Cambridge Journals Online

 
 

Help topic: Fulltext HTML

Increasingly, Cambridge Journals are being made available in full-text HTML as well as PDF. Those journals available in HTML have an 'H' icon next to them on the "Subscribed To" page.

The full-text HTML is accessible from the journal's table of contents or a list of search results. Clicking on the 'HTML' link opens a new window. At the top of the page you will see the article's bibliographic information, including its doi and its online publication date.

Useful features

Immediately beneath that information there are three links that allow you to:

- subscribe to the journal

- email the article's abstract to a colleague

- save the citation to your 'My saved articles' page.

(You need to have registered and logged in to have access to these features. See the related Help pages for more information.)

Beneath these links are four further features:

Clicking on 'A Link to the Abstract/Details of this Article' brings up a link which you can then cut and paste into your web pages or documents.

'How to Cite this Article' provides a complete citation (including the doi) for you to cut and paste into your own work or bibliographic software.

'Export Citation' allows you to download the citation to your desktop or to email it to a colleague.

'Social Bookmarking' allows you to add the abstract to one of the following social bookmarking or networking sites: CiteULike, Del.icio.us, Connotea.org, Bibsonomy.org, Furl.net, Digg.com, Reddit.com, Facebook.

Top right menu

At the top of each article on the right-hand side of the page, a navigation panel allows you to move quickly around the journal content and gives you access to a number of citation features. The navigation allows you to go back to the journal homepage (by clicking on the Volume); to the table of contents (by clicking on the Issue); to the abstract; to the previous and next articles; and to the PDF version of the article you are looking at.

Clicking on 'Request Permissions' takes you to the Copyright Clearance Center's Rightslink service. This will tell you if you can obtain permission to re-use some or all of the article and, if you can, lets you to buy the license to do so.

You can find out if this article has been cited elsewhere by using 'Cited by Articles (CrossRef)' and 'Cited by Articles (Google Scholar)'. If you click on either of these links a new window opens that lists - and provides links to - articles in CrossRef or Google Scholar that cite the article you are viewing.

If you have registered and are logged in, you can set up citation alerts to tell you when an article you are interested in has been cited in another publication. See Help on Citation Alerts for more information.

Some Cambridge journals are encouraging debate by asking readers to respond to individual articles. Click on 'Comments' to submit your comment to a moderator. By clicking on 'Comment alerts' you can receive alerts whenever a new comment on this article is posted on Cambridge Journals Online.

'Blog this Article' is a quick and easy way to cite an article in your blog or online community profile. A new window opens containing some code which you can cut and paste into your blog. The code will display as the article's title, author(s), the journal issue it appears in and it will give a link to the article's abstract.

The abstract

The article's abstract appears before the article itself, followed by a list of figures, tables and illustrations (if the article contains any) and key headings within the article. These are provided as links to make it easy to navigate around the content.

Reference linking

Full-text HTML means that we can offer reference linking to help you find related research articles. When an article is cited, the date of the article will appear as a link. Clicking on that link will take you to the reference in the bibliography. If the cited article is available via CrossRef or Medline or appears elsewhere on Cambridge Journals Online a link from the bibliography will take you to it. In addition, for all cited articles in the bibliography we provide a search string you can use in an OpenURL resolver (see below).

OpenURL query

This allows users with access to an OpenURL resolver to find the article. If your library has its own resolver this will tell you whether the article is available to you as part of the library's collection. Click on the 'Open URL query data' link. This will open a new window containing a search string that complies with the OpenURL standard. If your organisation is registered with us and your Account Administrator has given us the URL of your local OpenURL resolver, a link to it will appear in the window. You can then copy and paste the search string directly into that resolver. If no link appears, you can cut and paste into any other resolver.

Medline

Medline is a database containing abstracts of, and bibliographic information about, articles published across the biomedical and life sciences since 1965. If a full-text HTML Cambridge article cites an article that appears in Medline you will be able to link directly to the Medline record which, in turn, links to the article on the publisher's website.

CrossRef

A CrossRef link means the article cited belongs to a participating CrossRef publisher. Clicking on the link will take you directly to the article cited.

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