It is very important to document the information and sources you use in your research paper. Not only is citing and documenting sources ethical, but doing so will strengthen the evidence in your paper or the argument you are supporting. Additionally, citing and documenting will help prevent plagiarism, which is academic dishonesty.
Which documentation style you need to use depends on your major, discipline, course and instructor. Don’t hesitate to ask your instructor which documentation the course papers require.
Documenting and citing sources can be tedious and time-consuming, but done correctly, will enhance the quality of your paper. The following links will help you to cite and document your paper properly.
APA (American Psychological Association)
www.apastyle.org
AMA (American
Medical Association),
www.liu.edu/cwis/cwp/library/workshop/citama.htm
CBE (Council
of Biology Editors),
www.monroecc.edu/Depts/Library/cbe.htm
ACS (American
Chemistry Society )
www.lib.uwaterloo.ca/discipline/chem/acs_ref.html
AIP (American
Institute of Physics)
www.aip.org/pubservs/style/4thed/toc.html
IEEE (Institute
of Electrical and Electronics Engineers)
http://wwwlib.murdoch.edu.au/find/citation/ieee.html
Chicago Manual
of Style
www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/home.htm
MLA
www.dianahacker.com/resdoc/p04_c08_o.html
NLM (National Library of Medicine)
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bookshelf/br.fcgi?book=citmed&part=A63373
healthlinks.washington.edu/hsl/styleguides/nlm.html
If your course or paper requires you use MLA, APA or Chicago Manual of Style documentation, go to NoodleBib www.noodletools.com/login.php to produce an error-free references page.