◇◆
<bio> Biography
Biographical data concerning a contributor or the description of a collaboration.
Usage/Remarks
In print publications, the biographical text associated with an article may not appear
with the article metadata, which is typically displayed at the top or beginning of
the article. For
example, the biography may appear at the end of the article, in a sidebar, or collected
with other biographies in a separate section of the publication. Biographies may be
as short as a few words (tagged as a <p>) or as long as a section with internal subsections.
The XLink linking attribute @xlink:href may be used to point to a picture of the contributor, to a more complete vita, to
his/her website, etc.
Attributes
Namespaces
Models and Context
May be contained in
Description
The following, in order:
- <sec-meta> Section Metadata, zero or one
- <label> Label (of an Equation, Figure, Reference, etc.), zero or one
- <title> Title, zero or one
- Any combination of:
- Paragraph-level Display Elements
- <address> Address/Contact Information
- <answer> Answer to a Question
- <answer-set> Answer Set
- <array> Array (Simple Tabulation)
- <block-alternatives> Block-level Alternatives
- <boxed-text> Boxed Text
- <chem-struct-wrap> Chemical Structure Wrapper
- <code> Code
- <explanation> Explanation
- <fig> Figure
- <fig-group> Figure Group
- <graphic> Graphic
- <media> Media Object
- <preformat> Preformatted Text
- <question> Question
- <question-wrap> Question Wrapper
- <question-wrap-group> Question Wrapper Group
- <supplementary-material> Supplementary Material Metadata
- <table-wrap> Table Wrapper
- <table-wrap-group> Table Wrapper Group
- <alternatives> Alternatives For Processing
- <disp-formula> Formula, Display
- <disp-formula-group> Formula, Display Group
- Lists
- Math Elements
- <p> Paragraph
- <related-article> Related Article Information
- <related-object> Related Object Information
- <ack> Acknowledgments
- <disp-quote> Quote, Displayed
- <speech> Speech
- <statement> Statement, Formal
- <verse-group> Verse Form for Poetry
- <x> X - Generated Text and Punctuation
- Paragraph-level Display Elements
- <sec> Section, zero or more
- Any combination of:
Content Model
<!ELEMENT bio %bio-model; >
Expanded Content Model
(sec-meta?, label?, title?, (address | alternatives | answer | answer-set | array | block-alternatives | boxed-text | chem-struct-wrap | code | explanation | fig | fig-group | graphic | media | preformat | question | question-wrap | question-wrap-group | supplementary-material | table-wrap | table-wrap-group | disp-formula | disp-formula-group | def-list | list | tex-math | mml:math | p | related-article | related-object | ack | disp-quote | speech | statement | verse-group | x)*, (sec)*, (notes | fn-group | glossary | ref-list)*)
Tagged Samples
Two-paragraph <bio>
...
<article-meta>
...
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name><surname>Forster</surname>
<given-names>Anne</given-names></name>
<role>Designed electronic devices and protocols</role>
<aff>School of Electronic Engineering, University of Finlandia</aff>
<email>af_eengr@finlandia.edu</email>
<bio>
<p><bold>Anne Forster</bold> is the current editor of
the <italic>OASIS Microwave Journal</italic>, responsible
for Technical Committee and Developments. She received
her BE and PhD in electrical engineering from the University
of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. Currently, she is professor
in the School of Electronic Engineering at the University of
Finlandia, where she holds the chair in Microwave Electronics.</p>
<p>She is a member of the technical program committee
for the International Microwave Symposium and a member
of the editorial board for the <italic>Mulberry Transactions
on Microwave Theory and Technique</italic>. She has
organized many workshops and taught many short courses
on microwave signal integrity and wireless and RF design.</p>
</bio>
</contrib>
<contrib contrib-type="author">...</contrib>
</contrib-group>
...
</article-meta>
...
<bio> with headed sections
...
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>...</name>
<bio>
<p>One of the most well-known Surgeons General of the
United States (1982-1989), C. Everett Koop’s illustrious
career encompasses more than 35 years ...</p>
<sec>
<label>1</label>
<title>Education</title>
<p>Following his graduation from Dartmouth College (B.A.,
1937), Koop received his M.D. degree ...</p>
</sec>
<sec>
<label>2</label>
<title>Medical Practice</title>
<p>Following his training, Koop joined the staff of
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia as a pediatric
surgeon; in 1946 he became ...</p>
</sec>
<sec>
<label>3</label>
<title>Government Office</title>
<p>Koop became Surgeon General in January 1982. During
his tenure, he was a strong advocate on public health issues
such as the rights of the disabled, smoking, and ...</p>
<p>The same year as his appointment, controversy arose
involving the treatment of a disabled newborn ...</p>
...
</sec>
...
</bio>
</contrib>
...