Canonical Bibliographic Citation

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A Canonical Bibliographic Citation is a bibliographic citation that is a Canonical Referencer.



References

2009

  • (Romanello et al., 2009) ⇒ Matteo Romanello, Federico Boschetti, and Gregory Crane. (2009). “Citations in the Digital Library of Classics: extracting canonical references by using conditional random fields.” In: Proceedings of the 2009 Workshop on Text and Citation Analysis for Scholarly Digital Libraries table of contents
    • QUOTE: Scholars of Classics cite ancient texts by using abridged citations called canonical references. In the [[scholarly
    • QUOTE: Canonical references present unique characteristics when compared to bibliographic references to modern publications. First of all, they do not refer to physical facts of the referred work (such as publication date or page number), but refer rather to its logical and hierarchical structure. In addition, canonical references often provide additional information needed by the reader to resolve the reference. For example “Archestr. fr. 30.1 Olson-Sens” means line 1 of fragment 30 of the comic poet Archestratus in the edition published by S. D. Olson and A. Sens in 1994.