Title: Subtitle, if any." Magazine Title, vol. Volume Number, no. Issue Number, Publication Date, pages. Location where article can be found online.
Monatsschrift 4 (1777): 195-210. Kaku, Michio. Physics Today 40, no. 6 (1987): 33-38. Scientific American website.
Comments:
The fundamental structure for referencing journal articles
A. A. Author and B. B. Author (year, month, and date). The article's title magazine title, volume, and pages. Location of publication for the journal is provided. This information should be included on the first page or outside cover of the journal.
B. B. Author (year, month, and date) - Same as above.
C. C. Editor-in-chief name, editor names, address, phone number - Full citation required if used elsewhere in document.
D. D. Article's abstract - Brief summary of contents including subject being discussed. Not to exceed 200 words.
E. E. N/A - Not applicable. Information not given in the article.
F. F. URL of the website where the full text of the article can be found - Only necessary if the article is not available through your library subscription.
G. G. Page numbers - Corresponding pages will also need to be cited.
Go to the image's original location (website) and reference it in three of the forms listed above.
The structure is as follows: Last name and initials of the editor (Ed.). (Year). Anthology title: subtitle if present (volume number if applicable). Publisher's address is: Publisher. City, State, Country. Internet addresses are also useful for finding current editions of anthologies.
Example: Curley, John. (2009). The complete idiot's guide to writing essays and reports. New York, NY: Alpha Books.
Example: Khan, Salim. (2012). Essential journalism skills for your first story. Sudbury, MA: Jones & Bartlett Publishers.
Journal articles that have been collected into volumes may be cited in the text using the above format. However, since these articles were not selected by the editor, they should be referred to by their original citation information.
Example: Kerr, Andrew. (2005). Outlaws of the internet: How hackers, activists, and trolls have changed the world on Napster, World Wide Web, and beyond. New York, NY: Perseus Book Group.
For books that include contributions by many authors, each one should be cited individually.