3 minute read.A wrap up of the Crossref blog series for SciELO
Crossref member SciELO (Scientific Electronic Library Online), based in Brazil, celebrated two decades of operation last week with a three-day event The SciELO 20 Years Conference.
The celebration constituted an important landmark in SciELO’s evolution, and an exceptional moment for them to promote the advancement of an inclusive, global approach to scholarly communication and to the open access movement.
As part of the anniversary activities SciELO asked us to write a series of five blogs that would help the organizations of Brazil to better understand the following:
- Why all articles should have a DOI
- The critical role of the DOI
- The basics of record types, translations, preprints, Crossmark, and more
- The basics of Crossref sponsorship, and
- How to make the most of your Crossref membership
Below you’ll find an abstract of each of these blog posts as well as a link to the published posts in Brazilian Portuguese, Spanish and English.
Why all articles should have a DOI
In today’s world, an author’s work needs a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) for it to become discoverable, citable, and linkable. This unique alphanumeric string identifies the content of a research work, and remains associated with it irrespective of changes to its web location. Discover the origins of the DOI, how Crossref was founded, and why they continue to exist and persist.
Read the full blog in Brazilian Portuguese, Spanish, or English
The critical role of the DOI
Find out why URL links to research articles are fragile, and how DOIs are essential in building stable, persistent links between research objects. This is achieved through the metadata that members deposit with Crossref, as part of their obligations. Learn how we can all contribute to creating a global, robust research record.
Read the full blog in Spanish or English
The basics of record types: Preprints, Crossmark, translations, and more
What’s the difference between preprints and ahead of print? When should you use each; and, what are the DOI requirements? This article answers those questions and provides a basic overview of how to connect the metadata records of related record types, like translations.
Read the full blog in Brazilian Portuguese, Spanish, or English
The basics of Crossref sponsorship
There are many organizations that want to register content and benefit from the services Crossref provides, but may not be able to do so alone. These organizations use sponsors. Sponsors are organizations who publish on behalf of groups of smaller organizations. Nearly 650 of our 800 Brazilian members are represented by such a sponsor.
Read the full blog in Brazilian Portuguese, Spanish, or English
How to make the most of your Crossref membership
Since Crossref was founded in 2000, its member organizations have registered metadata and persistent identifiers (DOIs) for over 100 million content items. This information is used extensively by the research community—individuals and organizations—who need to find, cite, link and assess research outputs. As a SciELO member, the metadata you provide to Crossref when you register content is key to the discoverability of your journal content.
Read the full blog in Brazilian Portuguese, Spanish, or English
Further reading
- Jan 24, 2024 – The GEM program - year one
- Apr 21, 2023 – We’re hiring! New technical, community, and membership roles at Crossref
- Oct 18, 2018 – It’s not about the money, money, money.
- Jul 2, 2024 – Crossmark community consultation: What did we learn?
- May 14, 2024 – 2024 public data file now available, featuring new experimental formats
- May 1, 2024 – Seeking consultancy: understanding joining obstacles for non-member journals
- Apr 24, 2024 – Common views and questions about metadata across Africa
- Mar 6, 2024 – DOAJ and Crossref renew their partnership to support the least-resourced journals