ORCID "Connecting Research and Researchers"
What is ORCID
ORCID is a nonprofit helping create a world in which all who participate in
research, scholarship and innovation are uniquely identified and connected to
their contributions and affiliations, across disciplines, borders, and time.
Our vision
ORCID’s vision is a world where all who participate in research, scholarship,
and innovation are uniquely identified and connected to their contributions
across disciplines, borders, and time.
Our mission
ORCID provides an identifier for individuals to use with their name as they
engage in research, scholarship, and innovation activities. We provide open
tools that enable transparent and trustworthy connections between researchers,
their contributions, and affiliations. We provide this service to help people
find information and to simplify reporting and analysis.
Our values
ORCID is a not-for-profit organization, sustained by fees from our member
organizations. Our work is open, transparent, and non-proprietary. We are
guided by the principles of privacy and researcher control, and the vision of
identifier-enabled research information infrastructure. We make decisions
collaboratively, involving our staff, Board, those who support our mission, and
the researchers and community that are the purpose of our work.
We take a global view. We have a diverse team, deployed internationally in our
"virtual office." We engage with a wide range of organizations and people
to ensure broad viewpoints. We strive to be a trusted component of research
infrastructure with the goal of providing clarity in the breadth of research
contributions and the people who make them.
The ORCID Community
The ORCID community includes individual researchers, universities, national
laboratories, commercial research organizations, research funders, publishers,
national science agencies, data repositories, and international professional
societies, all of whom have been critically affected by the lack of a central
registry for researchers. ORCID coordinates with the community through Working
Groups and bi-annual Outreach meetings.
Documentation
ORCID works with the research community to identify opportunities for
integrating ORCID identifiers in key workflows, such as manuscript submissions
and grant applications. ORCID encourages third parties to develop applications
that interact with and enhance the utility of the ORCID Registry. We provide
tools, use cases, documentation, examples, and open-source code to support your
integration efforts.
http://orcid.org/about
The ORCID Team
ORCID is governed by a Board of Directors with wide stakeholder representation.
ORCID is supported by a dedicated and knowledgeable professional staff, led by
Executive Director Laure Haak and Technical Director Laura Paglione.
Membership
Individuals may use ORCID services freely. ORCID membership is open to any
organization interested in integrating ORCID identifiers. All member fees are
used to sustain and develop ORCID for the benefit of the research community.
*
ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) is
a nonproprietary alphanumeric code to uniquely identify scientific and other
academic authors and contributors.[1][2][3][4][5] This addresses the problem
that a particular author's contributions to the scientific literature or
publications in the humanities can be hard to recognize as most personal names
are not unique, they can change (such as with marriage), have cultural
differences in name order, contain inconsistent use of first-name abbreviations
and employ different writing systems. It provides a persistent identity for humans,
similar to that created for content-related entities on digital networks by
digital object identifiers (DOIs).[6]
The ORCID organization offers an open and independent registry intended to be
the de facto standard for contributor identification in research and academic
publishing. On 16 October 2012, ORCID launched its registry services [7][8] and
started issuing user identifiers.[9]
Contents
1 Development and launch
2 Uses
3 Members, sponsors and registrants
3.1 National implementations
4 Integrations
5 See also
6 References
7 External links
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ORCID
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Uses
The aim of ORCID is to aid "the transition from science to e-Science,
wherein scholarly publications can be mined to spot links and ideas hidden in
the ever-growing volume of scholarly literature".[26] Another suggested
use is to provide each researcher with "a constantly updated ‘digital
curriculum vitae’ providing a picture of his or her contributions to science
going far beyond the simple publication list."[1] The idea is that other
organizations will use the open-access ORCID database to build their own
services.
