Welcome. I'm "
Biosthmors", and I'll be helping out your
Introductory Neuroscience taught by
Steve Potter. Another Wikipedian, "
Disavian", a GT alumnus who has worked extensively on GT topics on Wikipedia, is also here to help. You can ask either of us questions either at
Disavian's talk page or
my talk page. In the following format:
#{{User|Your user name}} — Your name — {{la|Article title}}
please type your user name, name, and your existing or proposed article title [c] below. You can click edit down across from the "Names and article titles" section to selectively open it. Also, please copy and paste this template into the talk page of your article:
{{Educational assignment|year=2012|link=User:Biosthmors/Intro Neuro}} [d]
Here are some some tips and links. If you are starting a new article (indicated by a red link or a redirect), your topic should be notable (see the general notability guideline) and worthy of a separate page (see the reasons for merging). It's possible someone else wrote an article on the same subject so check for alternate titles (and one shouldn't capitalize the second or subsequent words in an article title, unless the title is a proper noun). As an example, here's an article I started from scratch. Another one I started (with an interesting title) is drunk walking. The highest-quality article I've written so far is deep vein thrombosis, which I rewrote. Because this is an encyclopedia, we are based off of secondary sources (as this and this explain for medicine and science). Review articles are the main secondary source for biomedical content. One doesn't have to use {{ In use}} or {{ Under construction}} on articles, though they might be useful. Again, let me or Disavian know if you have any questions. Why do I edit here? An example would be this collaboration to improve an article about a tremendously important global disease. Happy editing. =)
In addition to the classroom template, which should go below other templates, on the talk page of the article you are working on please make sure it is categorized into the appropriate WikiProjects, such as
{{ WPNEURO}}
{{ WPMCB}}
{{ WPMED}}
{{ WPANAT}}
{{ WPPSYCH}}
{{ WPPHARM}}
{{ WPCHEM}}
for WikiProject Neuroscience, Molecular and Cellular Biology, Medicine, Anatomy, Psychology, Pharmacology, and Chemicals, if your subject clearly falls into the scope of that field. Please add Template:WikiProjectBannerShell if there are three or more projects of clear interest. As an example, using that template correctly can look like this:
{{WikiProjectBannerShell||1=
{{WPNEURO}}
{{WPMCB}}
{{WPPSYCH}}
}}
See Talk:Paraphasia as an example. Long version to copy/paste then remove extraneous projects:
{{WikiProjectBannerShell||1=
{{WPNEURO}}
{{WPMCB}}
{{WPPSYCH}}
{{WPPHARM}}
{{WPCHEM}}
{{WPANAT}}
{{WPMED}}
}}
If you have a PubMed ID (PMID) just paste it into this website (included among a the list of tools at Help:Citation tools) and you'll get a fully formatted {{ cite journal}} template that you will place inside of the the reference tags, <ref></ref> (see the cheatsheet for an example). So pasting 22042752 of PMID 22042752 into the website yields
{{cite journal |author=Strijkers RH, Cate-Hoek AJ, Bukkems SF, Wittens CH |title=Management of deep vein thrombosis and prevention of post-thrombotic syndrome |journal=BMJ |volume=343 |issue= |pages=d5916 |year=2011 |pmid=22042752 |doi= |url=}}
So, into your article ( directly behind the punctuation), place
<ref name="Strijkers">{{cite journal |author=Strijkers RH, Cate-Hoek AJ, Bukkems SF, Wittens CH |title=Management of deep vein thrombosis and prevention of post-thrombotic syndrome |journal=BMJ |volume=343 |issue= |pages=d5916 |year=2011 |pmid=22042752 |doi= |url=}}</ref>
That's it. Notice the reference name in case one wants to cite the article multiple times. To cite it a second, third, etc. time in the article (above or below the full length version) all one has to do is type is <ref name="Strijkers"/>. Notice the /. That is the important distinction from the beginning of the full-length version. (Now if you want to be fancy, you can find and add the doi and url to a free full text version, if they exist, which in this case only the doi exists. Adding the url or PMC is more helpful to readers, because it will activate the title to link to free full text version. The doi can be added by someone running a program later, I think.) So, if you place the doi into the cite journal template, and then place it into the article, as long as it has a reference section at the bottom per the cheatsheet, it will look like this and have a number automatically assigned to it in the reference section:
Strijkers RH, Cate-Hoek AJ, Bukkems SF, Wittens CH (2011). "Management of deep vein thrombosis and prevention of post-thrombotic syndrome". BMJ. 343: d5916. doi: 10.1136/bmj.d5916. PMID 22042752.
{{ cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( link)
To add footnotes with {{
efn}}
, do this inside the article:
Something or another.{{efn|The note goes here and you can even add references inside here.}}
- ==Notes==
{{notelist}}
One can see examples of using this template at prothrombin G20210A and deep vein thrombosis.
