Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The site hosts public metadata releases from Crossref which contain over 120+ million metadata records for scholarly work, each with a DOI.This was done so to allow the community to work with the entire database programmatically instead of using their API.
Crossref is a nonprofit association of approximately 19,000 voting members made up of 6,000 societies and publishers, including both commercial and nonprofit organizations, 6,500 academic and research institutions, research funders, museums, repositories, government agencies and NGOs.
The citations are stored in Crossref and are made available through the Crossref REST API. They are also available from the OpenCitations Corpus, a database that harvests citation data from Crossref and other sources. [9] The data are considered by those involved in the Initiative to be in the public domain, and so a CC0 licence is used. [5]
CrossRef API. example call; Academic citation practices need to be modernized so that all references are digital and lead to full texts. provides a rationale for signalling the OA-ness of cited references to the reader, much like we try to do here; Creative Commons proposal to have Creative Commons symbols in Unicode original proposal (October ...
OpenCitations publishes the following datasets which encompass bibliographic data, citation metadata, and in-text reference data. The datasets can be accessed via SPARQL, a REST API, as dumps on Figshare, as individual bibliographic entities, or using OSCAR (OpenCitations RDF Search Application) or Lucinda (The OpenCitations RDF Resource Browser).
It also uses information from Crossref and ORCID. In 2024 the API had a usage volume of 115 million monthly queries. In 2024 the API had a usage volume of 115 million monthly queries. A 2024 study shows that OpenAlex is particularly good at indexing Diamond-criterion journals, with more than 12,500 indexed titles, including more than 60% of all ...
The CrossRef metadata includes the correct license for each article: it should be straightforward to tell whether the article is free to read simply looking at this piece of information. Once you comply with these guidelines, the bot should mark your DOIs as free to read in Wikipedia, with a green lock:
The newest version supports URLs, DOIs, ISBNs and PMC/PMIDs, and can search by title or full citation for books and journal articles in the Crossref and WorldCat databases. It will attempt to generate a full, template-supported citation after an editor pastes either of these identifiers into the VisualEditor citation tool.