Carol Anne Meyer presents a webinar on assigning CrossRef DOIs to scholarly book content. This webinar is also will explain how DOIs make it easier for your readers to find your books. It was held on June 26, 2014 and begins 10 seconds into the recording.
Corporate Profile 47Billion Information Technology
CrossRef DOIs for Books
1. CrossRef DOIs for Book Publishers
Carol Anne Meyer, CrossRef
@meyercarol @CrossRefNews
Webinar
26 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
• Multiple Resolution
3. What is a DOI?
Digital
Object
Identifier
Source: pasukaru76 from Flickr
14. It is a digital identifier of a
digital or physical object
15. It serves as a stable link to
content’s digital location
16. 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
17. So, what is the relationship between
an RA and the IDF?
18. 18
International DOI Foundation
(IDF)
• Oversees central DOI System
• Promotes DOI as a standard
• Provides organizational infrastructure that
ensures persistence and interoperability
19. 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)
20. CrossRef is the largest RA, but others
are growing
CrossRef, 72.26%
ISTIC, 21.39%
DataCite, 2.36%
DOI, 1.26%
OPOCE, 1.06%
mEDRA, 0.67% EIDR, 0.53%
Japan Link Center (JaLC),
0.42%
% of Total DOIs by
Registration Agency
22. • DOIs for scholarly content
• Develops and maintains
the DOI standard
• Develops and maintains the
Handle system upon which
the DOI executes
CrossRef/DOI Community
23. 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
24. 24
Cross-publisher means…
No need for
bilateral
negotiations
between
publishers, or
between a
third-party and
individual
publishers
Photo: Alexandra Lee
25. Members need to make long-term
archiving arrangements
CLOCKSS: http://clockss.org
Koninklijke Bibliotheek / National Library of the
Netherlands:
http://www.kb.nl/
Portico: http://www.portico.org
26. 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)
28. CrossRef Metadata Services
CrossRef Metadata Search
Multiple Resolution
CrossRef APIs
Bibliographic Management
Document Delivery
Link Resolvers
CrossCheck
CrossMark
Article Level Metrics
PreScore
Powered by
iThenticate
Reference Linking
Cited-by
Linking
Linking
Linked Data
FundRef
Text and Data Mining
Threaded Publications
NISO OA Indicator
Journal Article Tag Set (JATS)
Discovery and Delivery
Evaluating
Collaboration
provides different
services than other RAs
30. 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
31. • Links deliver
reader to front
door
• Access
control up to
publisher or
distributor
is “business-model neutral”
Photo: Tawheed Manzoor
32. The Numbers
• 274 publishers deposit book content at CrossRef
• 527K book titles
• 8.1 million total book DOIs
(Includes chapters and reference entries)
36. Largest CrossRef Book Publishers
• Springer
• 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
42. Best Practices Book DOIs
http://www.crossref.org/06members/bes
t_practices_for_books.html
43. Best Practices
Assigning, 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.
44. Best Practices
Updates 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 Practices
Updates 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 CrossRef DOIs 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 Publication
Record Service
– Identifies updates and
new editions
– Provides non-
bibliographic
information about rights,
funding, peer review,
etc.
http://www.crossref.org/crossmark/
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53. What kind of CrossRef Publication Record
information is available?
• License types
• Funding disclosures (FundRef)
• Conflict of interest statements
• Publication history (submission, revision and accepted
dates)
• Location of data deposits or registries
• Peer review process used
• CrossCheck plagiarism screening
• and more...
54. Best Practices: Citation Matching
Book Title Queries (finding the DOI)
• Minimum query:
– book title
– book author
– book year
• And as many as possible of these:
– editor (where appropriate)
– publisher
55. Displaying CrossRef DOIs in Book
Citations
• The DOI should appear at the end of the reference
• The DOI should be encoded as a hyperlink
Example:
Corrigan, John. Religion and Emotion - Approaches and Interpretations.
New York: Oxford University Press, 2004. Oxford Scholarship Online.
Oxford University Press. 2005.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/0195166248.001.0001
Note: This is a change from the previous format
doi:10.1093/0195166248.001.0001
56.
57. Style Manuals
Provide the DOI, if one has been assigned
to the content….
