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IEEE Referencing Guide: TED Talk

IEEE Referencing Guide

Header - Audiovisual Media

TED Talk

A TED Talk

TED Talk - from the TED website

 

A reference for a talk from the TED website generally requires the following elements:

  • Speaker (s).
  • Title: Subtitle.
  • Date of Broadcast (If appropriate)
  • [Format]
  • Special credits (If appropriate)
  • Place of publication
  • Credit TED Conferences as the publisher
  • Accessed date
  • URL

 

Example

[#]   A.A. Person, ‘Title: Subtitle’. Date of broadcast [Format]. Special credits (If appropriate). Place of publication: Publisher, Date. URL

 

 

Full Reference for the Reference List

[3]  R. Maher, ‘Renewable energy: what’s going on with the electrical grid. Apr. 2019. [Online video]              Bozeman,MT. TEDx talks, Jan 2024. https://www.ted.com/talks/dr_rob_maher_renewable_energy_what_s_going_on_with_the_electrical_grid


TED talk - from YouTube

 

A reference to a TED talk from YouTube generally requires the following elements:

 

  • Speaker
  • Title: Subtitle
  • Credit YouTube as the publisher of the talk.
  • uploaded by uploader's name (Usually 'Ted' or 'TEDx Talks')
  • Date of broadcast.
  • Place of broadcast
  • Accessed date
  • The URL.

  •  
  • Example - In-text citation

  •  
Recent research has shown that adequate sleep is necessary both before, and after learning [6], in order for the brain to properly absorb and memorise the new information.

 

 

Full reference for the Reference List

[6]   M. Walker  "Sleep is your superpower". YouTube, uploaded by                     TED. Jun. 2019. Vancouver, BC, Canada. Jan. 2024.                                   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5MuIMqhT8DM

 

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