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Name of the Publication.
Cheryl Iverson
in AMA Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors (11 ed.)
Use the accepted abbreviation of the journal name (see 13.10, Names of Journals) and the following forms, as applicable to the journal involved. Note that journals differ in the amount of information included in running heads and running feet and that the style for abbreviations may differ slightly from that used elsewhere in the publication....Running Head, Running Foot in Print/PDF.
Cheryl Iverson
in AMA Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors (11 ed.)
For publication, print or PDF pages customarily carry the bibliographic information for the article (journal name or abbreviation, year of publication, volume number, issue number, inclusive page numbers, and DOI, as well as the date published online, if applicable). Successive pages may also include a shortened version of the article title, called a running title or a short title (...Short Title of the Article.
Cheryl Iverson
in AMA Manual of Style: A Guide for Authors and Editors (11 ed.)
The shortened version of the title (ie, short title, running head) should be kept brief but should emphasize the main point of the article, not just repeat the first few words of the title. Different journals have different limits (eg, approximately 70 to 100 characters and spaces in the JAMA Network journals). No punctuation follows the running foot or head....View:
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