Eight or more:
Solei, H. R., Wein, M., Barnes, J., Bates, A., Ferta, R., Treat, D., … Martins, R. N. (2011). The provenance
of noodles. Culinary Research, 10(4), 299-300.
Complete author list: Solei, H. R., Wein, M., Barnes, J., Bates, A., Ferta, R., Treat, D., Verdile, G., Sutton,
T., Lenzo, N. P., Gandy, S. E., Martins, R. N.
Citations for Journal Articles accessed on a website or database
In-text citations for an online journal article remain unchanged from the way you would cite a print
article. The citation in the reference list does have a few differences, however. The main difference is
that in APA referencing, wherever possible you should supply the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) of the
source you accessed. If no DOI is available, you should cite the URL of the source.
Last name, First initial. (Year). Article Title. Journal name, Volume (Issue), Page/s. DOI: DOI link
Last name, First initial. (Year). Article Title. Journal name, Volume (Issue), Page/s. Retrieved from: URL.
For example:
Jenkins, O. (1996). Unusual Recipes and Cantonese Cuisine. Culinary Research, Volume 5 (8), pp. 47-59.
DOI: http://doi.org/ojenkinscantonesecuisine
Jenkins, O. (1996). Unusual Recipes and Cantonese Cuisine. Culinary Research, Volume 5 (8), pp. 47-59.
Retrieved from: www.culinaryresearchjournal.com/ojenkinscantonesecuisine
Citations for Newspaper and Magazine Articles – Print or Online:
Newspaper and magazine citations are rendered similarly to journal articles when they are found online;
the same differences in formatting occur, as the example below illustrates.