trusted, interoperable identifiers todd vision associate

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1 Funding ODIN is a 24 month project funded by the European Commission FP7 INFRA-2012-3.3 program, grant # 312788. Trusted, interoperable identifiers for researchers and data http://odin-project.eu The DataCite consortium works to establish easier access to research data, increase acceptance of research data as legitimate contributions in the scholarly record, and to support data archiving in order for results to be verified and data to be re- purposed for future study. Since 2009, DataCite has assigned over 1M digital object identifiers (DOI) to make research data citable. The EZID service is a DataCite registry based at the California Digital Library UC Curation Center, a DataONE partner organization, and registers DOIs for DataONE member nodes such as Dryad. The Open Researcher & Contributor ID Initiative (ORCID) is an 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. ORCID reaches across disciplines, research sectors, and national boundaries; it also provides linkages to other identifier systems. Members include publishers, funders, research institutions, repositories (including Dryad), and commercial and nonprofit profile providers. Toward an identifier-aware eInfrastructure ODIN, the ORCID and DataCite Interoperability project aims to identify opportunities and challenges in the application of persistent, discipline-neutral, interoperable researcher and data identifiers, and provide a roadmap for inclusion of such identifiers within the next generation of European eInfrastructure. Opportunities for the DataONE community Coordinating Nodes require identifier persistence, uniqueness and resolvability for data and metadata objects, but DataONE is largely agnostic about which identifiers Member Nodes use. Widely adopted identifiers for researchers and data could facilitate discovery, attribution and usage tracking of research data across the network. The DataONE community can be expected to benefit from the uptake of trusted, interoperable researcher and data identifiers. Todd Vision Associate Director for Informatics National Evolutionary Synthesis Center Durham, NC http://orcid.org/0000-0002-6133-2581 International partners Personnel: BL: John Kaye ANDS: Adrian Burton arXiv: Simeon Warner DataCite: Jan Brase, Sergio Ruiz Dryad: Todd Vision, Ryan Scherle CERN: Salvatore Mele, Laura Rueda, Sunje Dallmeier-Tiessen ORCID-EU: Martin Fenner & Gudmundur Thorisson h#p://datacite.labs.orcideu.org Import your works from DataCite to ORCID Then from ORCID to ImpactStory to monitor reuse Discipline-neutral tools Humanities and social sciences High energy physics One of ODIN’s two proofs of concept is in the Humani’es and Social Sciences. Data in this discipline may pass through numerous hands between incep@on, analysis and publica@on. The Bri@sh Birth Cohort Studies are a key resource for public health research in the UK, and have been built up by the cumula@ve effort of many different researchers over the last 65 years. The Bri@sh Library is exploring ways to ensure the contribu@ons of each genera@on of researchers are correctly a#ributed. 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 1948 1952 1956 1960 1964 1968 1975 1979 1983 1987 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 Rate per 100,000 % of Adult Population Who Smoked Cigarettes Year Male smoking prevalence Female smoking prevalence Male lung cancer incidence Female lung cancer incidence Smoking data weighted after 1998 Smoking and lung cancer in Great Britain, 1948-2010 Source: cancerresearchuk.org ODIN’s proof of concept in High Energy Physics presents a very different challenge. Approximately 2800 scien@sts work at any one @me on the CERN Large Hadron Collider. Author lists on publica@on and datasets are enormous and errorprone. Researchers have mul@ple affilia@ons and oWen change them during the course of publica@on. The CERN Inspire repository is developing a workflow and organiza@on model to harmonize and interconnect the iden@fiers for the various versions of preprints, published ar@cles, associated data in mul@ple repositories, and researchers. Scratch your own itch ODIN invites the data communinty to a conference from 1517 October 2013 at CERN, in Geneva, Switzerland. The first two days will be a Codesprint, in which developers are invited to use the ORCID and DataCite APIs and metadata to collabora@vely explore what can be accomplished with these services and data in the wild. The event will include bootcamps on topics selected by par@cipants. More informa@on and registra@on at h#p://indico.cern.ch/event/odin1styear Who knows what might come of your “vague but interes@ng” ideas! To illustrate what benefits can be realized. Dryad data from DataCite Ar@cle from Scopus

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Funding!ODIN is a 24 month project funded by the European Commission FP7 INFRA-2012-3.3 program, grant # 312788. !

Trusted, interoperable identifiers for researchers and data!

http://odin-project.eu!

