Gypsydoctor
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Your edits to URL redirection
editThank you for contributing to Wikipedia, Gypsydoctor! However, your edit here was reverted by an automated bot that attempts to remove spam from Wikipedia. If you were trying to insert a good link, please accept my creator's apologies, but please note that the link you added in is on my spam blacklist and should not be included in Wikipedia. Please read Wikipedia's external links policy for more information. If the link was to an Imageshack or Photobucket image, please read Wikipedia's image tutorial on how to use a more appropriate method to insert the image into an article. If your link was genuine spam, please note that inserting spam into Wikipedia is against policy. For more information about me, see my FAQ page. Thanks! Shadowbot 14:03, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
References in Robert Cornog
editIdeally, statements in Wikipedia need to be directly referenced, although the vast majority of articles don't do this successfully. For example, something like "His graduate student research led to the co-discovery, with Luis Alvarez, of hydrogen and helium of atomic mass 3 (tritium and helium-3)." would ideally need to have the citation as a footnote, showing which source or paper can verify this. You would put such a citation in between <ref> and </ref> tags and then have a references section at the end of the article. You would then be able to list the references simply by adding {{Reflist}} in the References section. This template then calls all the information between the <ref> and </ref> tags and places it in a numbered list for easy browsing. You can see examples of this on many other pages, e.g Hoover Dam.
For "official" Wikipedia guides on verifiability and references, see Wikipedia:Verifiability and Wikipedia:Citing sources. For templates which can be used to show citations in a standard format, see Wikipedia:Citation templates.
As an example particular to your article, you have cited two sources, so I would put footnotes at the end of each statement or sentence which has been derived from these sources; any other statement mark with {{fact}}. I can help you if you are not confident making these changes, but remember, be bold in updating pages, which is the best way to learn. I hope this helps; I appreciate it may be a bit daunting.
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April 2010
editIn a recent edit to the page Oxygen therapy, you changed one or more words from one international variety of English to another. Because Wikipedia has readers from all over the world, our policy is to respect national varieties of English in Wikipedia articles.
For subjects exclusively related to Britain (for example, a famous British person), use British English. For something related to the United States in the same way, use American English. For something related to other English-speaking countries, such as Canada, Australia, or New Zealand, use the appropriate variety of English used there. If it is an international topic, use the same form of English the original author used.
In view of that, please don't change articles from one version of English to the other, even if you don't normally use the version the article is written in. Respect other people's versions of English. They in turn should respect yours. Other general guidelines on how Wikipedia articles are written can be found in the Wikipedia:Manual of Style. If you have any queries about all this, you can ask me on my talk page or you can visit the help desk. Thank you. RexxS (talk) 22:36, 18 April 2010 (UTC)
Hi -- are you sure about the edits you made? It looks to me like you are distinguishing mitosis from meiosis, whereas to my understanding neurons are amitotic in the sense that they do not divide at all. (This is outside the domain where I'm confident in my knowledge, so I thought I had better check before making changes.) Regards, Looie496 (talk) 16:33, 30 December 2011 (UTC)
Looie: Thanks for the note. Like you, I thought neurons do not divide at all, but its not my domain of knowledge either. Then I looked up "amitotic" and got the definition that I added, though it seems to be a rarely-used term. Perhaps the original was incorrect and should have been something like "nonmitotic". I will do some more research. Gypsydoctor (talk) 22:25, 1 January 2012 (UTC)
I changed it to "permanently postmitotic" which is the terminology used in the reference that was cited. "Amitotic" means something very different, though you can find it used incorrectly many places. Gypsydoctor (talk) 23:05, 1 January 2012 (UTC)
- Looks good, thanks. Looie496 (talk) 16:10, 2 January 2012 (UTC)
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