AMERICAN
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION
I. General Document
Guidelines
- Margins: One
inch on all sides (top, bottom, left, right)
- Font Size and Type: 12-pt.
Times New Roman font
- Line Spacing: Double-space
throughout the paper, including the title page, abstract, body of the
document, references, appendixes, footnotes, tables, and figures.
- Spacing after Punctuation: Space once after
commas, colons, and semicolons within sentences. Insert two spaces after
punctuation marks that end sentences.
- Alignment: Flush
left (creating uneven right margin)
- Paragraph Indentation: 5-7
spaces
- Pagination: The
page number appears one inch from the right edge of the paper on the first
line of every page.
- Running Head: The
running head is a short title that appears at the top of the pages of a
paper or published article. The running head is typed flush left at the
top of all pages. The running head should not exceed 50 characters,
including punctuation and spacing. Using most word processors, the running
head and page number can be inserted into a header, which then
automatically appears on all pages.
- Active voice: As
a general rule, use the active voice rather than the passive voice. For
example, use “We predicted that …” rather than “It was predicted that …
II.
Title Page
- Pagination: The
Title Page is page 1.
- Running Head:
The running head is typed flush left (all uppercase) following “Running
head:”
- Key Elements: Paper
title, author(s), institutional affiliation(s), author note.
- Paper Title: Uppercase
and lowercase letters, centered on the page.
- Author(s): Uppercase
and lowercase letters, centered on the line following the title.
- Institutional affiliation: Uppercase
and lowercase letters, centered on the line following the author(s).
- Author Note:
Provide information about the author’s departmental affiliation,
acknowledgments of assistance or financial support, and a mailing address
for correspondence
III. Abstract:
The abstract is a
one-paragraph, self-contained summary of the most important elements of the
paper.
- Pagination: The
abstract begins on a new page (page 2).
- Heading: “Abstract”
(centered on the first line below the running head)
- Format: The
abstract (in block format) begins on the line following the Abstract
heading. The abstract word limit is set by individual journals. Typically,
the word limit is between 150 and 250 words. All numbers in the abstract
(except those beginning a sentence) should be typed as digits rather than
words.
IV. Body
- Pagination: The
body of the paper begins on a new page (page 3). Subsections of the body
of the paper do not begin on new pages.
- Title: The
title of the paper (in uppercase and lowercase letters) is centered on the
first line below the running head.
- Introduction: The
introduction (which is not labeled) begins on the line following the paper
title.
- Headings: Five
levels of headings are available to be used
to organize the paper and reflect the relative importance of sections. For
example, many empirical research articles utilize two levels of headings:
Main headings (such as Method, Results, Discussion, References)
would use Level 1 (centered, boldface, uppercase and lowercase letters),
and subheadings (such asParticipants, Apparatus,
and Procedure as subsections of the Method section) would
use Level 2 (flush left, boldface, uppercase and lowercase letters)
V. Text citations:
Source material must be
documented in the body of the paper by citing the author(s) and date(s) of the
sources. The underlying principle is that ideas and words of others must be
formally acknowledged. The reader can obtain the full source citation from the
list of references that follows the body of the paper.
When the names of the
authors of a source are part of the formal structure of the sentence, the year
of publication appears in parentheses following the identification of the
authors. Consider the following example:
Wirth and Mitchell
(1994) found that although there was a reduction in insulin dosage over a
period of two weeks in the treatment condition compared to the control
condition, the difference was not statistically significant.
[Note: and is used when
multiple authors are identified as part of the formal structure of the
sentence. Compare this to the example in the following section.]
When the authors of a
source are not part of the formal structure of the sentence, both the authors
and year of publication appear in parentheses. Consider the following example:
Reviews of research on
religion and health have concluded that at least some types of religious
behaviors are related to higher levels of physical and mental health (Gartner,
Larson, & Allen, 1991; Koenig, 1990; Levin & Vanderpool, 1991; Maton
& Pargament, 1987; Paloma & Pendleton, 1991; Payne, Bergin, Bielema,
& Jenkins, 1991).
[Note: & is used
when multiple authors are identified in parenthetical material. Note also that
when several sources are cited parenthetically, they are ordered alphabetically
by first authors' surnames and separated by semicolons.]
When a source that has
two authors is cited, both authors are included every time the source is cited.
When a source that has
three, four, or five authors is cited, all authors are included the first time
the source is cited. When that source is cited again, the first author’s
surname and “et al.” are used. Consider the following example:
Reviews of research on
religion and health have concluded that at least some types of religious
behaviors are related to higher levels of physical and mental health (Payne,
Bergin, Bielema, & Jenkins, 1991).
