If a journal article has a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) listed, you will always include this identifier in your reference. You will not have to include the URL of the journal's home page or of the database from which you retrieved the article if a DOI is available
If you viewed a journal article in an online database and it does not have a DOI, you will need to do a quick search outside of the database to locate the URL for the journal's home page. This information must be included in the reference. If the journal is no longer being published and it does not have a home page, then include the URL for the home page of the database from which you retrieved the article.
If you viewed a journal article in its print format, be sure to check if it has a DOI listed. If it does not, your reference to the article would end after you provide the page range of the article.
General Format
1. Author's surname, Initial(s)., Author's surname, Initial(s)., Author's surname, Initial(s)., Author's surname, Initial(s)., Author's surname, Initial(s)., & Author's surname, Initial(s). (Year). Article title: Subtitle. Journal Title, Volume(issue), page range. doi:xx.xxxxxxxxxx [if available].
OR
2. Author's surname, Initial(s)., Author's surname, Initial(s)., Author's surname, Initial(s)., Author's surname, Initial(s)., Author's surname, Initial(s)., & Author's surname, Initial(s). (Year). Article title: Subtitle. Journal Title, Volume(issue), page range. Retrieved from URL of journal home page [if available].
NOTE: If an article has more than seven authors, list the names of the first six authors followed by ... and then the last author's name in the reference entry (p. 198).
Examples
Reference list citation:
Dietz, P. M., Williams, S. B., Callaghan, W. M., Bachman, D. J., Whitlock, E. P., &
Hornbrook, M. C. (2007). Clinically identified maternal depression before, during, and after pregnancies ending in live births. American Journal of Psychiatry,164(10), 1515-1520. Retrieved from http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/