Section 6.32
Providing Publication Data for Electronic Sources
Publication Manual of the APA, page 191.
58.
59. Assigning (depositing) CrossRef Book DOIs
• Deposit metadata and URL(s).
• Metadata required for book DOI registration is
described in the schema, sections 6-8
http://www.crossref.org/schema/deposit/crossref4.3.0.xsd
and in the documentation at:
http://www.crossref.org/schema/info/CrossRefSchemaDocumentation4.1.0.pdf
60. Book Title Level Metadata
• Required data includes:
– Type: edited book, reference, monograph, or other
– Title
– Publisher
– Publication date
– ISBN
• Optional data includes:
– series title, and series ISSN*
– volume and edition numbers
– Book DOI and URL
* If you include a series title it must have an ISSN
61. ISSNs & ISBNs in CrossRef Schema
• ISSNs are assignable to a series title and not book title.
• ISSN is directly bound to series title and must be present in series
• ISSN check digit will be verified upon deposit – invalid ISSNs will be
rejected
• Volume is mandatory if series_metadata is present and volume level
title is NOT present
• Titles and ISSNs/ISBNs in deposit must match titles associated with
ISSNs/ISBNs in the system
• New titles will create a title entry in the system –
updates/additions to this title must remain consistent
• Contact support@crossref.org to change titles
62. Chapter Level Metadata
• Required data includes:
– Chapter title
– DOI and URL
• Optional data:
– Contributors
– Pagination
– Component number
63. • Manual DOI
registration
for books
• System builds
XML deposit
file
Web Deposit Form
http://www.crossref.org/webDeposit/
64. XML deposit
Sample XML is available:
• Monograph:
http://www.crossref.org/schema/info/samples/4.3.0_samples/monograph430.xml
• Series:
http://www.crossref.org/schema/info/samples/4.3.0_samples/book_series430.xml
65. Simple-Text Query
• A freely available, non-XML
alternative for reference linking
• A custom version of Inera’s
eXtyles® refXpress parses
unstructured references into
granular, valid XML and returns
any matching DOIs for those
references
66.
67. Find Complete Best Practices Here
http://www.crossref.org/06members/best_practices_for_books.html
68. How much? CrossRef Deposit Fees for Books
• Current Material
– Titles: $1.00
– Chapters/entries < 250 per title: 25 cents
– Chapters/entries > 250 per title: 15 cents
– Chapters/entries > 10,000 items: 12 cents
• Backfiles
– All content types: 15 cents
– More than 1 million records: 12 cents
• No additional membership fee
70. How much?
• No charge for metadata or URL updates
• No additional annual fee for CrossRef members
• Annual fees based on publishing revenue
• Annual fees range from $275-$50,000
• Theoretical conflict fee if more than one DOI assigned to same
metadata and not resolved.
• Fees have not risen for more than 5 years.
• Additional fees for optional services like CrossMark.
74. Book Interest Group
• Jennifer Kemp, Springer, Chair
• 70 ish Members
• Open to all book publisher members of
CrossRef, and others
• Includes major book hosting platforms
75. Book Interest Group
• Teleconferences several times per year
• Working groups on issues of importance to
book publishers
76. What’s Next
• Explore DOIs for mobile content
• Improve and simplify multiple resolution
• Best practices for common ebook format
metadata
• Can we accept ONIX in addition to XML?
77. What’s in it for
publishers?
No publisher is an
island
Collaboration and
connection is the
key
What is it? Digital Object Identifier, alphanumeric string that uniquely identifies an item and where it lives online DOIs can be used to identify things online, basically anything that you can link to (html pages, images, audio, raw data, programs, etc.) Once a DOI has been assigned to an item, the DOI URL (if properly maintained) can remain a consistent locator for the item.
Why are DOIs important? They solve the problem of ‘link rot’ i.e. broken links. (image) Broken links are a big problem with online content – titles move from publisher to publisher, publishers upgrade their sites regularly, which usually involves changing URLs.
A CrossRef DOI reliably identifies content. If you follow a DOI to an article, for example, you’re assure that the page you view is the publisher maintained version of an article. This is very important, because research articles are corrected, retracted, enhanced regularly.