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  2. Sep 2, 2023 · Citing Images. For academic purposes sources for images must be cited even if free or in the public domain. The basic information you will need: Artist's name. Title of work. Date it was created. Repository, museum or owner. Country of origin. Dimensions.

  3. Sep 18, 2024 · Citation General Guidelines. Include as much of the information below when citing images in a paper and formal presentations. Apply the appropriate citation style (see below for APA, MLA examples). Image creator's name (artist, photographer, etc.) Title of the image.

    • Sarah Huber
    • 2020
  4. Oct 16, 2024 · If you use an image in your work, you must cite it. This includes papers, presentations, theses/dissertations, publications, blogs, etc. Learn to use and cite images correctly.

    • Corinne Kennedy
    • 2018
    • Overview
    • Creative Commons Images
    • Online Image Databases
    • Websites
    • Print and Electronic Publications
    • Licensed Image Databases

    The Copyright Act does not specify any citation requirements beyond the source of the material used and, if available, the name of the creator (ie:Creator, Source). While there is no legal requirement to attribute works in the public domain to their creator(s), doing so is an important part of maintaining academic integrity. Generally, image citati...

    Creative Commons licenses are a suite of different licenses that facilitate the sharing and reuse of information and creative works. There are many different Creative Commons licenses and each allows the work to be shared and reused in different ways. Not all images available under Creative Commons licenses are available for all uses. For more info...

    Online image databases are sites such as Flickr, Wikimedia Commons, or Getty Images. Some of them are free to use (Flickr) and some are commercial (Getty). The attribution or citation required depends on the individual database. Each database should have a terms of use or copyright statement laying out what is and is not permissible to do with the ...

    Citing images from a website is very similar to citing images form online image databases. Check the website’s terms of use (or copyright/ permissions section) to determine if the image is available for use and for any specific attribution requirements. If no specific attribution requirements are indicated then the standard “creator, title, source”...

    A citation for an image from a published source requires, at minimum, the creator of the image and the source of the image. It is good practice to also include the image title. The general format would be: 1. 1.1. Creator, Title, source. How the source of the image is cited depends on the citation practices of the discipline. For example citing an ...

    Licensed image databases are very similar to online image databases in that it is a license (or terms of use agreement) that gives users the permission to make use of the images. In the case of Library licensed databases though, the database license is usually much more complicated than the standard Creative Commons license. Please consult the libr...

  5. Sep 16, 2024 · To cite an image, you need an in-text citation and a corresponding reference. The reference should list the creator of the image, the year it was published, its title and format, and its location or container (e.g. a website, book, or museum).

  6. Sep 1, 2014 · If you use an image you did not create, you must provide a citation, even if the image is very small, or in the public domain. Image citations should include the following information, if available: Title. Creator name. Repository information (museum, library, or other owning institution)

  7. Public domain photos and images are free to use, but you must credit the creator. It is treated the same as any other image under a Creative Commons licence. The reference is the same as a non-Creative Commons image, but the in-text citation is different.

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