Oxford University Press Text Capture Instructions

 

Shoulder Headings

Shoulder headings are titles that have been rendered in-line with the paragraph. Capture shoulder headings as normal titles.

//titleGroup/title

Example

media/image35.png

XML


<div2 id="med-9780198567377-chapter-4-div2-1">
<titleGroup><title>
<p>Foot</p></title>
</titleGroup>
<div3 id="med-9780198567377-chapter-4-div3-4"><titleGroup>
<title>
<p>Inspection</p>
</title></titleGroup><p>swelling, erythema, resting position, high-arch, bunions.</p>
</div3>
<div3 id="med-9780198567377-chapter-4-div3-5"><titleGroup>
<title>
<p>Palpation</p>
</title></titleGroup><p>temperature, pain or crepitus along each metatarsal and ...</p>
</div3>
</div2>

When a paragraph has both a paragraph number and a Shoulder Heading title so that the inline title is at a higher level than the paragraph it is associated with, wrap the paragraph in its own div[1-7,N] container element.

Although the paragraph number appears first when the content is type-set, it is encoded in the XML document after the title.

Example shoulder heading at a higher level than the following paragraph

media/890768_image10.png

XML


<div2>
<titleGroup><title>
<p>
<enumerator>(a)</enumerator> Definitions</p></title>
</titleGroup>
<div3><titleGroup>
<title>
<p>‘Joint venture’.</p>
</title></titleGroup><div4>
<p>
<enumerator role="paraNum">7.002</enumerator>The term ‘joint venture’
(‘JV’), as used by industry, resists clear...</p></div4>
</div3>
</div2>
Release ID:
20261202
ID:
OUP_Structured_Text_TCI_topic_3_4_4
Author:
dunnm
Last changed:
Wed, 04 Jun 2025
Modified by:
buckmasm
Revision#:
4400