The scholarly research community has come to depend on a series of open identifier and metadata infrastructure systems to great success. Content identifiers (through DataCite and Crossref) and contributor identifiers (through ORCID) have become foundational infrastructure for the community.
Authors Martin Fenner, Tom Demeranville, Rachael Kotarski, Todd Vision, Laura Rueda, Robin Dasler, Laure Haak, Patricia Cruse
This document identifies gaps in existing PID infrastructures, with a focus on ORCID and DataCite Metadata and links between contributors, organizations and artefacts. What prevents us from establishing interoperability and overcoming barriers between PID platforms for contributors, artefacts and organisations, and research solutions for federated attribution, claiming, publishing and direct data access? It goes on to propose strategies to overcome these gaps.
Authors DataCite Metadata Working Group, Joan Starr, Madeleine de Smaele, Jan Ashton, Amy Barton, Tina Bradford, Anne Ciolek-Figiel, Stefanie Dietiker, Jannean Elliot, Berrit Genat, Karoline Harzenetter, Barbara Hirschmann, Stefan Jakobsson, Jean-Yves Mailloux, Elizabeth Newbold, Lars Holm Nielsen, Mohamed Yahia, Frauke Ziedorn
1 Introduction
1.1 The DataCite Consortium
1.2 DataCite Community Participation
1.3 The Metadata Schema
1.4 Version 4.0 Update
2 DataCite Metadata Properties
2.1 Overview
2.2 Citation
2.3 DataCite Properties
3 XML Example
4 XML Schema
5 Other DataCite Services
Appendices
Appendix 1: Controlled List Definitions
Appendix 2: Earlier Version Update Notes
There is a community need for an independent, open, non-profit organization identifier registry. This framing document, prepared by the Executive Directors of Crossref, DataCite, and ORCID, suggests a way to move forward. We propose forming a Working Group to develop a plan for the operation and governance of a registry. In developing this document we pulled from our own experiences in building and maintaining open identifier registries and recent thinking on the topic of open infrastructure. We are committed to working with the community on this initiative, starting with forming a Working Group to explore the requirements for an independent, sustainable, non-profit registry. This paper will be circulated among community stakeholders prior to the PIDapalooza meeting in November. It will be open for feedback until mid-November after which the Working Group will be established to take on responsibility for the project.
This document is based on an analysis of the current landscape of Organisational Identifierprovision, conducted during the second quarter of 2016 by Geoffrey Bilder (Crossref) andaugmented by further research conducted by Josh Brown and Tom Demeranville (ORCID).This public discussion paper has been prepared as a complement to the OrganisationIdentifier requirements document published by Crossref, DataCite and ORCID in March2016. It informs our analysis of the current landscape of identifer provision, and is intendedto be read alongside companion documents concerning the governance and functionalrequirements for Organisation Identifiers.
Organizational identifiers are needed to help solve the affiliation use case in scholarlycommunication, i.e., which research outputs are produced by researchers affiliated to aparticular institution. Organizations need to be involved in changes to the organization identifierand associated metadata, including splitting or merging of organizations, and information aboutsub-organizations. Organizational identifiers must follow established best practices forpersistent identifiers, including the linking to other organization identifiers and other resources inthe metadata. This paper was prepared jointly by Crossref, DataCite, and ORCID andsummarizes technical use cases for an organizational identifier system, and our understandingof priorities based on community consultations carried out over the course of the past year.
80612 Interorganisational Information Systems and Web ServicesFOS: Computer and information sciencesFOS: Computer and information sciences
This document sets out a number of use cases for organisational identifiers, from the perspective of three PID providers that are also ‘consumers’ of organisation identifiers: Crossref, DataCite and ORCID. The document draws together the products of several studies, working groups and reports on the topic of organisation identifiers. It summarises the key observations and recommendations from these reports and combines them into a single list of top level requirements for a ‘minimum viable product’ to address the defined needs of the scholarly communications and related communities for organisation identifiers.