This is a slightly modified version of the namedplus style, which fully conforms with the Journal of Physiology citation style. Last modified 2009 Jan 28 by Matthias Hennig (mhhennig@gmail.com) version = 1.00 of jphysiol.bst 2009 Jan 28 Use the following citation macros: \cite, \citeauthor, \citeyear, \citenoparens, and \citetext \citenoparens The references are created as a full list of authors (year) and then the standard rest of the stuff, e.g: Hubel DH & Wiesel TN (1962). Receptive Fields, binocular interaction, and functional architecture in the cat's visual cortex. J Physiol 160, 106-154. Koch C (1999). Biophysics of Computation: Information Processing in Single Neurons. Oxford University Press. Ă“dor G (2004). Universality classes in nonequilibrium lattice systems. Rev Mod Phys 76, 663-724. The journal/book title is in itaclics, and the journal volume in boldface, as required. This has not been fully checked, let me know if you find errors. This is a modified version of the namedplus style by: ----------------------------------------------------- A. David Redish adr@nsma.arizona.edu Post-doc http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dredish Neural Systems, Memory and Aging, Univ of AZ, Tucson AZ ----------------------------------------------------- The ``named'' bibliography style creates citations with labels like \citeauthoryear{author-info}{year} these labels are processed by the following commands: \cite{key} which produces citations with both author and year, enclosed in parens. \shortcite{key} which produces citations with year only, enclosed in parens \citeauthor{key} which produces the author information only \citeyear{key} which produces the year information only \citetext{key} which produces Author (Year) \citenoparens{key} which produces Author, Year