AUTHOR INFORMATION

1. One Author

Golden, E. (2013). John Gilbert: The last of the silent film stars. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky.

2. Two Authors

Cox, B., & Cohen, A. (2011). Wonders of the universe. New York, NY: HarperCollins.

3. Three or More Authors

List every author up to and including seven; for a work with eight or more authors, give the first six names followed by three ellipsis dots and the last author’s name.

Holstein, M. B., Parks, J., & Waymack, M. (2010). Ethics, aging, and society: The critical turn. New York, NY: Springer.

Barry, A. E., Stellefson, M. L., Piazza-Gardner, A. K., Chaney, B. H., & Dodd, V. (2013). The impact of pre-gaming on subsequent blood alcohol concentrations: An event-level analysis. Addictive Behaviors, 38(8), 2374-2377.

4. Group, Corporate, or Government Author

In many cases, the group name is the same as the publisher. Instead of repeating the group name, use the term “Author” for the publisher’s name.

Scientific American Editors. (2012). Storm warnings: Climate change and extreme weather. New York, NY: Author.

5. Unidentified Author

If the author is listed on the work as “Anonymous,” list that in your reference entry, alphabetizing accordingly. Otherwise, start with and alphabetize by title.

Anonymous. (1996). Primary colors: A novel of politics. New York, NY: Random House.

Quantum computing: Faster, slower — or both at once? (2013, May). The Economist, 57-58.

6. Multiple Works by the Same Author

Shermer, M. (2003). I knew you would say that [Review of the book Intuition: Its powers and perils]. Skeptic, 10(1), 92-94.

Shermer, M. (2005a, August). Full of holes: The curious case of acupuncture. Scientific American, 293(2). 30.

Shermer, M. (2005b). Science friction. New York, NY: Henry Holt, 6.