<annotation>

Annotation in a Citation

Commentary, summary, review, or similar non-bibliographic information concerning the cited work.

Remarks

While most citations simply provide the bibliographic information for a cited reference, a few describe the work, categorize the work, comment upon the nature or quality of the work, or summarize its findings. The <annotation> element is intended to hold such commentary.

Display/Formatting Note: All of the other reference elements are inline elements. In contrast, an <annotation> is typically presented as a block element, with space before and after it.

Attributes

content-type Type of Content
specific-use Specific Use
xml:lang Language

Related Elements

This element is not related to the MathML <annotation> element, which is a mathematical term used only with equations.

Content Model

<!ELEMENT  annotation   %annotation-model;                           >

Expanded Content Model

((p)+)

Description

Any one of:

This element may be contained in:

<element-citation>, <mixed-citation>, <nlm-citation>, <product>, <related-article>, <related-object>

Example 1

In an element-style bibliographic reference (punctuation and spacing removed):

               
...
<ref id="B27">
<element-citation>
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name><surname>Hughes</surname>
<given-names>TR</given-names></name>
<name><surname>Marton</surname>
<given-names>MJ</given-names></name>
<name><surname>Jones</surname>
<given-names>AC</given-names></name>
<etal/>
</person-group>
<article-title>Functional discovery via a compendium
of expression profiles</article-title>
<source>Cell</source>
<year>2000</year>
<volume>102</volume>
<fpage>109</fpage>
<lpage>126</lpage>
<annotation>
<p>This report is the most extensive DNA expression
profile of yeast genes. It examines the expression
pattern of the whole yeast genome in 300 mutant
strains. It infers the function of many unknown
genes comparing profiles among the different
mutants.</p>
</annotation>
</element-citation>
</ref>...


            

Example 2

In a mixed-style bibliographic reference (punctuation and spacing preserved):

               
...
<back>
<ref-list>
...
<ref id="B27">
<mixed-citation>
<string-name><surname>Hughes</surname>,
<given-names>TR</given-names></string-name>,
<string-name><surname>Marton</surname>,
<given-names>MJ</given-names></string-name>,
<string-name><surname>Jones</surname>,
<given-names>AC</given-names></string-name>, et al.
<article-title>Functional discovery via a compendium
of expression profiles</article-title>.
<source>Cell</source> <year>2000</year>;
<volume>102</volume>: <fpage>109</fpage>&ndash;
<lpage>126</lpage>
(<annotation>
<p>This report is the most extensive DNA expression
profile of yeast genes. It examines the expression
pattern of the whole yeast genome in 300 mutant
strains. It infers the function of many unknown
genes comparing profiles among the different
mutants.</p>
</annotation>).
</mixed-citation>
</ref>
</ref-list>
</back>...


            

Module

JATS-references0.ent