This filter extracts optional CiTO (Citation Typing Ontology) information from citations and stores the information in the document's metadata. The extracted info is intended to be used in combination with other filters, templates, or custom writers. It is mandatory to run citeproc after this filter if CiTO data is embedded in the document; otherwise citeproc will interpret CiTO properties as part of the citation ID.
The citation typing ontology (CiTO) allows authors to specify the reason a citation is given. This is helpful for the authors and their co-authors, and furthermore adds data that can be used by readers to search and navigate relevant publications.
A CiTO annotation must come before the citation key and be
followed by a colon. E.g., @method_in:towbin_1979
signifies
that the citation with ID towbin_1979 is cited because the
method described in that paper has been used in the paper at
hand.
Below is the list of CiTO properties recognized by the filter, together with the aliases that can be used as shorthands.
- agrees_with
- agree_with
- citation
- cites
- cites_as_authority
- as_authority
- authority
- cites_as_data_source
- cites_as_evidence
- as_evidence
- evidence
- cites_as_metadata_document
- as_metadata_document
- metadata_document
- metadata
- cites_as_recommended_reading
- as_recommended_reading
- recommended_reading
- disagrees_with
- disagree
- disagrees
- disputes
- documents
- extends
- includes_excerpt_from
- excerpt
- excerpt_from
- includes_quotation_from
- quotation
- quotation_from
- obtains_background_from
- background
- background_from
- refutes
- replies_to
- updates
- uses_data_from
- data
- data_from
- uses_method_in
- method
- method_in
Note that the pandoc-crossref filter uses citations to link to
other elements. The crossref extensions are not understood by
cito.lua. pandoc-crossref, if used, should always be invoked
first: pandoc --filter=pandoc-crossref --lua-filter=cito.lua …
This approach was described in https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj-cs.112.