Earlier this year, we reported on the roundtable discussion event that we had organised in Frankfurt on the heels of the Frankfurt Book Fair 2023. This event was the second in the series of roundtable events that we are holding with our community to hear from you how we can all work together to preserve the integrity of the scholarly record - you can read more about insights from these events and about ISR in this series of blogs.
Crossref is undertaking a large program, dubbed 'RCFS' (Resourcing Crossref for Future Sustainability) that will initially tackle five specific issues with our fees. We haven’t increased any of our fees in nearly two decades, and while we’re still okay financially and do not have a revenue growth goal, we do have inclusion and simplification goals. This report from Research Consulting helped to narrow down the five priority projects for 2024-2025 around these three core goals:
The Crossref Nominating Committee is inviting expressions of interest to join the Board of Directors of Crossref for the term starting in January 2025. The committee will gather responses from those interested and create the slate of candidates that our membership will vote on in an election in September.
Expressions of interest will be due Monday, May 27th, 2024
This is an exciting time to join the board, as we have a number of active projects underway: We are considering resourcing Crossref for a sustainable future and board members will be part of deciding any changes to our fees scheme and overseeing its implementation.
This past year has been a captivating journey of immersion within the Crossref community, a mix of online interactions and meaningful in-person experiences. From the engaging Sustainability Research and Innovation Conference in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, to the impactful webinars conducted globally, this has been more than just a professional endeavour; it has been a personal exploration of collaboration, insights, and a shared commitment to pushing the boundaries of scholarly communication.
We maintain an expansive set of relationship types to support the various content items that a research object, like a journal article, might link to. For data and software, we ask you to provide the following information:
identifier of the dataset/software
identifier type: DOI, Accession, PURL, ARK, URI, Other (additional identifier types are also accepted beyond those used for data or software, including ARXIV, ECLI, Handle, ISSN, ISBN, PMID, PMCID, and UUID)
relationship type: isSupplementedBy or references (use the former if it was generated as part of the research results)
description of dataset or software
We and DataCite both use this kind of linking. Data repositories which register their content with DataCite follow the same process and apply the same metadata tags. This means that we achieve direct data interoperability with links in the reverse direction (data and software repositories to journal articles).
The possible relationship types between content items can be as varied as the items themselves. We use a controlled vocabulary to define these relationships, in order to construct an orderly mapped network of content.
This is achieved by (i) an implicit approach where the relation type is a function of a specific service and is declared in the structure of the deposited XML, and (ii) in an explicit approach where the relation type is selected as a value within the deposited metadata.
Reference linking and Cited-by: implicitly creates cites and isCitedBy relationships between a content item and the items in its bibliography
Crossmark: explicit creation of update relations between an item and other items that materially affect it (for example, a retraction)
Funding data: implicit creation of isFundedBy and hasAward relationships between an item and the funding source that supported the underlying research
Linked clinical trials: implicit creation of a belongsTo relationship between and item and a registered clinical trial
Components: implicit creation of a isChildOf relationship between an item and its elemental parts that are assigned their own DOI (limited parent relation typing)
General typed relations: explicitly typed relation between an item with a Crossref DOI and an item with one of several possible identifiers.
Relationship types for associated research objects: intra-work (within a work)
Description
Reciprocal relationship types
Expression
isExpressionOf, hasExpression
Format
isFormatOf, hasFormat
Identical
isIdenticalTo
Manifestation
isManifestationOf, hasManifestation
Manuscript
isManuscriptOf, hasManuscript
Preprint
isPreprintOf, hasPreprint
Replacement
isReplacedBy, Replaces
Translation
isTranslationOf, hasTranslation
Variant
isVariantFormOf, isOriginalFormOf
Version
isVersionOf, hasVersion
Relationship types for associated research objects: inter-work (between works)
Description
Reciprocal relationship types
Basis
isBasedOn, isBasisFor
Comment
isCommentOn, hasComment
Continuation
isContinuedBy, Continues
Derivation
isDerivedFrom, hasDerivation
Documentation
isDocumentedBy, Documents
Funding
finances, isFinancedBy
Part
isPartOf, hasPart
Peer review
isReviewOf, hasReview
References
references, isReferencedBy
Related material, such as a protocol
isRelatedMaterial, hasRelatedMaterial
Reply
isReplyTo, hasReply
Requirement
requires, isRequiredBy
Software compilation
isCompiledBy, compiles
Supplement, such as a dataset generated as part of research results
isSupplementTo, isSupplementedBy
General typed relations
This service allows for the creation of a typed relationship between an item with a Crossref DOI and another content item. The other item may be represented by another Crossref DOI, a DOI from some other Registration Agency, or an item not identified with a DOI. When DOIs are used, the deposit process will fail if the DOI does not exist. Non-DOI identifiers are not verified.
When DOIs are used, a bidirectional relation is automatically created by us when a relation is created in the deposit of one item in a pair. The DOI with metadata creating the relation is said to be the claimant, the other item does not need to have its metadata directly contain the relationship.
Example: translated article
A single journal article is published in two languages with each being assigned its own DOI. In this example, both are published in the same journal. The original language instance has metadata that contains no indication of the translation instance. The alternative language instance includes in its metadata a relation to the original language instance. Here is a screenshot of the relevant section in the code. Please refer to the code snippet below to see it in context.
<journal_article publication_type="full_text">
<titles>
<title>Um artigo na lÃngua original, que passa a ser o inglês</title>
<original_language_title language="en">An article in its original language which happens to be English</original_language_title>
</titles>
<contributors>
<person_name sequence="first" contributor_role="author">
<given_name>Daniel</given_name>
<surname>Stepputtis</surname>
<ORCID authenticated="true">http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4824-1631</ORCID>
</person_name>
</contributors>
<publication_date media_type="online">
<month>02</month>
<day>28</day>
<year>2013</year>
</publication_date>
<program xmlns="https://www-crossref-org.ezproxy.csu.edu.au/relations.xsd">
<related_item>
<description>Portuguese translation of an article</description>
<intra_work_relation relationship-type="isTranslationOf" identifier-type="doi">10.5555/original_language</intra_work_relation>
</related_item>
</program>
<doi_data>
<doi>10.5555/translation</doi>
<resource>https://www-crossref-org.ezproxy.csu.edu.au/</resource>
</doi_data>
</journal_article>
Example: book review
This example has a book review published as an article in the journal The Holocene. The article’s title, taken from the publisher’s site is “Book Review: Understanding the Earth system: compartments, processes and interactions” where this book has the DOI https://doi-org.ezproxy.csu.edu.au/10.1007/978-3-642-56843-5.
A: The current metadata for the review article gives no indication of the actual book being reviewed:
An article with a Crossref DOI identifies that data represented by a DataCite DOI was used in the research and was mentioned in the article’s acknowledgment section.