Cerebral Cortex Referencing Guide
(updated Mar 2024)


Last updated:
How to do citations in Cerebral Cortex style?

This is the Citationsy guide to Cerebral Cortex citations, reference lists, in-text citations, and bibliographies.
The complete, comprehensive guide shows you how easy citing any source can be. Referencing books, youtube videos, websites, articles, journals, podcasts, images, videos, or music in Cerebral Cortex.

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cite Cerebral Cortex  — Referencing Guide



How do you cite a book in the Cerebral Cortex referencing style? (2024 Guide)

Have you come across fiction, non-fiction, history, novel or any other book and you want to include it in your works-cited-list in Cerebral Cortex? This is how.

Here’s an example book citation in Cerebral Cortex using placeholders:
Last Name FN. 2000. Title. Edition. ed. City: Publisher.
So if we want to cite, for example, “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings” by Maya Angelou we’d do so like this:
Cerebral Cortex citation:
Angelou M. 1969. I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. 1st ed. New York: Random House.
And an in-text citation book citation in Cerebral Cortex looks like this: (Angelou 1969)


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How to reference a journal article in the Cerebral Cortex citation style?

How do you cite scientific papers in Cerebral Cortex format?

To cite a research paper or journal article following the Cerebral Cortex formatting guide, follow these easy steps

Here’s a Cerebral Cortex journal citation example using placeholders:
Author1 LastnameAF, Author3 LastnameAF. 2000. Title. Container. Volume:pages Used.
So if we want to reference this scientific article: “Testing consumer preferences for iced-coffee: Does the drinking environment have any influence?” by C. Petit and J.M. Sieffermann in Cerebral Cortex: