2023
de Castro, Pablo; Herb, Ulrich; Rothfritz, Laura; Schöpfel, Joachim
Adoption of the DAI in the Netherlands and subsequent superseding by ORCID/ISNI Technical Manual
Knowledge Exchange 2023.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Case Study, DAI, Dutch Digital Author Identifier, Persistent Identifier, PID, PID landscape
@manual{pablo_de_castro_2023_7327505,
title = {Adoption of the DAI in the Netherlands and subsequent superseding by ORCID/ISNI},
author = {Pablo de Castro and Ulrich Herb and Laura Rothfritz and Joachim Schöpfel},
url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7327505},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.7327505},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-02-01},
urldate = {2023-02-01},
publisher = {Zenodo},
organization = {Knowledge Exchange},
abstract = {This case study is part of a series that has been produced within the study on “Risks and Trust in pursuit of a well-functioning PID infrastructure for research” commissioned by the Knowledge Exchange in July 2021. The main outcome of this work is a report examining the current PID landscape with an emphasis on its risks and trust-related issues.
The case study looks at the Dutch Digital Author Identifier (DAI). It explains the importance of contingency management and community involvement to successfully address risks and trust issues for a well-functioning PID landscape.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.},
keywords = {Case Study, DAI, Dutch Digital Author Identifier, Persistent Identifier, PID, PID landscape},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {manual}
}
The case study looks at the Dutch Digital Author Identifier (DAI). It explains the importance of contingency management and community involvement to successfully address risks and trust issues for a well-functioning PID landscape.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.
de Castro, Pablo; Herb, Ulrich; Rothfritz, Laura; Schöpfel, Joachim
RePEc Author Service: An established community-driven PID Technical Manual
Knowledge Exchange 2023.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Case Study, Persistent Identifier, PID, PID landscape, RAS, RePEc, RePEc Author Service
@manual{de_castro_pablo_2023_7330516,
title = {RePEc Author Service: An established community-driven PID},
author = {Pablo de Castro and Ulrich Herb and Laura Rothfritz and Joachim Schöpfel},
url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7330516},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.7330516},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-02-01},
urldate = {2023-02-01},
publisher = {Zenodo},
organization = {Knowledge Exchange},
abstract = {This case study is part of a series that has been produced within the study on “Risks and Trust in pursuit of a well-functioning PID infrastructure for research” commissioned by the Knowledge Exchange in July 2021. The main outcome of this work is a report examining the current PID landscape with an emphasis on its risks and trust-related issues.
The case study looks at the RePEc Author Service (RAS), an independent community owned and run DAI service within Economics. Established before ORCID emerged, RAS survives on the basis of low running costs, various sponsors, and volunteers. It demonstrates how community-trust, accepting uncertainty around sustainability and governance, can help a PID service run for a long time.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.},
keywords = {Case Study, Persistent Identifier, PID, PID landscape, RAS, RePEc, RePEc Author Service},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {manual}
}
The case study looks at the RePEc Author Service (RAS), an independent community owned and run DAI service within Economics. Established before ORCID emerged, RAS survives on the basis of low running costs, various sponsors, and volunteers. It demonstrates how community-trust, accepting uncertainty around sustainability and governance, can help a PID service run for a long time.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.
de Castro, Pablo; Herb, Ulrich; Rothfritz, Laura; Schöpfel, Joachim
Failed PIDs and unreliable PID implementations Technical Manual
Knowledge Exchange 2023.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Case Study, Failed PIDs, Persistent Identifier, PID, PID implementation, PID landscape
@manual{pablo_de_castro_2023_7330527,
title = {Failed PIDs and unreliable PID implementations},
author = {Pablo de Castro and Ulrich Herb and Laura Rothfritz and Joachim Schöpfel},
url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7330527},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.7330527},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-02-01},
urldate = {2023-02-01},
publisher = {Zenodo},
organization = {Knowledge Exchange},
abstract = {This case study is part of a series that has been produced within the study on “Risks and Trust in pursuit of a well-functioning PID infrastructure for research” commissioned by the Knowledge Exchange in July 2021. The main outcome of this work is a report examining the current PID landscape with an emphasis on its risks and trust-related issues.
The case study explores what happens if organizations providing and managing PIDs are unreliable. It examines issues around risk and trust, the importance of a committed organization and contingency plans.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.},
keywords = {Case Study, Failed PIDs, Persistent Identifier, PID, PID implementation, PID landscape},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {manual}
}
The case study explores what happens if organizations providing and managing PIDs are unreliable. It examines issues around risk and trust, the importance of a committed organization and contingency plans.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.
de Castro, Pablo; Herb, Ulrich; Rothfritz, Laura; Schöpfel, Joachim
IGSN - building and expanding a community-driven PID system Technical Manual
Knowledge Exchange 2023.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Case Study, IGSN, International Generic Sample Number, Persistent Identifier, PID, PID landscape
@manual{pablo_de_castro_2023_7330498,
title = {IGSN - building and expanding a community-driven PID system},
author = {Pablo de Castro and Ulrich Herb and Laura Rothfritz and Joachim Schöpfel},
url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7330498},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.7330498},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-02-01},
urldate = {2023-02-01},
publisher = {Zenodo},
organization = {Knowledge Exchange},
abstract = {This case study is part of a series that has been produced within the study on “Risks and Trust in pursuit of a well-functioning PID infrastructure for research” commissioned by the Knowledge Exchange in July 2021. The main outcome of this work is a report examining the current PID landscape with an emphasis on its risks and trust-related issues.
The case study explores the International Generic Sample Number (IGSN) and its development. It aims to help explain how the PID system itself develops by bringing up new PIDs through community services.