It has been noted in an editorial in Nature that ORCID, in addition to tagging
the contributions that scientists make to papers, "could also be assigned
to data sets they helped to generate, comments on their colleagues’ blog posts
or unpublished draft papers, edits of Wikipedia entries and much else
besides".[1]
In April 2014, ORCID announced plans to work with the Consortia Advancing
Standards in Research Administration Information to record and acknowledge
contributions to peer review.[27]
In an open letter dated 1 January 2016 eight publishers, including the Royal
Society, the American Geophysical Union, Hindawi, the Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers, PLOS, and Science, committed to requiring all
authors in their journals to have an ORCID iD.[28][29]
Integrations
Nick Jennings' ORCID in his Wikidata entry
In addition to members and sponsors, journals, publishers, and other services
have included ORCID in their workflows or databases. For example, the Journal
of Neuroscience,[39][40] Springer Publishing,[41] the Hindawi Publishing
Corporation,[18] Europe PubMed Central,[42] the Japanese National Institute of
Informatics's Researcher Name Resolver,[43] Wikipedia,[44] and Wikidata.[45]
Some online services have created tools for exporting data to, or importing
data from, ORCID. These include Scopus,[46] Figshare,[47] Thomson Reuters'
ResearcherID system,[48] Researchfish,[49] the British Library (for their EThOS
thesis catalogue),[50] ProQuest (for their ProQuest Dissertations and Theses
service),[51] and Frontiers Loop.[52]
In October 2015, DataCite, CrossRef and ORCID announced that the former organisations
would update ORCID records, "when an ORCID identifier is found in newly
registered DOI names".[53][54]
Third-party tools allow the migration of content from other services into
ORCID, for example Mendeley2ORCID, for Mendeley.[55]
Some ORCID data may also be retrieved as RDF/XML, RDF Turtle, XML or
JSON.[56][57] ORCID uses GitHub as its code repository.[58]
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Have you ever tried to search for an author,
only to discover that he shares a name with 113 other researchers? Or realized
that Google Scholar stopped tracking citations to your work after you took your
spouse’s surname a few years back?
If so, you’ve probably wished for ORCID.
ORCID IDs are permanent identifiers for researchers. Community uptake has
increased tenfold over the past year, and continues to be adopted by new
institutions, funders, and journals on a daily basis. ORCID may prove to be one
of the most important advances in scholarly communication in the past ten
years.
Here are ten things you need to know about ORCID and its importance to you.
Contents of This Blog Post
1. ORCIDs protects your unique scholarly identity
2. Creating an ORCID identifier takes 30 seconds
4. ORCID lasts longer than your email address
5. ORCID supports 37 types of “works,” from articles to dance performances
6. You control who views your ORCID information
7. ORCID is glue for all your research services
8. Journals, funders & institutions are moving to ORCID
9. When everyone has an ORCID identifier, scholarship gets better
10. ORCID is open source, open data, and community-driven
Go to the web address above to read the details for these ten headings
http://blog.impactstory.org/ten-things-you-need-to-know-about-orcid-right-now/
*
*
ORCID
Identifiers FROM Cornell University Library
"ORCID® iDs are unique researcher identifiers
designed to provide a transparent method for linking researchers and
contributors to their activities and outputs. arXiv allows you to link your
ORCID iD with your arXiv account. This linkage will allow your works on arXiv
to be unambiguously connected to your works in other systems. It will help with
the ongoing challenge of distinguishing your research activities from those of
others with similar names.
We encourage all arXiv authors to link their ORCID iD with arXiv."
*
ORCID around the world
Spreading the ORCID word: ORCID communications webinar
Ten Things You Need to Know about ORCID Right Now
ORCID Technical Introduction 10-29-15, 9.02 AM
Peer Review Recognition: One Year Later: Peer Review on the ORCID Registry
Peer Review Recognition: One Year Later: EJPress
Peer Review Recognition: One Year Later: American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Peer Review Recognition: One Year Later: Publons
*
http://www.slideshare.net/ORCIDSlides
*
"Accurate attribution has long been a
challenge in the scholarly sphere. Whether one is the researcher, funder,
publisher or another contributing to this ecosystem, it is critical that work
be properly identified and tied to the right individual, institution, publisher
or funder. Thomson Reuters has long known this, hence the reason for its
ResearcherID solution. And, hence the reason for the company being a founding
member of the Open Researcher and Contributor ID (ORCID) initiative.
