1 / 82

CrossRef DOIs for Book Publishers

CrossRef DOIs for Book Publishers. Carol Anne Meyer, CrossRef @ meyercarol @ CrossRefNews AAUP CrossRef Books Interest Group 23 June 2014. Today’s Agenda. What are DOIs? IDF, Registration Agencies, and CrossRef Best Practices for CrossRef book DOIs Linking to and from books

zilya
Download Presentation

CrossRef DOIs for Book Publishers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CrossRef DOIs for Book Publishers Carol Anne Meyer, CrossRef @meyercarol @CrossRefNews AAUP CrossRef Books Interest Group 23 June 2014

  2. Today’s Agenda • What are DOIs? • IDF, Registration Agencies, and CrossRef • Best Practices for CrossRef book DOIs • Linking to and from books • Assigning CrossRef DOIs to books • Finding book DOIs • ISSNs and ISBNs for books & series • What’s next?

  3. Source: pasukaru76 from Flickr What is a DOI? Digital Object Identifier

  4. It is alphanumeric

  5. It uniquely identifies content It is unique

  6. It has two parts

  7. Creating a DOI Suffix:Keep it short and simple 10.1632/074069503X85526 10.5664/sleep.1000 10.3183/NPPRJ-1986-01-03-p004-013 10.3103/S0005105507050032 10.4260/BJFT20094508 Allowed characters: "a-z", "A-Z", "0-9" and "-._;()/” More info: Establishing a Sufix Pattern

  8. To a reader, it looks like a link

  9. The DOI is also an ISO standard

  10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/jmpi.1995.0238

  11. DOI-enabled linking

  12. It prevents this

  13. It is a digital identifier of a digital or physical object

  14. It serves as a stable link to content’s digital location

  15. Some DOIs are not CrossRef DOIs • Other Registration Agencies have assigned DOIs to books for supply chain purposes, i.e. the ISBN-A (assigned by mEDRA) • More information is available here: http://www.crossref.org/06members/otherdoifaq.html

  16. So, what is the relationship between an RA and the IDF?

  17. International DOI Foundation (IDF) • Oversees central DOI System • Promotes DOI as a standard • Provides organizational infrastructure that ensures persistence and interoperability 18

  18. IDF Registration Agencies (RAs) CrossRef ISTIC DataCite DOI OPOCE mEDRA EIDR Japan Link Center (JaLC) Bowker Airiti CNKI Publications Office of the European Union (OP)

  19. CrossRef is the largest RA, but others are growing

  20. Handle-DOI-CrossRef relationship Handle general-purpose naming service Requires customized solution DOI organizational structure for persistence CrossRef programmatic linking and discovery service Easy for publisher to automate

  21. DOIs for scholarly content • Develops and maintains • the DOI standard • Develops and maintains the • Handle system upon which • the DOI executes CrossRef/DOI Community

  22. What Does CrossRef Do? • Provides technology infrastructure for linking Registers DOIs with the Handle System Provides discoverability services for those DOIs • Provides business infrastructure for linking One agreement with CrossRef is a linking agreement with all CrossRef publishers

  23. Cross-publisher means… No need for bilateral negotiations between publishers, or between a third-party and individual publishers 24 Photo: Alexandra Lee

  24. Members need to make long-term archiving arrangements CLOCKSS: http://clockss.org Portico: http://www.portico.org KoninklijkeBibliotheek / National Library of the Netherlands: http://www.kb.nl/

  25. ? Why do publishers join CrossRef? • To get persistent identifiers for their content • To drive more traffic to their content • To turn references into hyperlinks • To pull in cited-by links (who cites this?) to get more traffic • Participate in other collaborative services (CrossCheck, CrossMark)

  26. It’s all about discoverability

  27. provides different services than other RAs • Reference linking • Cited-by linking • CrossRef Metadata Service feeds to Affiliates • CrossCheck plagiarism screening • CrossMark update identification service Powered by iThenticate

  28. Where do people discover CrossRef DOIs? • Scholarly References • Abstracting & Indexing services • Reference management tools • Search engines • Aggregated reference products • Online library catalogs (i.e. WorldCat)

  29. Why publishers assign CrossRef DOIs to books • Persistent linking---books interlink with journal articles and other scholarly content • Inbound links drive traffic; • Outbound links add value and utility to readers • CrossRef Book DOIs can resolve to information on purchasing -- for both print and online books • Access/authentication remain under publisher control

  30. is “business-model neutral” • Links deliver reader to front door • Access control up to publisher or distributor Photo: Tawheed Manzoor

  31. The Numbers • 214 publishers deposit book content at CrossRef • 414,600 book titles • 7,031,461 total book DOIs (Includes chapters and reference entries)

  32. membership • Represents 76 countries 33

  33. CrossRef Book DOI deposits have been growing rapidly

  34. 7 million book DOIs out of 63 million CrossRef DOIs http://crossref.org/06members/53status.html

  35. Largest CrossRef Book Publishers • Springer-Verlag • Smithsonian Institution (Biodiversity Heritage Library) • Cambridge University Press • Elsevier • Wiley Blackwell • Nature Publishing Group • Oxford University Press (OUP) • CRC Press • World Bank • Walter de Gruyter • American Psychological Association (APA) • World Scientific • Brill Academic Publishers • IGI Global • ASTM International • American Chemical Society (ACS) • Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishing • MBLWHOI Library • Emerald (MCB UP ) • Woodhead Publishing • Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Texas • American Mathematical Society (AMS). • American Geophysical Union (AGU) • Sage Publications • Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics • Netbiblo See http://crossref.org/06members/51depositorB.html for complete list

  36. Title level response page

  37. Book chapter response page

  38. Combined title & chapter response page

  39. Title response page for print & e-books

  40. Entry in reference works

  41. Best Practices Book DOIs http://www.crossref.org/06members/best_practices_for_books.html

  42. Best PracticesAssigning, linking and CrossRef DOI use • Deposit DOIs at the title and chapter/entry level. • Add outbound links from references in books. • Deposit references from books with CrossRef to enable CrossRef Cited-by Linking.

  43. The future is now: Cited-by Linking for books

  44. Best PracticesUpdates and Versions • Major version – updates affect interpretation. Publisher notifies readers that content has changed. • new editions • errata • corrigenda • Minor version – unlikely to affect interpretation. No publisher notification.

  45. Best PracticesUpdates and Versions • Assign new CrossRef DOIs to new major versions or editions of books, chapters and entries. Older versions remain available online with links to the latest version. • Do not assign new CrossRefDOIs to minor new versions of books, chapters and entries. • Use Multiple Resolution to associate one CrossRef DOI with multiple URLs, i.e. for electronic formats or multiple hosting platforms.

  46. Notifying readers of new editions • CrossMark Update Identification Service http://www.crossref.org/crossmark/

More Related