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Siglas nas referências em letras minúsculas

Open andresimi opened this issue 7 years ago • 5 comments

Comportamento esperado: image Algumas letras do tiítulo (DSM-V) deveriam sair em maiúscula como está no Bibtex, mas sai tudo em minúsculo.

andresimi avatar Mar 15 '17 22:03 andresimi

@andresimi sempre coloca os códigos para facilitar reproduzir o problema. Nesse caso, coloca o código dessa referência.

Não sei se vai funcionar, mas tentar colocar {DSM-V} no título.

edusantana avatar Mar 15 '17 23:03 edusantana

@andresimi cola o código (do arquivo referencias.bib) que você utilizou para essa referência.

edusantana avatar Mar 23 '17 18:03 edusantana

Foi gerado pelo Mendeley.

@article{Oquendo2008,
abstract = {Suicidal behavior (death and attempts) is usually a complication of psychiatric conditions, most commonly mood disorders (1). However, it also occurs in schizophrenia, substance use disorders (particularly with alcohol), and personality and anxiety disorders, among others (1). About 10{\%} of those who commit or attempt suicide have no identifiable psychiatric illness. However, our current nomenclature considers suicidal behavior a symptom of major depressive episode or borderline personality disorder. During assessment, clinicians evaluate the principal diagnosis responsible for the chief complaint and use overview questions to identify comorbid conditions. If no evidence is found for major depressive episode or borderline personality disorder, questions about past suicidal behavior may not be pursued. Since the mental status examination targets the present condition, patients who deny suicidality may not be asked about past suicidal acts, potentially leading to an underestimate of suicide risk. Yet a history of suicidal behavior is the most reliably replicated risk factor for future suicide attempt or completion, whereas expressions of suicidality wax and wane and may be absent during an interview (2). Thus, current diagnostic algorithms may lead clinicians to overlook suicidal ideation or behavior in patients with posttraumatic stress disorder, where patients may contemplate suicide as an escape from their flashbacks, or in those with alcoholism, where disinhibition during intoxication may render patients less able to resist suicidal thoughts. Suicidality in these high-risk groups can easily go unidentified. Even when a clinician identifies suicidal ideation or behavior, the patient receives a diagnosis that does not highlight suicide risk as a focus of concern. We recommend that suicidal behavior be considered a separate diagnostic category documented on a sixth axis. Suicidal behavior meets the criteria for diagnostic validity set forth by Robins and Guze (3), and it does so as well as most conditions we treat. It is clinically well described (4), research has identified postmortem and in vivo laboratory markers (1), it can be subjected to a strict differential diagnosis (4), follow-up studies confirm its presence at higher rates in those with a past diagnosis (2), and it is familial (5). With suicidal behavior in a sixth axis, it would be identified through review-of-systems questions, in addition to inquiry during the mental status examination. This proposed solution would address both conceptual and practical issues. Suicidal behavior might be conceptualized as an impulse-control disorder not elsewhere classified, but it is not always impulsive. Classification among " other conditions that may be a focus of clinical attention " diminishes its hierarchical position among diagnoses. Practically, an axis for suicidal acts would compel clinical and administrative structures to determine the suicide risk status of individuals assessed in psychiatric settings. In this manner, suicide risk can be},
author = {Oquendo, Mar{\'{i}}a A. and Baca-Garc{\'{i}}a, Enrique and Mann, J. John and Giner, Jos{\'{e}}},
doi = {10.1176/appi.ajp.2008.08020281},
file = {:home/andresimi/Documentos/Dropbox/Sincronizar/Mendeley Desktop/pdf/Oquendo et al. - 2008 - Issues for DSM-V Suicidal behavior as a separate diagnosis on a separate axis.pdf:pdf},
journal = {American Journal of Psychiatry},
keywords = {suicide,terminology},
mendeley-tags = {suicide,terminology},
number = {11},
pages = {1383--1384},
pmid = {18981069},
title = {{Issues for DSM-V: Suicidal behavior as a separate diagnosis on a separate axis}},
volume = {165},
year = {2008}
}

andresimi avatar Mar 27 '17 00:03 andresimi

Já tive esse problema. Basta colocar as letras ou siglas que você quer em maiúsculo entre chaves.

