<conf-date>

Conference Date

Date(s) on which a conference was held.

Remarks

Related Essay: The element <conf-date> may be used in bibliographic references (<element-citation> and <mixed-citation>). For a discussion on the use of <conf-date>, see Conferences in Citations.

Best Practice: Conference dates in journal metadata are traditionally stored in one of two forms: as a single date (“May 1906”), or as the first day and last day of the conference. Either form can be stored in the <conf-date> element :

  <conf-date>December 2011</conf-date>
  

or

  <conf-date>August 4, 2010 - August 9, 2010</conf-date>
  

Dates that originate as separate first and last elements in the source should be combined. For example, the separate dates:

  <conf-start>August 4, 2010</conf-start>
  <conf-end>August 9, 2010</conf-end>
  

should be merged into a single conference date to become:

  <conf-date>August 4, 2010 - August 9, 2010</conf-date>
  

Attributes

calendar Calendar
content-type Type of Content
id Document Internal Identifier
iso-8601-date ISO-8601 Formatted Date
specific-use Specific Use
xml:base Base
xml:lang Language

Related Elements

The container element <conference> holds all the elements that may be used to describe a conference, where an article was originally presented at a conference. Those elements include the conference related elements: <conf-date>, <conf-name>, <conf-num>, <conf-loc>, <conf-sponsor>, <string-conf>, <conf-theme>, and <conf-acronym>.

Content Model

<!ELEMENT  conf-date    (#PCDATA %conf-date-elements;)*              >

Expanded Content Model

(#PCDATA | day | era | month | season | year | x)*

Description

Any combination of:

This element may be contained in:

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

Example 1

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

...
<ref>
<element-citation publication-type="paper">
<name><surname>Thabet</surname>
<given-names>A</given-names></name>
<article-title>Clinical value of two serial pulmonary
embolism-protocol CT studies performed within ten
days</article-title>
<conf-name>Annual Scientific Meeting and Postgraduate
Course of the American Society of Emergency Radiology</conf-name>
<conf-date iso-8601-date="2006-09-27">2006 Sep 27-30</conf-date>
<conf-loc>Washington, DC</conf-loc>
</element-citation>
</ref>
...


Example 2

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

...
<ref>
<mixed-citation publication-type="paper">
<string-name><surname>Thabet</surname>
<given-names>A</given-names></string-name>.
<article-title>Clinical value of two serial pulmonary
embolism-protocol CT studies performed within ten
days</article-title>. <conf-name>Annual Scientific
Meeting and Postgraduate Course of the American
Society of Emergency Radiology</conf-name>;
<conf-date iso-8601-date="2006-09-27">2006 Sep
27-30</conf-date>; <conf-loc>Washington, DC</conf-loc>.
</mixed-citation>
</ref>
...


Example 3

...
<article-meta>
...
<abstract>...</abstract>
<conference>
<conf-date iso-8601-date="1999">1999</conf-date>
<conf-name>The 27th annual ACM SI/GUCCS
conference</conf-name>
<conf-acronym>SIGUCCS</conf-acronym>
<conf-num>27</conf-num>
<conf-loc>Denver, Colorado, United States</conf-loc>
<conf-sponsor>ACM, Assoc. for Computing
Machinery</conf-sponsor>
<conf-theme>User services conference for
university and college computing service
organizations</conf-theme>
</conference>
</article-meta>
...

Module

JATS-common1.ent