Blog

Crossref metadata for bibliometrics

Our paper, Crossref: the sustainable source of community-owned scholarly metadata, was recently published in Quantitative Science Studies (MIT Press). The paper describes the scholarly metadata collected and made available by Crossref, as well as its importance in the scholarly research ecosystem.

Bridging Identifiers at PIDapalooza

Hello from sunny Girona! Iā€™m heading to PIDapalooza, the Persistent Identifier festival, as it returns for its second year. Itā€™s all about to kick off.

One of the themes this year is ā€œbridging worldsā€: how to bring together different communities and the identifiers they use. Something I really enjoyed about PIDapalooza last year was the variety of people who came. We heard about some ā€œtraditionalā€ identifier systems (at least, it seems that way to us): DOIs for publications, DOIs for datasets, ORCIDs for researchers. But, gathered in Reykjavik, under dark Icelandic skies, I met oceanographic surveyors assigning DOIs to drilling equipment, heard stories of identifiers in Chinese milk production and consoled librarians trying navigate the identifier landscape.

Event Data as Underlying Altmetrics Infrastructure at the 4:AM Altmetrics Conference

Iā€™m here in Toronto and looking forward to a busy week. Maddy Watson and I are in town for the 4:AM Altmetrics Conference, as well as the altmetrics17 workshop and Hack-day. Iā€™ll be speaking at each, and for those of you who arenā€™t able to make it, Iā€™ve combined both presentations into a handy blog post, which follows on from my last one.

But first, nothing beats a good demo. Take a look at our live stream. This shows the Events passing through Crossref Event Data, live, as they happen. You may need to wait a few seconds before you see anything.

You do want to see how itā€™s made ā€” seeing what goes into altmetrics

Thereā€™s a saying about oil, something along the lines of ā€œyou really donā€™t want to see how itā€™s madeā€. And whilst Iā€™m reluctant to draw too many parallels between the petrochemical industry and scholarly publishing, there are some interesting comparisons to be drawn.

Oil starts its life deep underground as an amorphous sticky substance. Prospectors must identify oil fields, drill, extract the oil and refine it. It finds its way into things as diverse as aspirin, paint and hammocks. And as I lie in my hammock watching paint dry, Iā€™m curious to know how crude oil made its way into the aspirin that Iā€™ve taken for the headache brought on by the paint fumes. Whilst it would be better if I did know how these things were made, not knowing doesnā€™t impair the efficacy of my aspirin.

Event Data enters Beta

Weā€™ve been talking about it at events, blogging about it on our site, living it, breathing it, and even sometimes dreaming about it, and now we are delighted to announce that Crossref Event Data has entered Beta.