ResearcherID and ORCID are complementary attribution identifiers. They go
hand-in-hand and it is essential that scholarly authors and researchers have
both. ORCID is a platform-agnostic identifier, whereas the ResearcherID
identifier is specific to Thomson Reuters. With a ResearcherID, users can:
Showcase and network more easily across the Web of Science™
Access citation profile and metrics in the Web of Science
Provide end-user feedback on publications for claiming purposes, which will
propagate through other Thomson Reuters offerings
With the latest release of ResearcherID, members can seamlessly exchange data
between their ResearcherID and ORCID profiles"
http://wokinfo.com/researcherid/integration/
*
*
Publishing blog
From January you’ll need an ORCID
7 December 2015 by Phil Hurst
Mandating the use of Open Researcher and Contributor ID (ORCID) by submitting
authors.
ORCIDORCID provides a unique identifier for all researchers that can be linked
to their different research works and activities across multiple platforms. It
also serves to distinguish authors with similar names and simplify searching of
publications databases (such as PubMed, Scopus, etc.) to avoid retrieving
articles by authors with similar names. Close to 1.8 million researchers have
already created their ORCID iD. The service is non-profit and community driven.
From 1 January 2016, we will require the submitting author to provide an ORCID
identifier as part of the manuscript submission process.
Benefits of creating an ORCID iD
It’s a time saver
It provides cross-platform compatibility
Your privacy is protected
It helps to build reputations
https://blogs.royalsociety.org/publishing/from-january-youll-need-an-orcid/
*
Author: Torsten Reimer
Abstract
The ORCID researcher identifier ensures that research outputs can always
reliably be traced back to their authors. ORCID also makes it possible to
automate the sharing of research information, thereby increasing data quality,
reducing duplication of effort for academics and saving institutions money. In
2014, Imperial College London created ORCID identifiers (iDs) for academic and
research staff. This article discusses the implementation project in the
context of the role of ORCID in the global scholarly communications system. It
shows how ORCID can be used to automate reporting, help with research data
publication and support open access (OA).
Keywords: ORCID, identifier, Imperial College London, scholarly communications,
research information management
How to Cite: Reimer, T., (2015). Your name is not good enough: introducing the
ORCID researcher identifier at Imperial College London. Insights. 28(3),
pp.76–82. DOI: http://doi.org/10.1629/uksg.268
Introduction
Why engage with ORCID?
The Imperial College ORCID project
Two approaches to ORCID
ORCID roll-out
Academic response, success factors and lessons learned
Ongoing ORCID engagement at Imperial College
http://insights.uksg.org/articles/10.1629/uksg.268/
*
Guest blog by Alice Meadows, Director of
Community Engagement & Support at ORCID
If you’re a researcher or work in a research organization, the chances are that
over the past couple of years you’ve started to hear about ORCID. Maybe you’re
one of the over 2 million people who have already signed up for an ORCID iD, or
you know colleagues who have.
Perhaps you’ve been asked to provide an ORCID iD when applying for a grant,
submitting a manuscript, or when using a research information management
system. Or you may have responded to our call for feedback in our first
community survey last year.
Read more at the Web Address Above
http://blogs.nature.com/ofschemesandmemes/2016/04/14/orcid-what-why-how
*
Why Some Publishers are Requiring ORCID iDs
for Authors: An Interview with Stuart Taylor, The Royal Society
FROM The Scholarly Kitchen
Posted by Alice Meadows ⋅
Jan 7, 2016 ⋅
58 Comments
Filed Under Academic publishing, ORCID, publishing, Royal Society
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"Being able to effectively and consistently
link yourself to your research is not only convenient, but also vitally
important if you want your work to be discovered.
Since its launch in October 2012, the ORCID registry has issued over 500,000
unique identifiers to help researchers and scholars keep track of their outputs
and other “works”.
By the end of 2014, the ORCID team hope to triple this figure to 1.5 million
ORCID ID’s and today Symplectic is pleased to announce its own contribution to
this most important of causes by becoming one of the first ORCID members to use
Authenticated ID’s to transfer data from the ORCID registry to an institutional
information management system."
