Wednesday May 10 -14:00 : plenary room |
Speaker |
Title |
Time |
Abstract |
Material |
Gilles Landais |
DOI status in IVOA |
10 |
Introduction on the DOIs status in the Virtual Observatory and in Open Sciences. The challenges to provide curated metadata in order to improve data citation. |
pdf |
Gus Muench (AAS) (remote) |
The utility of dataset DOIs in manuscript review and scientific publications |
12+3 |
I will describe the current practices for using dataset digital object identifiers in the publication of scientific journal articles. This includes both their use in the data- and peer-review processes and in the expression of relationship(s) between datasets and published works. Further, I will propose templates for drawing out the provenance of datasets created, reused, and accessed by distinct archives and toolkits. By highlighting a set of barriers to the successful reuse of dataset identifiers I hope to guide the best practices undertaken by archives and authors when minting dataset identifiers. |
pdf |
S.Peroni (Bologna university) |
DOI (and Beyond) for Publications and Other Citable Research Outcomes |
12+3 |
OpenCitations is an independent, community-led, and not-for-profit Open Science infrastructure organisation that publishes open bibliographic and citation data. During this talk, I will show the main collections and services OpenCitations includes and how it enables several PIDs to be associated with citing/cited entities and citations. |
pdf |
A.Accomazzi (ADS) (remote) |
DOI-Enabled Discovery and Credit: an ADS Perspective |
12+3 |
I describe the ADS Policy for data indexing and linking, highlighting how DOIs provide the basic infrastructure required to make this an automated and robust process. |
PDF |
B.Cecconi (Obs Paris) |
Data Management and DOI implementation and lessons' learnt |
12+3 |
We present how Data management and DOI are implemented in a real-life service (space science and radio astronomy). We show things that work, and things that don't work. |
PDF |
M.Parsons (Nasa) (remote) |
the new NASDA DOI Registration guidelines and general guidelines process. |
12+3 |
The guidelines provide an overview of the scenarios in which NASA data repositories may need to register a DOI and the mechanisms through which they can do so. They provide guidance on the registration process and appropriate roles. The intent is to identify services and define a process that allow data repositories the flexibility they need to respond to the needs of their user communities while also enabling the creation of a central NASA registry of DOIs managed through the Scientific and Technical Information (STI) Program Office. |
pdf |
R.d'Abrusco |
Conclusion |
5 |
|
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