Welcome. I'm "
Biosthmors", and I'll be helping out your
Introductory Neuroscience taught by
Steve Potter. Another Wikipedian, "
Disavian", a GT alumnus who has worked extensively on GT topics on Wikipedia, is also here to help. You can ask either of us questions either at
Disavian's talk page or
my talk page. In the following format:
#{{User|Your user name}} — Your name — {{la|Article title}}
please type your user name, name, and your existing or proposed article title [c] below. You can click edit down across from the "Names and article titles" section to selectively open it. Also, please copy and paste this template into the talk page of your article:
{{Educational assignment|year=2012|link=User:Biosthmors/Intro Neuro}} [d]
Here are some some tips and links. If you are starting a new article (indicated by a red link or a redirect), your topic should be notable (see the general notability guideline) and worthy of a separate page (see the reasons for merging). It's possible someone else wrote an article on the same subject so check for alternate titles (and one shouldn't capitalize the second or subsequent words in an article title, unless the title is a proper noun). As an example, here's an article I started from scratch. Another one I started (with an interesting title) is drunk walking. The highest-quality article I've written so far is deep vein thrombosis, which I rewrote. Because this is an encyclopedia, we are based off of secondary sources (as this and this explain for medicine and science). Review articles are the main secondary source for biomedical content. One doesn't have to use {{ In use}} or {{ Under construction}} on articles, though they might be useful. Again, let me or Disavian know if you have any questions. Why do I edit here? An example would be this collaboration to improve an article about a tremendously important global disease. Happy editing. =)
In addition to the classroom template, which should go below other templates, on the talk page of the article you are working on please make sure it is categorized into the appropriate WikiProjects, such as
{{ WPNEURO}}
{{ WPMCB}}
{{ WPMED}}
{{ WPANAT}}
{{ WPPSYCH}}
{{ WPPHARM}}
{{ WPCHEM}}
for WikiProject Neuroscience, Molecular and Cellular Biology, Medicine, Anatomy, Psychology, Pharmacology, and Chemicals, if your subject clearly falls into the scope of that field. Please add Template:WikiProjectBannerShell if there are three or more projects of clear interest. As an example, using that template correctly can look like this:
{{WikiProjectBannerShell||1=
{{WPNEURO}}
{{WPMCB}}
{{WPPSYCH}}
}}
See Talk:Paraphasia as an example. Long version to copy/paste then remove extraneous projects:
{{WikiProjectBannerShell||1=
{{WPNEURO}}
{{WPMCB}}
{{WPPSYCH}}
{{WPPHARM}}
{{WPCHEM}}
{{WPANAT}}
{{WPMED}}
}}
If you have a PubMed ID (PMID) just paste it into this website (included among a the list of tools at Help:Citation tools) and you'll get a fully formatted {{ cite journal}} template that you will place inside of the the reference tags, <ref></ref> (see the cheatsheet for an example). So pasting 22042752 of PMID 22042752 into the website yields
{{cite journal |author=Strijkers RH, Cate-Hoek AJ, Bukkems SF, Wittens CH |title=Management of deep vein thrombosis and prevention of post-thrombotic syndrome |journal=BMJ |volume=343 |issue= |pages=d5916 |year=2011 |pmid=22042752 |doi= |url=}}
So, into your article ( directly behind the punctuation), place
<ref name="Strijkers">{{cite journal |author=Strijkers RH, Cate-Hoek AJ, Bukkems SF, Wittens CH |title=Management of deep vein thrombosis and prevention of post-thrombotic syndrome |journal=BMJ |volume=343 |issue= |pages=d5916 |year=2011 |pmid=22042752 |doi= |url=}}</ref>
That's it. Notice the reference name in case one wants to cite the article multiple times. To cite it a second, third, etc. time in the article (above or below the full length version) all one has to do is type is <ref name="Strijkers"/>. Notice the /. That is the important distinction from the beginning of the full-length version. (Now if you want to be fancy, you can find and add the doi and url to a free full text version, if they exist, which in this case only the doi exists. Adding the url or PMC is more helpful to readers, because it will activate the title to link to free full text version. The doi can be added by someone running a program later, I think.) So, if you place the doi into the cite journal template, and then place it into the article, as long as it has a reference section at the bottom per the cheatsheet, it will look like this and have a number automatically assigned to it in the reference section:
Strijkers RH, Cate-Hoek AJ, Bukkems SF, Wittens CH (2011). "Management of deep vein thrombosis and prevention of post-thrombotic syndrome". BMJ. 343: d5916. doi: 10.1136/bmj.d5916. PMID 22042752.
{{ cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( link)
To add footnotes with {{
efn}}
, do this inside the article:
Something or another.{{efn|The note goes here and you can even add references inside here.}}
- ==Notes==
{{notelist}}
One can see examples of using this template at prothrombin G20210A and deep vein thrombosis.