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DataCite Blog - DataCite

DataCite Blog - DataCite
Connecting Research, Advancing Knowledge
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Organization IdentifiersInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Over the past couple of years, a group of organizations with a shared purpose – California Digital Library, Crossref, DataCite, and ORCID – invested our time and energy into launching the Org ID initiative, with the goal of defining requirements for an open, community-led organization identifier registry. The goal of our initiative has been to offer a transparent, accessible process that builds a better system for all of our communities.

Informatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
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Auteur DataCite

Joan Starr, EZID Service Manager, California Digital Library has been an important part of DataCite’s success from the beginning. Joan has made a difference with her guidance, passion, voice, knowledge — all of which has helped so many in the DataCite community. DataCite awarded Joan the Distinguished Service Award at the spring General Assembly in Berlin 2018. Her contributions are immense.

Data-level MetricsMDCInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

One year into our Sloan funded Make Data Count project, we are proud to release Version 1 of standardized data usage and citation metrics! As a community that values research data it is important for us to have a standard and fair way to compare metrics for data sharing. We know of and are involved in a variety of initiatives around data citation infrastructure and best practices; including Scholix, Crossref and DataCite Event Data.

Make Data CountData CitationMDCRDAScholixInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
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For the past several years data citation has been an important topic in the research community. The community came together and agreed that data must be granted first-class citizenship in the practice of scholarship. Thus the community defined a set of guiding principles for data within scholarly literature. This is known as the Joint Declaration of Data Citation Principles (JDDCP)[@https://doi.org/10.25490/a97f-egyk], published in 2014.

Informatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Today we’re releasing a special follow-up to our successful DOI Fabrica 1.0 release earlier this month [@https://doi.org/10.5438/0yk5-b755]. That’s right, the DOI registration form is here! We know many of you have been waiting for this feature, and we’re pleased to say it has arrived. You can now enter the metadata for your DOI into individual form fields instead of uploading a metadata file.

DOISoftware CitationInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
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We know that software is important in research, and some of us in the scholarly communications community, for example, in FORCE11, have been pushing the concept of software citation as a method to allow software developers and maintainers to get academic credit for their work: software releases are published and assigned DOIs, and software users then cite these releases when they publish research that uses the software.

Informatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
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DataCite is pleased to welcome Robin Dasler to our team. Robin joined DataCite as product manager in March. Get to know her better via this interview. Can you tell us a little bit about what you did before you started working for DataCite? I began my career as a science liaison librarian, mostly in the physical sciences and math, and I made the jump to data librarian roles once they came on the scene.

Informatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

The DataCite team is pleased to announce the release of DOI Fabrica 1.0! DataCite Providers and Clients can check it out at https://doi.datacite.org. DOI Fabrica is the new web interface for DataCite DOI registration services. With DOI Fabrica, you can create and manage DOIs right from your browser without needing to use an API.

Conference IdentifiersInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
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Auteur Aliaksandr Birukou

This blog post by guest author Aliaksandr Birukou was cross-posted from the Crossref blog. Aliaksandr Birukou is the Executive Editor for Computer Science at Springer Nature and is chair of the Project PID Group that has been working to establish a persistent identifier system and registry for scholarly conferences.