INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Use pillows to keep your upper body at a 45-degree angle and your head elevated. This will reduce swelling in your wounds and make them throb less, making it significantly easier for you to sleep.  Although this may not be your natural sleeping state, resting with your head upright is by far the best way to naturally reduce the pain in your mouth while sleeping.  Consider investing in a wedge pillow to make sleeping in this position easier. Sleeping upright makes it somewhat easier for your body to fall downwards while you’re asleep. Avoid sleeping on leather couches or other slippery surfaces to get a restful sleep and prevent hurting yourself. This will be less of a concern if you sleep in a normal bed with your head propped up by pillows. Turn off all the lights in your room, use heavy curtains on the windows, and lower the temperature in your room to maximize your room for optimal sleep.  Keeping your room between 60 °F (16 °C) and 67 °F (19 °C) will help your body lower its temperature as it gets ready for sleep. If you keep your cellphone next to your bed, turn it over so that the screen faces down as you sleep. This will prevent it from adding unwanted light to your bedroom when new notifications pop up on the screen. Some studies have shown that particular scents can alleviate stress and promote restful sleep. Consider using candles, oils, or sprays to make your room more aromatic and better for sleep.  The best scents for creating a better sleep environment are lavender and vanilla.  You can also dip a cotton ball in a scented oil and leave that by your pillow for a quick and easy aromatic experience. Be very careful when lighting candles for maximizing your sleep environment. Do not fall asleep with a candle still burning. It will be particularly hard to take your mind off the pain in your gums long enough to fall asleep. Play slow, calming music as you’re laying down to give your mind something else to focus on.  Slow music is generally the best music for falling asleep. Play music with a rhythm between 60 and 80 beats per minute for best results.  Some good genres of music to sleep to may include jazz, classical, and folk music.

SUMMARY: Keep your head elevated to minimize swelling. Avoid sleeping on a slippery surface like leather. Keep your room cool and dark to make it an ideal sleeping environment. Use aromatherapy to make it easier to fall asleep. Play calming music to help you relax.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Test out different things you can attach stickers to. You'll get better results by attaching stickers to slower moving objects that don't get blurry. Got something in your video you don't want others to see? You can pin a 3D sticker to it, and it will remain covered throughout the entire clip, even as the camera moves around. The sticker will automatically resize as necessary. 3D stickers work great for replacing your pet's face with a smiley face. Take a video of your pet and pin a sticker to it. The sticker should track your pet's face as it moves in your video. You can pin more than one emoji to your video at once, allowing different emoji to track different objects. There is no practical limit to the number of emoji that you pin to objects. The object you pin an emoji to doesn't have to start in the video. If you pause and attach an emoji to an object that appears half-way through the video, the emoji won't appear until the object appears.

SUMMARY: Try pinning stickers to different things. Use stickers to censor objects in your video. Pin a sticker to your pet. Add multiple emoji. Pin emoji to objects that enter the frame later.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Typically, in-text citations are indicated through the use of footnotes or endnotes. Immediately after the punctuation mark that follows the borrowed information, mark the citation with a superscript number. The number should correspond to the present number of citations used in the text. You may introduce the name of the author in the sentence, but it is not necessary.  This information is considered fact by all but a few critics.1 Doe believes this to be false.2 At the end of the page or the end of the paper, cite the author's first and last name and the name of the article. Include the author's name even if you mentioned it in the text itself. Following this information, indicate the city of publication, the name of the publisher, and the year of publication in parentheses. Immediately following this, include the page number on which the borrowed information can be found.  1. Robert Smith and Kevin Williams, Studies on the Human Condition (New York: Big Time Press, 2012), 4-14. 2. John Doe, “A New Perspective” (New York: Major Journal, 2011), 18. If you have already cited a source once, abbreviate it in any subsequent footnotes. When a citation immediately follows one from the same source, abbreviate all information except for the page number with the Latin abbreviation "Ibid." When a citation from the same source is separated by other sources, include the last name of the author, the title of the work, and the page number.  1. Robert Smith and Kevin Williams, Studies on the Human Condition (New York: Big Time Press, 2012), 4-14. 2. Ibid., 34. 3. John Doe, “A New Perspective” (New York: Major Journal, 2011), 18. 4. Robert Smith and Kevin Williams, Studies on the Human Condition, 67. If your instructor has stated that you should not use footnotes or endnotes, provide the same citation information in parentheses immediately following the borrowed information and before the closing punctuation. Include the full name of the author, the title of the work, the publication city, the name of the publisher, the date of publication, and the page number.  Doe believes this to be false (“A New Perspective” [New York: Major Journal, 2011], 18). “This idea is entirely false” (John Doe, “A New Perspective” [New York: Major Journal, 2011], 18). If a corporation is responsible for a certain source rather than an individual author, replace the author's name with the corporation name.  The job outlook for this profession appears positive (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook [Washington, DC: Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2013]). 18. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook (Washington, DC: Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2013).

SUMMARY:
Use footnotes or endnotes. Provide a full citation in the first footnote. Abbreviate the citation in following footnotes. Include a parenthetical citation if no notes are used. Name the organization if the work has a corporate or government author.