Disregard hyphens joining given (first or middle) names.
Jean-Louis Lagrot becomes Lagrot JL
Use only the first letter of given names and middle names if they contain a prefix, a preposition, or another particle.
D'Arcy Hart becomes Hart D
W. St. John Patterson becomes Patterson WS
De la Broquerie Fortier becomes Fortier D
Craig McC. Brooks becomes Brooks CM
Disregard traditional abbreviations of given names. Some non-US publications use abbreviations of conventional given names rather than single initials, such as St. for Stefan. Use only the first letter of the abbreviation.
Ch. Wunderly becomes Wunderly C
C. Fr. Erdman becomes Erdman CF
For non-English names that are romanized (written in the roman alphabet), capitalize only the first letter if the original initial is represented by more than one letter.
Iu. A. Iakontov becomes Iakontov IuA
G. Th. Tsakalos becomes Tsakalos GTh
Según:
Citing Medicine: The NLM Style Guide for Authors, Editors, and Publishers [Internet]. 2nd edition. Chapter 4: Scientific and Technical Reports
Related:
General Rules for Author/Editor (required) to Citing Entire Reports Vancouver Style
Specific Rules #1: Surnames with hyphens and other punctuation in them
Specific Rules #2: Other surname rules
Specific Rules #3: Given names containing punctuation, a prefix, a preposition, or particle
Specific Rules #4: Degrees, titles, and honors before or after a personal name
Specific Rules #5: Designations of rank in a family, such as Jr and III
Specific Rules #6: Names in non-roman alphabets (Cyrillic, Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, Korean) or character-based languages (Chinese, Japanese)
Specific Rules #7: Non-English words for editor
Specific Rules #8: Organizations as author
Specific Rules #9: No author can be found
Specific Rules #10: Options for author names
Examples for Author/Editor (required) to Citing Entire Reports Vancouver Style
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