Payne et al. (1991)
showed that …
When a source that has
six or more authors is cited, the first author’s surname and “et al.” are used
every time the source is cited (including the first time).
Every effort should be
made to cite only sources that you have actually read. When it is necessary to
cite a source that you have not read (“Grayson” in the following example) that
is cited in a source that you have read (“Murzynski & Degelman” in the following
example), use the following format for the text citation and list only the
source you have read in the References list:
Grayson (as cited in
Murzynski & Degelman, 1996) identified four components of body language
that were related to judgments of vulnerability.
To cite a personal
communication (including letters, emails, and telephone interviews), include
initials, surname, and as exact a date as possible. Because a personal
communication is not “recoverable” information, it is not included in the
References section. For the text citation, use the following format:
B. F. Skinner (personal
communication, February 12, 1978) claimed …
To cite a Web document,
use the author-date format. If no author is identified, use the first few words
of the title in place of the author. If no date is provided, use “n.d.” in
place of the date. Consider the following examples:
Degelman (2009)
summarizes guidelines for the use of APA writing style.
Changes in Americans’
views of gender status differences have been documented (Gender and Society,
n.d.).
To cite an entire
website, give the address of the site in the text. Example:
Eric Chudler’s
excellent Neuroscience for Kids (http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/neurok.html)
is definitely not only for kids!
[Note: No entry in the
References list is needed for the website.]
To cite the Bible,
provide the book, chapter, and verse. The first time the Bible is cited in the
text, identify the version used. Consider the following example:
“You are forgiving and
good, O Lord, abounding in love to all who call to you” (Psalm 86:5, New
International Version).
VI. Quotations:
When a direct quotation
is used, always include the author, year, and page number as part of the
citation.
- A quotation of fewer than 40 words
should be enclosed in double quotation marks and should be incorporated
into the formal structure of the sentence. Consider the following example:
Patients receiving prayer had “less congestive heart failure, required less diuretic and antibiotic therapy, had fewer episodes of pneumonia, had fewer cardiac arrests, and were less frequently intubated and ventilated” (Byrd, 1988, p. 829). - A lengthier quotation of 40 or more
words should appear (without quotation marks) apart from the surrounding
text, in block format, with each line indented five spaces from the left
margin.
All sources included in
the References section must be cited in the body of the paper (and all sources
cited in the paper must be included in the References section).
- Pagination: The
References section begins on a new page.
- Heading: “References”
(centered on the first line below the running head)
- Format: The
references (with hanging indent) begin on the line following the
References heading. Entries are organized alphabetically by surnames of
first authors. Most reference entries have the following components:
- Authors: Authors are listed in the
same order as specified in the source, using surnames and initials.
Commas separate all authors. When there are eight or more authors, list
the first six authors followed by three ellipses (…) and then the final
author. If no author is identified, the title of the document begins the
reference.
- Year of Publication: In
parentheses following authors, with a period following the closing
parenthesis. If no publication date is identified, use “n.d.” in
parentheses following the authors.
- Source Reference: Includes title,
journal, volume, pages (for journal article) or title, city of publication,
publisher (for book). Italicize titles of books, titles of periodicals,
and periodical volume numbers.
- Electronic Retrieval Information:
Electronic retrieval information may include digital object identifiers
(DOIs) or uniform resource locators (URLs). DOIs are unique alphanumeric
identifiers that lead users to digital source material. To learn whether
an article has been assigned a DOI
IX. Tables:
A common use of tables
is to present quantitative data or the results of statistical analyses (such as
ANOVA). See the Publication Manual (2010, pp. 128-150) for
detailed examples. Tables must be mentioned in the text.
- Pagination: Each
Table begins on a separate page.
- Heading:
“Table 1″ (or 2 or 3, etc.) is typed flush left
on the first line below the running head. Double-space and type the table
title flush left (italicized in uppercase and lowercase letters).
A common use of Figures
is to present graphs, photographs, or other illustrations (other than tables).
See the Publication Manual (2010, pp. 150-167) for detailed
examples.
- Pagination:
Figures begin on a separate page.
- Figure Caption:
“Figure 1.” (or 2 or 3, etc.) is typed flush left and italicized on
the first line below the figure, immediately followed on the same line by
the caption (which should be a brief descriptive phrase).
A common use of
appendixes is to present unpublished tests or to describe complex equipment or
stimulus materials.
- Pagination: Each
Appendix begins on a separate page.
- Heading:If
there is only one appendix, “Appendix” is centered on the first line below
the manuscript page header. If there is more than one appendix, use
Appendix A (or B or C, etc.). Double-space and type the appendix title
(centered in uppercase and lowercase letters).
- Format: Indent
the first line 5-7 spaces.
More generalize Referencing format: on next post
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