I seem to have gotten LyX back in action for the moment with apa6. However am having a minor problem with a bibliography item. For some reason it is including a URL which I don't want.
The URL is correct, in that I did download the reference from someplace, but I don't want it in a journal entry since it is not a website, etc and the download time and date are not relevant. I am handling my references with Zotero and it is creating a nice little bib file as I play around but why am I getting the URL in the reference. Or perhaps more correctly --how do I turn it off? I can easily edit the bibtex entry but I suspect a lot of my references in real life willl have this and it might mean a lot of hand editing. Zotero and OpenOffice.org handle the reference correctly, BTW. Examples attached Thanks (and to paraphrase S. Pepys "so to a late lunch".
apa6.1.knitr.lyx
Description: application/lyx
% This file was created with JabRef 2.7b.
% Encoding: UTF8
@ARTICLE{adams2001therisk,
author = {Adams, J. and Hillman, M.},
title = {The risk compensation theory and bicycle helmets},
journal = {Injury Prevention},
year = {2001},
volume = {7},
pages = {89{\textendash}90; discussion 90{\textendash}91},
number = {2},
month = jun,
abstract = {[Comment, Journal Article, Review; 14 Refs; In English; England; {MEDLINE]}},
url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6WVB-45GNBD0-3G6/2/c4885e756af9e39fd3ad671f12830fd5}
}
@ARTICLE{cameron1994mandatory,
author = {Cameron, M. H. and Vulcan, A. P. and Finch, C. F. and Newstead, S.
V.},
title = {Mandatory bicycle helmet use following a decade of helmet promotion
in {V}ictoria, {A}ustralia{\textendash}an evaluation.},
journal = {Accident Analysis and Prevention},
year = {1994},
volume = {26},
pages = {325{\textendash}337},
number = {3},
month = jun,
abstract = {On July 1, 1990, a law requiring wearing of an approved safety helmet
by all bicyclists (unless exempted) came into effect in Victoria,
Australia. Some of the more important steps that paved the way for
this important initiative (believed to be the first statewide legislation
of its type in the world) are described, and the initiative's effects
are analysed. There was an immediate increase in average helmet-wearing
rates from 31\% in March 1990 to 75\% in March 1991, although teenagers
continued to show lower rates than younger children and adults. The
number of insurance claims from bicyclists killed or admitted to
hospital after sustaining a head injury decreased by 48\% and 70\%
in the first and second years after the law, respectively. Analysis
of the injury data also showed a 23\% and 28\% reduction in the number
of bicyclists killed or admitted to hospital who did not sustain
head injuries in the first and second post-law years, respectively.
For Melbourne, where regular annual surveys of helmet wearing have
been conducted, it was possible to fit a logistic regression model
that related the reduction in head injuries to increased helmet wearing.
Surveys in Melbourne also indicated a 36\% reduction in bicycle use
by children during the first year of the law and an estimated increase
in adult use of 44\%.},
keywords = {Adolescent;, Adult;, Bicycling;, Child;, Devices;, Evaluation, Head,
Humans;, Protective, Studies;, Victoria}
}
