I develop my own BibTex database. At least there two versions of BibTex style (DBLP and Google Scholar), I combine them.
Jing, Hongyang and Kathleen McKeown. 2000. Cut and paste based summarization. In Proceedings of the First Conference
of the North American Chapter of the Association of Computational Linguistics, pages 178–185, Seattle.
produced by DBLP
@inproceedings{DBLP:conf/anlp/JingM00,
author = {Hongyan Jing and
Kathleen McKeown},
title = {Cut and Paste Based Text Summarization},
booktitle = {ANLP},
year = {2000},
pages = {178-185},
ee = {http://acl.ldc.upenn.edu/A/A00/A00-2024.pdf},
bibsource = {DBLP, http://dblp.uni-trier.de}
}
produced by Google Scholar (automatically)
@conference{jing2000cut,
title={{Cut and paste based text summarization}},
author={Jing, H. and McKeown, K.R.},
booktitle={Proceedings of the 1st North American chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics conference},
pages={178--185},
year={2000},
organization={Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc.}
}
My preference (hybrid from two versions above and saved in Jabref)
@conference{jing2000cut,
author = {Hongyan Jing and
Kathleen McKeown},
title = {Cut and Paste Based Text Summarization},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1st North American chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics conference},
year = {2000},
pages = {178-185},
ee = {http://acl.ldc.upenn.edu/A/A00/A00-2024.pdf},
}