The DataCite consortium works to establish easier access to research data, increase acceptance of research data as legitimate contributions in the scholarly record, and to support data archiving in order for results to be verified and data to be re-purposed for future study. Since 2009, DataCite has assigned over 1M digital object identifiers (DOI) to make research data citable. The EZID service is a DataCite registry based at the California Digital Library UC Curation Center, a DataONE partner organization, and registers DOIs for DataONE member nodes such as Dryad.!  

The Open Researcher & Contributor ID Initiative (ORCID) is an 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. ORCID reaches across disciplines, research sectors, and national boundaries; it also provides linkages to other identifier systems. Members include publishers, funders, research institutions, repositories (including Dryad), and commercial and nonprofit profile providers. !

Toward an identifier-aware eInfrastructure !ODIN, the ORCID and DataCite Interoperability project aims to identify opportunities and challenges in the application of persistent, discipline-neutral, interoperable researcher and data identifiers, and provide a roadmap for inclusion of such identifiers within the next generation of European eInfrastructure.  !Opportunities for the DataONE community!Coordinating Nodes require identifier persistence, uniqueness and resolvability for data and metadata objects, but DataONE is largely agnostic about which identifiers Member Nodes use. Widely adopted identifiers for researchers and data could facilitate discovery, attribution and usage tracking of research data across the network. The DataONE community can be expected to benefit from the uptake of trusted, interoperable researcher and data identifiers.!

Todd Vision!Associate Director for Informatics!

National Evolutionary Synthesis Center!Durham, NC!

http://orcid.org/0000-0002-6133-2581!

International partners!

Personnel:!•  BL: John Kaye!•  ANDS: Adrian Burton!•  arXiv: Simeon Warner!•  DataCite: Jan Brase, Sergio Ruiz!•  Dryad: Todd Vision, Ryan Scherle!•  CERN: Salvatore Mele, Laura Rueda,

Sunje Dallmeier-Tiessen!•  ORCID-EU: Martin Fenner &

Gudmundur Thorisson!

h#p://datacite.labs.orcid-­‐eu.org  

Import your works from DataCite to

ORCID!!!

Then from ORCID to

ImpactStory to monitor reuse!

!

Discipline-neutral tools!

Humanities and social sciences!

High energy physics!One  of  ODIN’s  two  proofs  of  concept  is  in  the  Humani'es  and  Social  Sciences.    Data  in  this  discipline  may  pass  through  numerous  hands  between  incep@on,  analysis  and  publica@on.  The  Bri@sh  Birth  Cohort  Studies  are  a  key  resource  for  public  health  research  in  the  UK,  and  have  been  built  up  by  the  cumula@ve  effort  of  many  different  researchers  over  the  last  65  years.    The  Bri@sh  Library  is  exploring  ways  to  ensure  the  contribu@ons  of  each  genera@on  of  researchers  are  correctly  a#ributed.  

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1948

1952

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Who

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Year

Male smoking prevalence Female smoking prevalence Male lung cancer incidence Female lung cancer incidence

Smoking data weighted after 1998

Smoking and lung cancer in Great Britain, 1948-2010!

Source:  cancerresearchuk.org  

ODIN’s  proof  of  concept  in  High  Energy  Physics  presents  a  very  different  challenge.  Approximately  2800  scien@sts  work  at  any  one  @me  on  the  CERN  Large  Hadron  Collider.    Author  lists  on  publica@on  and  datasets  are  enormous  and  error-­‐prone.  Researchers  have  mul@ple  affilia@ons  and  oWen  change  them  during  the  course  of  publica@on.    The  CERN  Inspire  repository  is  developing  a  workflow  and  organiza@on  model  to  harmonize  and  interconnect  the  iden@fiers  for  the  various  versions  of  preprints,  published  ar@cles,  associated  data  in  mul@ple  repositories,  and  researchers.    

Scratch your own itch!ODIN  invites  the  data  communinty  to  a  conference  from  15-­‐17  October  2013  at  CERN,  in  Geneva,  Switzerland.    The  first  two  days  will  be  a  Codesprint,  in  which  developers  are  invited  to  use  the  ORCID  and  DataCite  APIs  and  metadata  to  collabora@vely  explore  what  can  be  accomplished  with  these  services  and  data  in  the  wild.  The  event  will  include  bootcamps  on  topics  selected  by  par@cipants.    More  informa@on  and  registra@on  at  h#p://indico.cern.ch/event/odin-­‐1st-­‐year    Who  knows  what  might  come  of  your  “vague  but  interes@ng”  ideas!      

To  illustrate  what  benefits  can  be  realized.  

Dryad  data  from  DataCite  

Ar@cle  from  Scopus