Secure integration
Ensuring high quality data
Looking ahead
Growing the community
About ORCID
http://symplectic.co.uk/elements-updates/elements-integrates-with-orcid/
*
http://orcid.org/organizations/integrators/integration-chart
*
Wed, 09/04/2013 - 14:27
It has been almost a year since ORCID – the open, non-profit, community-based
effort to provide a registry of unique researcher identifiers and a transparent
method of linking research activities and outputs to these identifiers – was
launched. More than 253,000 ORCID profiles have been created as of today. Since
its launch, the Scopus team has continued to add enhanced integration points
while supporting the mission of ORCID.
*
Haak, Laurel L., Martin Fenner, Laura
Paglione, Ed Pentz, and Howard Ratner.
"ORCID: a system to uniquely identify researchers."
Learned Publishing 25, no. 4 (2012): 259-264.
*
Clement, Gail.
"ORCID-opoly, Where High-touch Meets High-Tech: Learning and Outreach
efforts in support of ORCID Integration at Texas A&M."
(2014).
*
Fenner, Martin, Consol Garcia Gómez, and
Gudmundur Thorisson.
"Collective Action for the Open Researcher and Contributor ID (Orcid)."
Serials 24, no. 3 (2011).
*
Anstey, A.
"How Can We Be Certain Who Authors Really Are? Why ORCID is Important to
the British Journal of Dermatology."
British Journal of Dermatology
171, no. 4 (2014): 679-680.
*
Wilson, B., and M. Fenner.
"Open researcher & contributor ID (ORCID): solving the name ambiguity
problem.
" Educause Rev 47 (2012): 1-4.
*
Bilder, Geoffrey.
"Disambiguation without de-duplication: Modeling authority and trust in
the ORCID system."
Retrieved November 20 (2011): 2013.
*
De Castro, Pablo, and Simeon Warner.
"ORCID Implementation in Open Access Repositories and Institutional
Research Information Management Systems."
2014-12-19]. (2013).
*.
Foley, Michael J., and David L. Kochalko.
"Open Researcher and Contributor Identification"
(ORCID). (2012).
*
Friedberg, Errol C.
"Good news on the horizon: the Open Researcher and Contributor ID"
(ORCID).
DNA repair 9, no. 2 (2010): 102.
*
Haak, Laurel.
"ORCID: Connecting Researchers and Scholars with Their Works."
Insights 26, no. 3 (2013).
*
Barry, Michael J., Floyd J. Fowler Jr, Michael
P. O'Leary, R. C. Bruskewitz, H. L. Holtgrewe, W. K. Mebust, and A. T. Cockett.
"The American Urological Association symptom index for benign prostatic
hyperplasia. The Measurement Committee of the American Urological
Association."
The Journal of urology
148, no. 5 (1992): 1549-57.
*
Moreira, João Mendes, Alcino Cunha, and Nuno
Macedo.
"An ORCID based synchronization framework for a national CRIS
ecosystem."
F1000Research 4 (2015).
*
Research evaluation metrics
Volume 4 of Open access for researchers
Author Das, Anup Kumar
Publisher UNESCO Publishing, 2015
ISBN 9231000829, 9789231000829
Length 120 pages
*
The Metric Tide: Independent Review of the
Role of Metrics in Research Assessment and Management
Author James Wilsdon
Edition revised
Publisher SAGE, 2016
ISBN 1473978777, 9781473978775
Length 192 pages
*
New Content in Digital Repositories: The
Changing Research Landscape
Chandos Information Professional Series
Authors Natasha Simons, Joanna Richardson
Publisher Elsevier, 2013
ISBN 1780634099, 9781780634098
Length 252 pages
*
The Death of Science: A Companion Study to
Martín López Corredoira’s The Twilight of the Scientific Age
Author Andrew Holster
Edition illustrated
Publisher Universal-Publishers, 2016
ISBN 1627340769, 9781627340762
Length 310 pages
*
Bioinformatics Challenges at the Interface of
Biology and Computer Science: Mind the Gap
Authors Teresa K. Attwood, Stephen R. Pettifer, David Thorne
Publisher John Wiley & Sons, 2016
ISBN 047003548X, 9780470035481
Length 424 pages
*
Managing Scientific Information and Research
Data
Author Svetla Baykoucheva
Publisher Chandos Publishing, 2015
ISBN 0081002378, 9780081002377
Length 162 pages
*
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