h bioscience Referencing Guide
(updated Apr 2024)


Last updated:
How to do citations in h bioscience style?

This is the Citationsy guide to h bioscience 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 h bioscience.

Automate citations and referencing with our tool, Citationsy. It’s free to try and over 400 000 students and researchers already use it.
Click here to give it a try.
cite h bioscience  — Referencing Guide



How do you cite a book in the h bioscience referencing style? (2024 Guide)

A book citation in h bioscience always includes the author name(s), the publication year, the book title, and the publisher. Here’s an example

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


Automate citations and referencing in h bioscience with our tool, Citationsy.
It’s free to try and over 400 000 students and researchers already use it.
Click here sign up

How to reference a journal article in the h bioscience citation style?

How do you cite scientific papers in h bioscience format?

To write a research paper, you need to incorporate sources. This means that you have to know how to format the sources in your academic paper. To cite someone else’s paper in h bioscience in your research, follow these simple steps.

Here’s a h bioscience journal citation example using placeholders:
1.
Author1 LastnameAF, Author3 LastnameAF. Title. Container [Internet] 2000 [cited 2024 Apr. 25]; Volume:pages Used. Available from: URL
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 h bioscience: