Scienze informatiche e dell'informazioneIngleseHugo

Crossref Blog

Crossref Blog
Recent content in Blog on Crossref
Pagina inizialeAtom Foraggio
language
CrossrefR&DScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
Pubblicato
Autore Martin Eve

One of the challenges that we face in Labs and Research at Crossref is that, as we prototype various tools, we need the community to be able to test them.

CollaborationCommunityCrossrefScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
Pubblicato

Crossref and DOAJ share the aim to encourage the dissemination and use of scholarly research using online technologies and to work with and through regional and international networks, partners, and user communities for the achievement of their aims to build local institutional capacity and sustainability.

CommunityCrossrefScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
Pubblicato
Autore Martin Eve

Crossref holds metadata for approximately 150 million scholarly artifacts. These range from peer reviewed journal articles through to scholarly books through to scientific blog posts.

CommunityCrossrefStaffScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
Pubblicato
Autore Crossref

We’re equally sad and proud to report that Rachael Lammey is moving on in her career to the very lucky team at 67Bricks. Her last day at Crossref is today, Friday 16th February. Which is too soon for us, but very exciting for her!

CommunityCrossrefStaffStrategyScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
Pubblicato
Autore Rosa Morais Clark

Great news to share: our Executive Director, Ed Pentz, has been selected as the 2024 recipient of the Miles Conrad Award from the USA’s National Information Standards organisation (NISO). The award is testament to an individual’s lifetime contribution to the information community, and we couldn’t be more delighted that Ed

CrossrefResearch IntegrityStrategyTrustworthinessScienze informatiche e dell'informazioneInglese
Pubblicato

Metadata about research objects and the relationships between them form the basis of the scholarly record: rich metadata has the potential to provide a richer context for scholarly output, and in particular, can provide trust signals to indicate integrity.