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<article-title> Article Title
Full title of an article.
Usage/Remarks
The <article-title> element is used in two contexts: as a part of the metadata
concerning the article itself and as part of bibliographic reference metadata inside
bibliographic citations (<element-citation> and <mixed-citation>), where it contains the full title of a cited journal article.
The title is nearly always in the original language of publication, but a publisher
or archive may choose to place all article titles in one language, such as English,
and use the translated title element to hold the original title (<trans-title>).
Subtitle
In the article metadata (<article-meta>), the article subtitle and title are identified with two different elements and tagged
separately, using the <article-title> and <subtitle> elements. Within a bibliographic reference citation, the subtitle cannot be preserved
separately as this Tag Set identifies no cited-subtitle elements.
For references using either the <element-citation> or the <nlm-citation>, which do not permit untagged
text, there are two choices:
- The subtitle may be included with the title in the <article-title> element (or the <source> element for book titles, proceedings titles, and other titles), or
- The subtitle may be tagged as <named-content> with a @content-type “subtitle”.
For references using the <mixed-citation>, there are two choices:
- The subtitle may be included with the title in the <article-title> element (or the <source> element for book titles, proceedings titles, and other titles), or
- The subtitle may be left as untagged characters within the text of the reference.
Best Practice in Citations
Although this Tag Set cannot enforce either practice, retrieval performance will be
enhanced if the subtitle for all cited material is consistently placed within the
<article-title> element for journal articles and within the <source> element for book titles, proceedings titles, and other documents. When marked as
either a <named-content> or left as untagged text, the subtitle is easy to lose to searching. It is also not
always easy to identify, particularly with historical or foreign material, which part
of a multipart title is the main title and which the subtitle.
Models and Context
May be contained in
Description
Any combination of:
- Text, numbers, or special characters
- Linking Elements
- Related Material Elements
- Emphasis Elements
- <alternatives> Alternatives For Processing
- Inline Display Elements
- Inline Math Elements
- Math Elements
- Other Inline Elements
- Internal Linking Elements
- Baseline Change Elements
- <break> Line Break
Content Model
<!ELEMENT article-title (#PCDATA %article-title-elements;)* >
Expanded Content Model
(#PCDATA | email | ext-link | uri | inline-supplementary-material | related-article | related-object | bold | fixed-case | italic | monospace | overline | roman | sans-serif | sc | strike | underline | ruby | alternatives | inline-graphic | inline-media | private-char | chem-struct | inline-formula | tex-math | mml:math | abbrev | index-term | index-term-range-end | milestone-end | milestone-start | named-content | styled-content | fn | target | xref | sub | sup | break)*
Tagged Samples
<article-meta>
<article dtd-version="1.3">
<front>
<journal-meta>...</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">WES-10092260</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title>Systematic review of day hospital care for
elderly people</article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>...</contrib-group>
<aff>...</aff>
<pub-date publication-format="print" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="1999-08-27">
<day>27</day><month>03</month><year>1999</year></pub-date>
...
</article-meta>
</front>
...
</article>
In citations
Mixed citation
...
<back>
...
<ref-list>
...
<ref id="B8">
<label>8</label>
<mixed-citation>
<string-name><surname>Weissert</surname>,
<given-names>W</given-names></string-name>,
<string-name><surname>Livieratos</surname>,
<given-names>B</given-names></string-name>.
<article-title>Effects and costs of day-care
services for the chronically ill: a randomized
experiment</article-title>. <source>Medical Care</source>
<year iso-8601-date="1980">1980</year>; <volume>18</volume>:
<fpage>567</fpage>–<lpage>584</lpage>.
<pub-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">WES-6772889</pub-id>.
</mixed-citation>
</ref>
...
</ref-list>
...
</back>
...
Element citation
...
<back>
...
<ref-list>
...
<ref id="B8">
<label>8</label>
<element-citation>
<person-group person-group-type="author">
<name><surname>Weissert</surname>
<given-names>W</given-names></name>
<name><surname>Livieratos</surname>
<given-names>B</given-names></name>
</person-group>
<article-title>Effects and costs of day-care
services for the chronically ill: a randomized
experiment</article-title>
<source>Medical Care</source>
<year iso-8601-date="1980">1980</year>
<volume>18</volume>
<fpage>567</fpage>
<lpage>584</lpage>
<pub-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">WES-6772889</pub-id>
</element-citation>
</ref>
...
</ref-list>
...
</back>
...
Related Resources
- See: Titles in Citations