APA Citation Style
APA Citation Style
APA Citation Style
APA citation style refers to the rules and conventions established by the
American Psychological Association for documenting sources used in a
research paper. APA style requires both in-text citations and a reference
list. For every in-text citation there should be a full citation in the
reference list and vice versa.
The examples of APA styles and formats listed on this page include many of
the most common types of sources used in academic research. For
additional examples and more detailed information about APA citation
style, refer to the Publication Manual of the American Psychological
Association and theAPA Style Guide to Electronic References.
Also, for automatic generation of citations in appropriate citation style, use a
bibliographic citation management program such as Refworks or
EndNote. You can find more information on this in ourCitation
Management page.
Examples:
Works by a single author
The last name of the author and the year of publication are inserted in the
text at the appropriate point.
from theory on bounded rationality (Simon, 1945)
If the name of the author or the date appear as part of the narrative, cite
only missing information in parentheses.
Simon (1945) posited that
information in the text citation for a reader to locate its source in the
Reference List without difficulty.
(NIMH, 2007)
Reference List
References cited in the text of a research paper must appear in a Reference
List or bibliography. This list provides the information necessary to
identify and retrieve each source.
Authors: Write out the last name and initials for all authors of a
particular work. Use an ampersand (&) instead of the word "and" when
listing multiple authors of a single work. e.g. Smith, J. D., & Jones, M.
Titles: Capitalize only the first word of a title or subtitle, and any
proper names that are part of a title.
Indentation*: The first line of the entry is flush with the left margin,
and all subsequent lines are indented (5 to 7 spaces) to form a "hanging
indent".
* The APA has special formatting standards for the use of indentation and
italics in manuscripts or papers that will be typeset or submitted for
official publication. For more detailed information on these publication
standards, refer to the Publication Manual of the American Psychological
Association, or consult with your instructors or editors to determine their
style preferences.
** See the APA Style Guide to Electronic References for information on how to
format URLs that take up more than one line.
Examples:
Articles in journals, magazines, and newspapers
References to periodical articles must include the following elements:
author(s), date of publication, article title, journal title, volume number,
issue number (if applicable), and page numbers.
Journal article, one author, accessed online
Ku, G. (2008). Learning to de-escalate: The effects of regret in
escalation of commitment. Organizational Behavior and Human
Books
References to an entire book must include the following elements: author(s)
or editor(s), date of publication, title, place of publication, and the name
of the publisher.
Edited book
Gibbs, J. T., & Huang, L. N. (Eds.). (2001). Children of color:
Psychological interventions with culturally diverse youth. San
Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Dissertations
References for dissertations should include the following elements: author,
date of publication, title, and institution (if you accessed the manuscript
copy from the university collections). If there is a UMI number or a
database accession number, include it at the end of the citation.
Two editors
Hammond, K. R., & Adelman, L. (1986). Science, values, and human
judgment. In H. R. Arkes & K. R. Hammond (Eds.), Judgement
and decision making: An interdisciplinary reader (pp. 127143). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
Encyclopedia article
Kinni, T. B. (2004). Disney, Walt (1901-1966): Founder of the
Walt Disney Company. In Encyclopedia of Leadership (Vol. 1,
pp. 345-349). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Audio-visual media
References to audio-visual media must include the following elements: name
and function of the primary contributors (e.g., producer, director), date,
title, the medium in brackets, location or place of production, and name
of the distributor. If the medium is indicated as part of the retrieval ID,
brackets are not needed.
Videocassette/DVD
Achbar, M. (Director/Producer), Abbott, J. (Director), Bakan, J.
(Writer), & Simpson, B. (Producer) (2004). The
corporation [DVD]. Canada: Big Picture Media Corporation.
Audio recording
Nhat Hanh, T. (Speaker). (1998). Mindful living: a collection of
teachings on love, mindfulness, and meditation [Cassette
Recording]. Boulder, CO: Sounds True Audio.
Motion picture
Television broadcast
Anderson, R., & Morgan, C. (Producers). (2008, June 20). 60
Minutes [Television broadcast]. Washington, DC: CBS News.
Music recording
Jackson, M. (1982). Beat it. On Thriller [CD]. New York, NY: Sony
Music.
and date published when available. For undated materials, include the
date the resource was accessed.
Blog entry
Arrington, M. (2008, August 5). The viral video guy gets $1
million in funding. Message posted
to http://www.techcrunch.com