Inkludieren der Bibliographie in ein RMarkdown-Dokument unter Verwendung der Strickmuster

Ich versuche, @ zu verwendknitcitations und fügen Sie dem R Markdown-Dokument, das ich in R Studio entwerfe, eine Bibliografie hinzu. Die Kopfzeile meines Dokuments sieht folgendermaßen aus:

---
title: "Some Title"
author: "Me"
date: "September 2015"
bibliography: bibliography.bib
output:
  pdf_document: 
    highlight: tango
    number_sections: yes
    toc: yes
---

Ich möchte die Bibliographie am Ende mit dem folgenden Code hinzufügen:

```{r generateBibliography, echo=FALSE, eval=TRUE, message=FALSE, warning=FALSE}
require("knitcitations")
cleanbib()
options("citation_format" = "pandoc")
read.bibtex(file = "bibliography.bib")
```

Die Referenzdateibibliography.bib hat folgenden Inhalt:

@article{debarsy_testing_2010,
    title = {Testing for spatial autocorrelation in a fixed effects panel data model},
    volume = {40},
    issn = {0166-0462},
    url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166046210000451},
    doi = {10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2010.06.001},
    abstract = {The aim of this paper is to assess the relevance of spatial autocorrelation in a fixed effects panel data model and in the affirmative, to identify the most appropriate spatial specification as this appears to be a crucial point from the modeling perspective of interactive heterogeneity. Several {LM} test statistics as well as their {LR} counterparts, which allow discriminating between endogenous spatial lag versus spatially autocorrelated errors, are therefore proposed. Monte Carlo experiments show their good finite sample performance. Finally, an empirical application is provided in the framework of the well-known Feldstein–Horioka puzzle.},
    pages = {453--470},
    number = {6},
    journaltitle = {Regional Science and Urban Economics},
    shortjournal = {Regional Science and Urban Economics},
    author = {Debarsy, Nicolas and Ertur, Cem},
    urldate = {2015-10-01},
    date = {2010-11},
    keywords = {Panel data, Spatial autocorrelation, Test statistics},
    file = {complex_zotero_path}
}

@article{lamichhane_spatial-temporal_2015,
    title = {Spatial-Temporal Modeling of Neighborhood Sociodemographic Characteristics and Food Stores},
    volume = {181},
    issn = {0002-9262, 1476-6256},
    url = {http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/content/181/2/137},
    doi = {10.1093/aje/kwu250},
    abstract = {The literature on food stores, neighborhood poverty, and race/ethnicity is mixed and lacks methods of accounting for complex spatial and temporal clustering of food resources. We used quarterly data on supermarket and convenience store locations from Nielsen {TDLinx} (Nielsen Holdings N.V., New York, New York) spanning 7 years (2006–2012) and census tract-based neighborhood sociodemographic data from the American Community Survey (2006–2010) to assess associations between neighborhood sociodemographic characteristics and food store distributions in the Metropolitan Statistical Areas ({MSAs}) of 4 {US} cities (Birmingham, Alabama; Chicago, Illinois; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and San Francisco, California). We fitted a space-time Poisson regression model that accounted for the complex spatial-temporal correlation structure of store locations by introducing space-time random effects in an intrinsic conditionally autoregressive model within a Bayesian framework. After accounting for census tract–level area, population, their interaction, and spatial and temporal variability, census tract poverty was significantly and positively associated with increasing expected numbers of supermarkets among tracts in all 4 {MSAs}. A similar positive association was observed for convenience stores in Birmingham, Minneapolis, and San Francisco; in Chicago, a positive association was observed only for predominantly white and predominantly black tracts. Our findings suggest a positive association between greater numbers of food stores and higher neighborhood poverty, with implications for policy approaches related to food store access by neighborhood poverty.},
    pages = {137--150},
    number = {2},
    journaltitle = {American Journal of Epidemiology},
    shortjournal = {Am. J. Epidemiol.},
    author = {Lamichhane, Archana P. and Warren, Joshua L. and Peterson, Marc and Rummo, Pasquale and Gordon-Larsen, Penny},
    urldate = {2015-10-01},
    date = {2015-01-15},
    langid = {english},
    pmid = {25515169},
    keywords = {food availability, food stores, intrinsic conditionally autoregressive model, neighborhood characteristics, Poverty, sociodemographic factors, spatial-temporal modeling, supermarkets},
    file = {complex_zotero_path}
}

Die produzierte Ausgabe wird jedoch als Kommentar und nicht als bibliografischer Eintrag angezeigt:

Die Datei wird mit folgendem Code kompiliert:

"C:/Program Files/RStudio/bin/pandoc/pandoc" +RTS -K512m -RTS _paper.md --to latex 
--from markdown+autolink_bare_uris+ascii_identifiers+tex_math_single_backslash-implicit_figures 
--output _paper.pdf --filter pandoc-citeproc --table-of-contents --toc-depth 2 --template "path_\latex\default.tex" 
--number-sections --highlight-style tango --latex-engine pdflatex --variable "geometry:margin=1in" --bibliography bibliography.bib 

us Gründen der Kürze habe ich die Pfade zu @ geänder_paper und_paper.

Wenn ich versucht habe, dem @ zu folgHinweis zur Aufnahme der Bibliographie in RStudio Das Dokument wurde ohne bibliografische Einträge erstellt. Daher meine Frage,wo mache ich den Fehler und wie kann ich die Erzeugung bibliografischer Einträge erzwingen, wenn ich in RStudio arbeite?

Bearbeite

Nach sehr nützlichen Kommentaren möchte ich es idealerweise vermeiden, im angehängten Dokument ausdrücklich auf zitierte Werke hinzuweisen. Tatsächlich bin ich daran interessiert, eine Bibliographie aufzunehmen, die aus einigen zitierten Werken besteht, aber auch Veröffentlichungen, die für das Hauptdokument relevant sind, in dem Dokument jedoch nicht ausdrücklich erwähnt werden.

Antworten auf die Frage(6)

Ihre Antwort auf die Frage