e-ISSN: 2300-262X, ISSN: 0137-5075
References
Presenting bibliography/reference list
Items appearing in the reference list should be complete, including surname and the initials of the first name of the author, the full title of the paper/book in English followed by the information on the original paper language.
In case of a book, the publisher's name, the place and year of publication should be given.
In case of a periodical, the full title of the periodical, consecutive volume number, current issue number, pages, and year of publication should be given; the annual volume number must be boldfaced type so as to distinguish it from the current issue number.
Providing the DOI number for each item in the reference list to which it has been assigned is obligatory.
- Reference list should be arranged alphabetically by author surname. Put all the entries in one long alphabetical list. Number them from 1 to n.
- Do not list books, journal articles, websites, etc. in separate sections.
- When an author or group of authors has more than one publication in the same year a lower case letter is added to the date. This letters will be used when citing this source in the text. Example:
- Karamanli A., Aydogdu M. (2019a), Buckling of laminated composite and sandwich beams due to axially varying in-plane loads, Composite Structures, 210: 391–408, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compstruct.2018.11.067.
- Karamanli A., Aydogdu M. (2019b), On the vibration of size dependent rotating laminated composite and sandwich microbeams via a transverse shear-normal deformation theory, Composite Structures, 216: 290–300, doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compstruct.2019.02.044.
-
Book, encyclopaedia, and ISO/ASTM standards titles should be italicized:
Author’s surname, initials (year), Title of the Book [language of publication – if other than English], edition (if later than the first), Publisher Name, Place of Publication. Examples:
- American Psychological Association (2001), Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 5th ed., Washington D.C.
- Encyclopaedia of Physics (1993), 2nd ed., McGraw-Hill, New York.
- Varshneya A. (1944), Fundamentals of Inorganic Glasses, p. 111, Academic Press, New York.
- Moore M.H., Estrich S., McGillis D., Spelman W. (1984), Dangerous Offenders: The Elusive Target of Justice, Harvard University Press, Cambridge.
- Strunk W., White E.B. (1979), The Elements of Style, 3rd ed., Macmillan, New York.
- International Organization for Standardization (1998), Acoustics — Determination of acoustic properties in impedance tubes. Part 2: Two-microphone technique for normal sound absorption coefficient and normal surface impedance (ISO Standard No. ISO 10534-2:2023), https://www.iso.org/standard/81294.html.
- ASTM E2611-19 (2019), Standard test method for normal incidence determination of porous material acoustical properties based on the transfer matrix method, ATM International.
- American National Standard (2008), Criteria for evaluating room noise, Standard ANSI S12.2:2008.
If the book is in language other than English:
Author’s surname, initials (year), Title of the Book translated to English [in: original title of the publication], edition (if later than the first), Publisher Name, Place of Publication.
- Nowicki A. (1995), Basics of Doppler Ultrasonography [in Polish: Podstawy ultrasonografii dopplerowskiej], WN PWN, Warszawa.
-
List up to six (6) authors. If there are seven (7) or more, list the surname and initials of the first one and then “et al.”.
-
Information about editors of book:
Editor(s) surname, initial of the Editor(s) name, initials [Ed./Eds] (year), Title of the Book, edition (if later than the first one), Volumes (if there are more than one), Publisher Name, Place of Publication. Examples:
- Crocker M.J. [Ed.] (2007), Handbook of Noise and Vibration Control, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York.
- Klinke R., Hartman R. [Eds] (1983), Hearing – Physiological Bases and Psychophysics, Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, Tokyo.
-
Chapter in edited book:
Surname of the author(s) of the chapter, initials (year), Title of chapter, [in:] Title of the Book, Editor(s) surname, initial of the Editor(s) name, initials [Ed./Eds], pp. start and end of chapter page numbers, Publisher Name, Place of Publication. Example:
- Rakowski A. (1991), Context-dependent intonation variants, [in:] Music, Language, Speech and Brain, Sundberg J., Nord L., Carlson R. [Eds.], pp. 203–211, MacMillan Press, London.
- Berlincourt D.A., Curran D.R., Jaffe H. (1964), Piezoelectric and piezomagnetic materials and their function in transducers, [in:] Physical Acoustic, Mason W.P. [Ed.], Vol. 1, part A, pp. 169–270, Academic Press, New York.
-
Journal article:
Author(s) surname, name initials (year), Title of the article, Title of the Journal, Volume number[boldfaced](issue number): start and end page numbers of article, full DOI link (obligatory) or web URL if applies. Write directly page numbers (not preceded by p. or pp.), if the article is originally in language other than English, do exactly the same thing as in book, add after a title: [in: title in the original language]. Examples:
- Houtsma A. (2007), Experiments on pitch perception: implications for music and other processes, Archives of Acoustics, 32(4): 475–490.
- Sęk A., Moore B.C.J. (1995), Frequency discrimination as a function of frequency, measured in several ways, TheJournal of the Acoustical Society of America, 97(4): 2479–2486, https://doi.org/10.1121/1.411968
- Yori S.A. (2020), Method for calculating the sound absorption coefficient for a variable range of incidence angles, Archives of Acoustics, 45(1): 67–75, https://doi.org/10.24425/aoa.2020.132482.
-
Conference paper in published proceedings (do not forget about DOI if it exists). Example:
- Rakowski A., Miśkiewicz A. (2002), Pitch discrimination of low-frequency tones, [in:] Proceedings of 7th International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition, pp. 538–540, Sydney.
-
Dissertations in congresses and meetings (unpublished). Example:
- Tucker S. (2003), An ecological approach to the classification of transient underwater acoustic events: perceptual experiments and auditory models, Ph.D. Thesis, Department of Computer Science, University of Sheffield.
- Salamon R. (2009), Contemporary military sonar system, Dissertation presented during the 56th Open Seminar on Acoustics, OSA 2009, Goniądz, Poland.
-
Electronic sources:
Author(s) surname, name initials (year), Title, Publisher Name, URL (access: D/M/Y)
If no date is shown on the document, authors should use n.d. (no date). If the author is not given, authors should begin the reference with the title of the document. If a document is part of a large site such as a university or a government department’s website, give the name of the parent organization and the relevant department before the URL.
Do not write the web address (URL) within the text of the paper, it should appear only in the reference.
Examples:
- Cox T. (n.d.), Sound quality, from www.acoustics.salford.ac.uk/res/cox/sound_quality/.
- Deciding your future (2000), University of Portsmouth, Careers Service, www.port.ac.uk/departments/careers/plancareer/deciding-your-future.htm (access: 5.08.2001).
- Alexander J., Tate M.A. (2001), Evaluating web resources, Widener University, Wolfgram Memorial Library, https://www.science.widener.edu/~withers/webeval.htm-0 (access: 21.08.2001).
-
Audio-visual sources – music:
Author’s surname, name initials (date of copyright), Title of the song, [on:] Title of the album [medium of recording], Location: Label (recording date if different from copyright date). Example:
- Puccini G. (1990), Nessun dorma, [on:] Carreras Domingo Pavarotti in concert [CD], Decca, London.