This is my Neuro Practice Page. This page is a practice so that I can see what to do for my page on agraphia later. This first paragraph should be an overview. There will likely be links to other wikipedia pages in this paragraph (no external links). This page is all about the brain. It is often called grey matter.
Introduction
editImages must be copyright free. Use wikimedia commons or something you create yourself.
the thing after the second pipe will be the caption The way we view the brain has changed over time[1] .
Let's create a list:
- first
- second
- third
- fourth
- fifth
Early History
editPre-1400's
editSmith says blah, blah, blah[1] .
1400-1600
editPillars of Wikipedia
edit- It is an encyclopaedia; don't present your own or anybody else's research at the research level. Cite review articles and books, not so much primary research.
- It should be from a neutral point of view. Present both sides of any controversy.
- Everything has to be copyright free. Be careful not to paraphrase too closely (no plagiarism, even maybe).
- When you interact with other editors, do so in a civil manner. Keep in mind that other people will also be working on your page.
- Be flexible.
- Something has to be notable (enough references to make it worthwhile). If it's not found in literature, it's not important enough to be an article.
- It must be verifiable. Every piece of information should be verified; have in-line citations.
Talk Pages
editThis is the major e-mail system in Wikipedia. There are talk pages associated with the article and also with the user. Generally, people don't comment much on sandboxes. We might get some comments on the talk page for our sandbox articles. One of the users we might see is Biosthmors; he's an online ambassador for this class. Go to talk page for stub and write that you're going to expand on it. End with four tildes any time you make a comment on someone's talk page. Use colon to indent to reply to a comment.
References
editThis reference is not real; it is completely made up.
- ^ a b Smith, Andrew (15). "Zen of the Brain". Brain Journal. 56 (7): 12–23.
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