@Article{Oquendo2008,
  author        = {Oquendo, Mar{\'{i}}a A. and Baca-Garc{\'{i}}a, Enrique and Mann, J. John and Giner, Jos{\'{e}}},
  title         = {Issues for {DSM-V}},
  journal       = {American Journal of Psychiatry},
  year          = {2008},
  subtitle      = {Suicidal behavior as a separate diagnosis on a separate axis},
  volume        = {165},
  number        = {11},
  pages         = {1383--1384},
  abstract      = {Suicidal behavior (death and attempts) is usually a complication of psychiatric conditions, most commonly mood disorders (1). However, it also occurs in schizophrenia, substance use disorders (particularly with alcohol), and personality and anxiety disorders, among others (1). About 10{\%} of those who commit or attempt suicide have no identifiable psychiatric illness. However, our current nomenclature considers suicidal behavior a symptom of major depressive episode or borderline personality disorder. During assessment, clinicians evaluate the principal diagnosis responsible for the chief complaint and use overview questions to identify comorbid conditions. If no evidence is found for major depressive episode or borderline personality disorder, questions about past suicidal behavior may not be pursued. Since the mental status examination targets the present condition, patients who deny suicidality may not be asked about past suicidal acts, potentially leading to an underestimate of suicide risk. Yet a history of suicidal behavior is the most reliably replicated risk factor for future suicide attempt or completion, whereas expressions of suicidality wax and wane and may be absent during an interview (2). Thus, current diagnostic algorithms may lead clinicians to overlook suicidal ideation or behavior in patients with posttraumatic stress disorder, where patients may contemplate suicide as an escape from their flashbacks, or in those with alcoholism, where disinhibition during intoxication may render patients less able to resist suicidal thoughts. Suicidality in these high-risk groups can easily go unidentified. Even when a clinician identifies suicidal ideation or behavior, the patient receives a diagnosis that does not highlight suicide risk as a focus of concern. We recommend that suicidal behavior be considered a separate diagnostic category documented on a sixth axis. Suicidal behavior meets the criteria for diagnostic validity set forth by Robins and Guze (3), and it does so as well as most conditions we treat. It is clinically well described (4), research has identified postmortem and in vivo laboratory markers (1), it can be subjected to a strict differential diagnosis (4), follow-up studies confirm its presence at higher rates in those with a past diagnosis (2), and it is familial (5). With suicidal behavior in a sixth axis, it would be identified through review-of-systems questions, in addition to inquiry during the mental status examination. This proposed solution would address both conceptual and practical issues. Suicidal behavior might be conceptualized as an impulse-control disorder not elsewhere classified, but it is not always impulsive. Classification among " other conditions that may be a focus of clinical attention " diminishes its hierarchical position among diagnoses. Practically, an axis for suicidal acts would compel clinical and administrative structures to determine the suicide risk status of individuals assessed in psychiatric settings. In this manner, suicide risk can be},
  doi           = {10.1176/appi.ajp.2008.08020281},
  file          = {:home/andresimi/Documentos/Dropbox/Sincronizar/Mendeley Desktop/pdf/Oquendo et al. - 2008 - Issues for DSM-V Suicidal behavior as a separate diagnosis on a separate axis.pdf:pdf},
  keywords      = {suicide,terminology},
  mendeley-tags = {suicide,terminology},
  pmid          = {18981069},
}

O resultado image

Detalhe: Coloquei um campo a mais (subtitulo). Na citação em questão não fará a diferença, pois o que será destacada será o nome da revista, mas em outros tipos de trabalho é preciso Capítulo 8 - abntex2cite.

cauachagas avatar Jan 02 '18 17:01 cauachagas

O formato bib é complexo para os idiomas que possuem acentos. Eu penso em criar um pré-processador de referências no futuro. Para ler os arquivos do mendeley, zotero etc e gerar um outro bib formatado corretamente.

edusantana avatar Jan 05 '18 09:01 edusantana