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Building Open Research Infrastructure with PIDs

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Building Open Research Infrastructure with PIDs

  1. 1. Building Open Research Infrastructure with PIDs 13 September, 2019 Gabriela Mejias https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1598-7181 Engagement Lead, Europe @gabioshka @ORCID_Org
  2. 2. persistent an organization made a promise to keep it alive identifier globally unique string (known as PIDs to their friends)
  3. 3. A PID for everything Journal articles: via Crossref (https://crossref.org) Datasets, software: via DataCite (https://datacite.org) Research organizations: via ROR (https://ror.org) People: via ORCID (https://orcid.org) And more...
  4. 4. And what can PIDs do? • PIDs disambiguate
  5. 5. And what can PIDs do? • PIDs make research data FAIR
  6. 6. What is ORCID? • ORCID is an open, not-for-profit organization run by and for the research community • We provide researchers with a unique identifier, an ORCID iD, that reliably and clearly connects them with their research contributions, affiliations, funding & facilities • We provide open tools (ORCID Registry & API) that enable transparent connections between researchers, and identifiers for their activities & contributions.
  7. 7. Our Community https://orcid.org/statistics • 1059 members from 40+ countries • 20 consortia • 600+ system integrations: all research sectors • 7M+ iDs connected to: ○ 7M+ affiliations ○ 42M+ works ○ 16M+ unique DOIs
  8. 8. And how did we get there? Being OPEN!
  9. 9. PID Power By connecting everything, you can see the true power of PIDs Researchers, institutions, publications, datasets, grants, peer review and more are already interconnected in real life, and this can be reflected and tracked through PIDs
  10. 10. Open Research Infrastructure (as illustrated by terrible clip art)
  11. 11. Interoperability in action And we support many dif. types of research activities (affiliations, funding, peer review, etc.), contributions (journal article, preprint, conference paper, dataset, etc.), and more!
  12. 12. Interoperability in action
  13. 13. Interoperability in action
  14. 14. Pulling work metadata • Researchers can now pull metadata from PIDs when manually adding works to ORCID • DOI, ArXiv, Pubmed all supported • Thanks to the efforts of Datacite encouraging adoption of citeproc content!
  15. 15. Annotations and physical objects • There are emerging use cases for connecting annotations and physical objects to ORCID iDs • Working with RDA Biodiversity Standards, Bloodhound, SciCrunch and more • We’ve added support for both work types this week! https://members.orcid.org/api/resources/work-types
  16. 16. Demonstrating facility impact • Making accurate assessment of the scientific impact of public investments in research infrastructure is very difficult • PIDs can help • ORCID has workflows for adding resource proposals and awards to ORCID records and work metadata
  17. 17. An example: EMSL
  18. 18. Funders should use ORCID and other persistent identifiers to: ● Support researchers. Use data from ORCID records to auto-fill forms for your researchers and add information about funding to their records ● Track and evaluate research results. Maintain links with grantees - past, present, and future - to track the impact of your funding over time ● Streamline reporting. Enable easy information-sharing across systems within and between research organizations Show your support for ORCID by signing the Funders Open Letter ORCID IN FUNDING WORKFLOWS https://doi.org/10.23640/07243.9149240.v1
  19. 19. So what can you do? Step 1: Register PIDs It’s hard to connect things when we don’t know they exist • Get an ORCID iD for yourself → https://orcid.org • Give DOIs to your research publications, data and software → https://datacite.org, • Use repositories that generate PIDs → https://repositoryfinder.datacite.org https://zenodo.org/ or your institutional repository
  20. 20. So what can you do? Step 2: Make your PIDs talk to each other Include relevant related PIDs in the metadata for your publications, software, dataset PIDs
  21. 21. So what can you do? Step 3: Share your connections with the community!
  22. 22. Join the conversation! • https://www.pidforum.org/ • PIDapalooza 2020 (29 & 30 Jan @Lisbon)
  23. 23. (The ORCID Team engaging with persistence in Stonehenge) Find out more at https://members.orcid.org Email g.mejias@orcid.org Twitter @ORCID_Org / @gabioshka THANK YOU!

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