A Modest Proposal for a Hyperlink-based Citation System

Citations for the modern age


Old Citation Systems Solve Old Problems

Citation systems serve a valuable purpose: enabling a reader of a text to review and contemplate the source of the claims upon which the text is based. Standard citation systems1 do this well, but it is clear that they were made in an era of physical information storage. The APA format2, for example, has very clearly had its guidelines with respect to electronic sources tacked on in an ad-hoc manner3, and it is considerably easier to use it to cite physical sources4. A fully hyperlink-based system, like the one I am proposing, would logically extend this ease of reference to digital material, rather than trying to glue a digital arm onto an inherently phsyical system.

Proposed System

This isn’t a new idea, and the utility of hyperlinking to provide citations in hypermedia has been widely discussed. However, I want to add a little spin on the existing ideas of hyperlinking names of sources or parenthetical references: hyperlinking the entire section of text deriving from a given source. This includes quotations, figures, paraphrasing, and anything else that isn’t analysis, criticism, or new conclusions. Features like Scroll to Text Fragment make it easy to immediately jump to the piece of text that is being referenced, enabling faster lookups5 and easier validation of sources (i.e., whether or not the current author is misrepresenting the views of the cited article6). Furthermore, it creates an obvious visual cue as to what is old and what is new7, which is useful for distinguishing whether or not the content of an article is anything new or interesting8, or for speeding up cycle time when following the three-stage strategy. It also makes citation analysis easier by embedding the links directly in the papers, so tooling can be re-used from search engines and web crawlers9.

Is Anyone Going To Use This?

No, probably not. Tragic, but we can throw this idea in the bin of “things hypermedia10 could have enabled but didn’t because of social forces”. Many such cases

1Chicago style, MLA, APA, etc

2Which I will pick on, as it’s the one I’ve used most recently

3The biggest giveaway is that is has a special section just for citing Wikipedia. You’re making my job too easy, guys!

4I ran into this a lot when I was working on a term paper about artificial intelligence. Maybe next they can build in a special section on citing arXiv

5No longer do you have to spend 5 minutes C-fing around a page to find what’s being referenced

6Some might say that this is a bug rather than a feature. Contemplate why they’re saying that and get back to me

7Text-based mediums have largely ignored visual aspects even though the cost of leveraging it has gone down exponentially

8Cf. footnote 6

9I’m not sure if this is a problem anyone actually has. Who knows

10And computers in general