Citation Examples: Chicago
Overview
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Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI)
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Please note that guidelines for working with generative AI are both new and changing quickly. It's always a good idea to check the website of the style guide for the latest information.
Chicago Manual of Style, Citing Content Developed or Generated by Artificial Intelligence, Released in spring 2023
In Chicago style, when citing AI-generated content, acknowledge the AI tool as the author. You can include a note or parenthetical citation without listing it in your bibliography. Currently, Chicago advises treating AI content like private conversations, as shareable links are not typically available. Mention the prompt details in the text or as a footnote, and use the date of content generation in your citation. Note that guidance may evolve with new AI features.
Format
Author, Title, Publisher, Date, url for the tool.
Example (if information about the prompt has been included within the text of your paper)
Text generated by ChatGPT, OpenAI, March 7, 2023, https://chat.openai.com/chat.
Example (including information about the prompt)
ChatGPT, response to "Provide step by step instructions on how to build a house," OpenAI, March 7, 2023, https://chat.openai.com/chat.
Books
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Book (single author)
In-text citation
Use a superscript number (like this: ¹) in the text at the place where you are indicating that you are citing from a source.
"There is a consistently high correlation between the voting patterns of parents and the eventual voting patterns of their children, as demonstrated by Miller and Hastings."²
Footnote
2. Kathleen Thelen, How Institutions Evolve: The Political Economy of Skills in Germany (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), 271.
Reference
Thelen, Kathleen. How Institutions Evolve: The Political Economy of Skills in Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
Book (two or three authors)
In-text citation
Use a superscript number (like this: ¹) in the text at the place where you are indicating that you are citing from a source.
The Seattle Advertiser made some startling claims about interventions by corporate interests in the 2004 mayoral election.¹
Footnote
1. Peter Gourevitch and James Shinn, Political Power and Corporate Control: The New Global Politics of Corporate Governance (New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 2005), 59.
Reference
Gourevitch, Peter, and James Shinn. Political Power and Corporate Control: The New Global Politics of Corporate Governance. New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 2005.
Book (more than three authors)
In-text citation
Use a superscript number (like this: ¹) in the text at the place where you are indicating that you are citing from a source.
The theory that the Renaissance marked a radical break with previous history is now discounted by many, notably by Sadie Hawkins in her book The Myth of the Renaissance.³
Footnote
3. Camilla de La Bédoyère et al., A Brief History of Art (London: Flame Tree Publishing, 2006), 101.
Reference
De la Bédoyère, Camilla, Ihor Holubizky, Julia Kelly, Michael Kerrigan, James Mackay, William Matar, Tom Middlemos, Michael Robinson, and Iain Zaczek. A Brief History of Art. London: Flame Tree Publishing, 2006.
eBooks
In-text citation
Use a superscript number (like this: ¹) in the text at the place where you are indicating that you are citing from a source.
Hartmann and Henderson have argued that the rate of infant mortality in fifth-century Athens has been considerably overestimated.³
Footnote
3. Lesley A. Beaumont, Childhood in Ancient Athens: Iconography and Social History (London: Routledge, 2012), https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ucd/detail.action?docID=1114632.
Reference
Beaumont, Lesley A. Childhood in Ancient Athens: Iconography and Social History. London: Routledge, 2012. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ucd/detail.action?docID=1114632.
Note: If a book is available in print and online you must cite the version of the book you consulted for your work. Access dates are only included if no publication date information is available. Also note that a place of publication may not be available for an e-book. If this is the case, write "n.p." ("no place") where you would have recorded the place of publication.
Note: If you access your book on an eReader or other type of platform, insert that instead of the url (e.g. Kindle, Google Play Books, iBooks etc.).
Note: Where page numbers are not available or where they change depending on the device used to view the eBook, the CMOS, 17th Edition advises including chapter numbers or section headings instead. If a scanned version of an original book is available online to read, this version is preferable for citation.
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Book chapters
In-text citation
Use a superscript number (like this: ¹) in the text at the place where you are indicating that you are citing from a source.
According to Michael Sheringham in Restless Cities, the rubbish or waste of a city can be seen as a sort of archive.²
Footnote
2. Michael Sheringham, “Archiving,” in Restless Cities, ed. Matthew Beaumont and Gregory Dart (London: Verson, 2010), 9.
Reference
Sheringham, Michael. “Archiving.” In Restless Cities, edited by Matthew Beaumont and Gregory Dart, 10-24. London: Verso, 2010.
Conferences
Data
Journal articles
Online video
Paintings, Photographs, Sculptures
Webpage on a website
Thanks to the following sources for providing inspiration/content for this page: UCD Library - University College Dublin.