Am Samstag, 1. Dezember 2012, 17:16:23 schrieb stefano franchi:
> Wolfgang,
> 
> there were no files attached to your message.
> 
> Cold you send them again?
> 
> Best,
> 
> Stefano

Sorry, here they are

Wolfgang
> 
> 
> On Sat, Dec 1, 2012 at 8:54 AM, Wolfgang Engelmann <
> 
> [email protected]> wrote:
> > Am Freitag, 30. November 2012, 23:28:55 schrieben Sie:
> > > Whenever your ref disappear, the first suspicion is that biber/biber
> > > cannot find the bib file. The second is  that bibtex/biber
> > > themselves have disappeared (i.e. lyx cannot find them).
> > > Have you checked their log (Document>>LaTeX Log, then "Bibtex" from
> > > the drop down menu)?  What does it say?
> > > 
> > > Cheers,
> > > 
> > > Stefano
> > 
> > Hi, Stefano,
> > and thanks.
> > 
> > Could you or somebody else kindly check the included short file (bib
> > file also added).
> > If  I run it under lyx, it does not show with my setup the citation
> > and the references. If I export the tex file and run latex and bibtex
> > (3 times) and do dvips it shows the reference, but not the citation
> > (a ?).
> > 
> > The latex logfile tells me the following
> > Package natbib Warning: Citation `Silver2011' on page 1 undefined on
> > input line
> > 
> >  72.
> > 
> > No file aTest.bbl.
> > Package natbib Warning: There were undefined citations.
> > 
> > I had tried it with my former texlive2011 also, same problem. Note,
> > that I do not use biber, since there is no Vancouver layout
> > available. I might have forgotten to set something back from the
> > biber setup, but an old file does not work either.
> > 
> > I am baffled.
> > 
> > Wolfgang


-- 
---------------------------------
Wolfgang Engelmann
Schlossgartenstrasse 22
D-72070 Tübingen
Tel 07071 68325

Attachment: aTest.lyx
Description: application/lyx

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@ARTICLE{Silver2011,
  author = {Rae Silver and Peter D Balsam and Matthew P Butler and Joseph LeSauter},
  title = {Food anticipation depends on oscillators and memories in both body
	and brain.},
  journal = {Physiol Behav},
  year = {2011},
  volume = {104},
  pages = {562--571},
  abstract = {Despite the importance of learning and circadian rhythms to feeding,
	there has been relatively little effort to integrate these separate
	lines of research. 
	
	
	In this review, we focus on how light and food entrainable oscillators
	contribute to the anticipation of food. In particular, we examine
	the evidence for temporal conditioning of food entrainable oscillators
	throughout the body. The evidence suggests a shift away from previous
	notions of a single locus or neural network of food entrainable oscillators
	to a distributed system involving dynamic feedback among cells of
	the body and brain. 
	
	
	Several recent advances, including documentation of peroxiredoxin
	metabolic circadian oscillation and anticipatory behavior in the
	absence of a central nervous system, support the possibility of conditioned
	signals from the periphery in determining anticipatory behavior.
	
	
	
	Individuals learn to detect changes in internal and external signals
	that occur as a consequence of the brain and body preparing for an
	impending meal. Cues temporally near and far from actual energy content
	can then be used to optimize responses to temporally predictable
	and unpredictable cues in the environment.},
  institution = {Department of Psychology, Columbia University, 1190 Amsterdam Avenue,
	New York, NY 10027, USA. [email protected]},
  keywords = {Animals; Anticipation, Psychological, physiology; Biological Clocks,
	physiology; Brain, physiology; Feeding Behavior, physiology/psychology;
	Humans; Memory, physiology; Models, Biological; Psychophysiology},
  language = {eng},
  medline-pst = {ppublish},
  owner = {wolfgang},
  pii = {S0031-9384(11)00303-9},
  pmid = {21664916},
  timestamp = {2012.05.19}
}

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