The doi2cite
is a fantastic filter by @korintje that extends citeproc
and allows you to add citations using only the work’s DOI.
In essence, doi2cite
searches the Markdown documents for
citations that start with doi:
, DOI:
,
doi.org/
or https://doi.org/
, extracts the
DOI, queries CrossRef for the bibliographic information, writes it to a
local BibTeX-file and replaces the citation key by the proper BibTeX
key. Now citeproc
can process the citation and will do the
rest. I have adapted the filter to work with multiple bibliography files
and and have provide additional post-processing functions to streamline
the use with R Markdown. The key issue to solve here is that
doi2cite
replaces DOI with BibTeX handles in the
intermediate Markdown document, but not in the R Markdown source file.
Doing this requies an additional post-processing step that is done by
rmdfilter::replace_doi_citations()
.
To use the doi2cite
filter, we need to do two
things:
rmdfiltr::add_doi2cite_filter()
to add an argument
to the call to pandocbibliography
field of the YAML
front matterWhen adding the filters to pandoc_args
the R code needs
to be preceded by !expr
to declare it as to-be-interpreted
expression.
bibliograph: "__from_DOI.bib"
output:
html_document:
pandoc_args: !expr rmdfiltr::add_doi2cite_filter(args = NULL)
In the resulting HTML file, the citation tags
@doi:10.1037/xlm0001360
will be rendered as
Marsh et al. (2024)
. However, the DOI-based citation tag
remains in the source R Markdown file. To replace it with the BibTeX
citation handle requies an additional post-processing step.
A makeshift solution to this is to call
rmdfiltr::replace_resolved_doi_citations()
in the R
Markdown document. The function will check the bibliography files in the
YAML front matter for matching DOIs and replace the DOI in the R
Markdown document with the corresponding reference handles. Because
doi2cite
is run after
rmdfiltr::replace_resolved_doi_citations()
, this will only
work for DOI citations that were resolved in a previous knitting
process.
To resolve this remaining issue, it is necessary to create a custom
rmarkdown format. Now, we can add to the
doi2cite
filter to the pandoc arguments and add
rmdfiltr::replace_resolved_doi_citations()
to the post
processor. The following is sketch of the essential parts of the custom
format:
my_format <- rmarkdown::output_format(
pre_processor = \(...) {
rmdfiltr::add_doi2cite_filter(args = NULL)
}
, post_processor = \(input_file, metadata, ...) {
rmdfiltr::post_process_doi_citations(input_file, metadata$bibliography)
}
, ...
)
With these pre- and post-processors, the DOI-based citations will be
replaced by the BibTeX citation handles in the R Markdown source file.
That is, the citation tag @doi:10.1037/xlm0001360
will be
replaced by @Marsh_2024
in the R Markdown source file and
rendered to Marsh et al. (2024)
in the output.
Marsh, John E., Mark J. Hurlstone, Alexandre Marois, Linden J. Ball, Stuart B. Moore, François Vachon, Sabine J. Schlittmeier, et al. (2024). Changing-State Irrelevant Speech Disrupts Visual–Verbal but Not Visual–Spatial Serial Recall. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition. https://doi.org/10.1037/xlm0001360.