CERN Accelerating science

Talk
Title Incites into Citation Linking using the OAI-PMH
Video
Loading
If you experience any problem watching the video, click the download button below
Download Embed
Mp4:High
(600 kbps)
Windows Media:Medium
(480 kbps)
Flash:High
(753 kbps)
High-resolution:
Copy-paste this code into your page:
Author(s) Brody, Tim (speaker) (University of Southampton, UK)
Corporate author(s) CERN. Geneva
Imprint 2005-10-20. - Streaming video, 00:23:41:00.
Series (Conferences)
(CERN workshop on Innovations in Scholarly Communication (OAI4))
Lecture note on 2005-10-20T17:30:00
Subject category Conferences
Abstract There are some 300 repositories of research material (Source: IAR), most of which have an OAI-PMH interface, but no current Institutional Repositories export reference data - nor do they provide their users with citation impact metrics. We propose a model for extending IR's to be citation aware and to expose that data to citation indices using the OAI-PMH and OpenURL. We present some techniques for the export of citation data using the OAI-PMH in Citebase Search. As part of a proposed Open Access Citation Information study we have developed a proposal for the integration of reference parsing and linking into the author- deposit process. This highly-distributed approach to citation linking utilises the OAI-PMH to transfer structured citation data between IRs and citation indexing services. OpenURL - a standard for contextual linking using bibliographic data - is now a NISO standard. As well as it's linking role, OpenURL is a useful standard for the transfer of bibliographic data for the purposes of citation indexing. The developing DCMI guidelines for encoding citation metadata makes use of OpenURL context objects in XML. A more lightweight approach is implemented by Citebase Search for transferring bibliographic data using OpenURLs by encoding the metadata as URIs (OpenURL 'KEV' format) and including these in repeated simple Dublin Core relation elements. The widespread adoption of OpenURL for contextual linking and the transfer of citation links will lower the barriers to citation indices as well as enabling novel new interactions between services (e.g. through the embedding of citation analysis services into IRs). Emerging technologies using the OAI-PMH and OpenURL will allow seemless linking across subscription-based and open access services, creating an integrated, citation-linked environment for researchers.
Copyright/License © 2005-2024 CERN
Submitted by thomas.baron@cern.ch

 


 Record created 2013-05-31, last modified 2022-11-02


External links:
Download fulltextTalk details
Download fulltextEvent details