The interviews conducted give further insight into how IGSN helps the research community.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.},
keywords = {Case Study, IGSN, International Generic Sample Number, Persistent Identifier, PID, PID landscape},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {manual}
}
The case study explores the International Generic Sample Number (IGSN) and its development. It aims to help explain how the PID system itself develops by bringing up new PIDs through community services.
The interviews conducted give further insight into how IGSN helps the research community.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.
de Castro, Pablo; Herb, Ulrich; Rothfritz, Laura; Schöpfel, Joachim
Persistent identifiers for research instruments and facilities: an emerging PID domain in need of coordination Technical Manual
Knowledge Exchange 2023.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Case Study, Conferences, ConfID, Facilities, PID, PID implementation, PID landscape, Research Instruments
@manual{pablo_de_castro_2023_7330372,
title = {Persistent identifiers for research instruments and facilities: an emerging PID domain in need of coordination},
author = {Pablo de Castro and Ulrich Herb and Laura Rothfritz and Joachim Schöpfel},
url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7330372},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.7330372},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-02-01},
urldate = {2023-02-01},
publisher = {Zenodo},
organization = {Knowledge Exchange},
abstract = {This case study is part of a series that has been produced within the study on “Risks and Trust in pursuit of a well-functioning PID infrastructure for research” commissioned by the Knowledge Exchange in July 2021. The main outcome of this work is a report examining the current PID landscape with an emphasis on its risks and trust-related issues.
The case study aims to explore the challenges faced and the opportunities offered by the gradual implementation of emerging PIDs. The main focus of this case study is on persistent identifiers for research instruments and facilities but the analysis addresses emerging PID infrastructure and therefore has links to other PID areas like persistent identifiers for conferences (ConfIDs) and – to a certain extent – to PIDs addressed in other case studies such as IGSNs for samples and ROR IDs for organisational identifiers.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.},
keywords = {Case Study, Conferences, ConfID, Facilities, PID, PID implementation, PID landscape, Research Instruments},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {manual}
}
The case study aims to explore the challenges faced and the opportunities offered by the gradual implementation of emerging PIDs. The main focus of this case study is on persistent identifiers for research instruments and facilities but the analysis addresses emerging PID infrastructure and therefore has links to other PID areas like persistent identifiers for conferences (ConfIDs) and – to a certain extent – to PIDs addressed in other case studies such as IGSNs for samples and ROR IDs for organisational identifiers.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.
de Castro, Pablo; Herb, Ulrich; Rothfritz, Laura; Schöpfel, Joachim
The gradual implementation of organisational identifiers (OrgIDs) Technical Manual
Knowledge Exchange 2023.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Case Study, Organisational Identifiers, OrgIDs, Persistent identifier, PID, PID implementation, PID landscape, Ringgold, ROR
@manual{pablo_de_castro_2023_7327535,
title = {The gradual implementation of organisational identifiers (OrgIDs)},
author = {Pablo de Castro and Ulrich Herb and Laura Rothfritz and Joachim Schöpfel},
url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7327535},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.7327535},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-02-01},
urldate = {2023-02-01},
publisher = {Zenodo},
organization = {Knowledge Exchange},
abstract = {This case study is part of a series that has been produced within the study on “Risks and Trust in pursuit of a well-functioning PID infrastructure for research” commissioned by the Knowledge Exchange in July 2021. The main outcome of this work is a report examining the current PID landscape with an emphasis on its risks and trust-related issues.
This case study provides insight into the process that led to selecting the Research Organization Registry (ROR) – initially based on the Digital Science Global Research Identifier (GRID) database – as the default international framework for the provision of OrgIDs. Insight into the challenges triggered by current developments are also addressed.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.},
keywords = {Case Study, Organisational Identifiers, OrgIDs, Persistent identifier, PID, PID implementation, PID landscape, Ringgold, ROR},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {manual}
}
This case study provides insight into the process that led to selecting the Research Organization Registry (ROR) – initially based on the Digital Science Global Research Identifier (GRID) database – as the default international framework for the provision of OrgIDs. Insight into the challenges triggered by current developments are also addressed.
The report, Building the Plane as We Fly It: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies have also been published.
2022
de Castro, Pablo; Herb, Ulrich; Rothfritz, Laura; Schöpfel, Joachim
The role of research funders in the consolidation of the PID landscape Technical Manual
Knowledge Exchange 2022.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Case Study, Persistent Identifier, PID, PID landscape, Research funders, Research Funding Organizations
@manual{de_castro_pablo_role_2022,
title = {The role of research funders in the consolidation of the PID landscape},
author = {Pablo de Castro and Ulrich Herb and Laura Rothfritz and Joachim Schöpfel},
url = {https://zenodo.org/record/7258209},
doi = {10.5281/ZENODO.7258209},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-11-29},
urldate = {2022-11-29},
publisher = {Zenodo},
organization = {Knowledge Exchange},
abstract = {This case study is part of a series that has been produced within the study on “Risks and Trust in pursuit of a well-functioning PID infrastructure for research” commissioned by the Knowledge Exchange in July 2021. The main outcome of this work will be a report examining the current PID landscape with an emphasis on its risks and trust-related issues. This initial case study aims to explore the key role research funders are expected to play in the gradual adoption of an ever wider range of PIDs across European countries. The study examines matters such as the endorsement of PIDs by research funders and opportunities for cross-funder collaboration. In addition it looks at the potential differences in the technical workflows for PID adoption among others. The report, "Building the Plane as We Fly It”: the Promise of Persistent Identifiers, and remaining complementary case studies will be published soon.},
keywords = {Case Study, Persistent Identifier, PID, PID landscape, Research funders, Research Funding Organizations},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {manual}
}