Blog

Get ready for Crossmark 2.0!

TL;DR
 In a few weeks, publishers can upgrade to the new and improved Crossmark 2.0 including a mobile-friendly pop-up box and new button. We will provide a new snippet of code for your landing pages, and we’ll support version v1.5 until March 2017.

We recently revealed a new look for the Crossmark box, bringing it up-to-date in design and offering extra space for more metadata. The new box pulls all of a publication’s Crossmark metadata into the same space, so readers no longer have to click between tabs. Linked Clinical Trials and author names (including ORCID iDs) now have their own sections alongside funding information and licenses. Feedback so far tells us that the new box is a vast improvement.

Getting ready to run with preprints, any day now

run

While preprints have been a formal part of scholarly communications for decades in certain communities, they have not been fully adopted to date across most disciplines or systems. That may be changing very soon and quite rapidly, as new initiatives come thick and fast from researchers, funders, and publishers alike. This flurry of activity points to the realization from these parties of preprints’ potential benefits:

  • Accelerating the sharing of results;
  • Catalyzing research discovery;
  • Establishing priority of discoveries and ideas;
  • Facilitating career advancement; and
  • Improving the culture of communication within the scholarly community.
  • To acknowledge them as a legitimate part of the research story, we need to fully build preprints into the broader research infrastructure. Preprints need infrastructure support just like journal articles, monographs, and other formal research outputs. Otherwise, we (continue to) have a two-tiered scholarly communications system, unlinked and operating independently.

    Using AWS S3 as a large key-value store for Chronograph

    One of the cool things about working in Crossref Labs is that interesting experiments come up from time to time. One experiment, entitled “what happens if you plot DOI referral domains on a chart?” turned into the Chronograph project. In case you missed it, Chronograph analyses our DOI resolution logs and shows how many times each DOI link was resolved per month, and also how many times a given domain referred traffic to DOI links per day.

    A fairer approach to waiting for deposits

    If you ever see me in the checkout line at some store do not ever get in the line I’m in. It is always the absolute slowest.

    Crossref’s metadata system has a sort of checkout line, when members send in their data they got processed essentially in a first come first served basis. It’s called the deposit queue. We had controls to prevent anyone from monopolizing the queue and ways to jump forward in the queue but our primary goal was to give everyone a fair shot at getting processed as soon as possible. With many different behaviors by our members this could often be a challenge and at times some folks were not 100% happy.

    2016 upcoming events - we’re out and about!

    Check out the events below where Crossref will attend or present in 2016. We have been busy over the past few months, and we have more planned for the rest of year. If we will be at a place near you, please come see us (and support these organizations and events)!

    Upcoming Events
    SHARE Community Meeting, July 11-14, Charlottesville, VA, USA
    Crossref Outreach Day - July 19-21 - Seoul, South Korea
    CASE 2016 Conference - July 20-22 - Seoul, South Korea
    ACSE Annual Meeting 2016 - August 10-11 - Dubai, UAE
    Vivo 2016 Conference - August 17-19 - Denver CO, USA
    SciDataCon - September 11-17 - Denver CO, USA
    ALPSP - September 14-16 - London, UK
    OASPA - September 21-22 - Arlington VA, USA
    3:AM Conference - September 26 - 28 - Bucharest, Romania
    ORCID Outreach Conference - October 5-6 - Washington DC, USA
    Frankfurt Book Fair - October 19-23 - Frankfurt, Germany (Hall 4.2, Stand #4.2 M 85)
    Crossref Annual Community Meeting #Crossref16 - November 1-2 - London, UK**
    PIDapalooza - November 9-10 - Reykjavik, Iceland
    OpenCon 2016 - November 12-14 - Washington DC, USA
    STM Digital Publishing Conference - December 6-8 - London, UK

    DOI-like strings and fake DOIs

    TL;DR

    Crossref discourages our members from using DOI-like strings or fake DOIs.

    discouraged

    Details

    Recently we have seen quite a bit of debate around the use of so-called “fake-DOIs.” We have also been quoted as saying that we discourage the use of “fake DOIs” or “DOI-like strings”. This post outlines some of the cases in which we’ve seen fake DOIs used and why we recommend against doing so.

    Outreach Day DC. Next Up? You Tell Us

    Rallying the community is a key Crossref role. Sometimes this means collaborating on new initiatives but it is also an ongoing process, a cornerstone of our outreach efforts. Part of rallying the community is bringing people together, literally, in a series of outreach days around the globe. It means we encourage dialog with us and among members and non-publisher affiliates. We want to hear from the community and we hope to facilitate conversations in it. Not just about Crossref, but larger issues of scholarly communications and your particular part in it. The Crossref outreach team is doing a number of events around the world to bring together the community for updates, feedback and discussion.

    Hello preprints, what’s your story?

    The role of preprints

    Crossref provides infrastructure services and therefore we support scholarly communications as it evolves over time. Today, preprints are increasingly discussed as a valuable part of the research story (beyond physics, math, and a small set of sub-disciplines). Preprints might play a positive role in catalyzing research discovery, establishing priority of discoveries and ideas, facilitating career advancement, and improving the culture of communication within the scholarly community.

    Linked Clinical Trials initiative gathers momentum

    We now have linked clinical trials deposits coming in from five publishers: BioMedCentral, BMJ, Elsevier, National Institute for Health Research and PLOS. It’s still a relatively small pool of metadata - around 4000 DOIs with associated clinical trial numbers - but we’re delighted to see that “threads” of publications are already starting to form.

    An exemplary image

    If you look at this article in The Lancet and click on the Crossmark button you will see that in the Clinical Trials section there are links to three other articles reporting on the same trial: two from the American Heart Journal and one from BMJ’s Heart. Readers can navigate between these four articles in three separate journals using the Crossmark functionality- a new set of links and routes for discovery have appeared.

    Distributing references via Crossref

    Known unknowns

    If you follow this blog, you are going to notice a theme over the coming months- Crossref supports the deposit and distribution of a lot more kinds of metadata than people usually realise.

    We are in the process of completely revamping our web site, help documentation, and marketing to better promote our metadata distribution capabilities, but in the mean time we think it would be useful highlight one of our most under-promoted functions- the ability to distribute references via Crossref.