Are you using the API to integrate ORCID functionality into your own site? This webinar will review common workflows for linking your site, and will review some of the trickier aspects of the API. (ORCID Training Presentation - Aug 30, 2012)
ORCID Indonesia Workshop provides an introduction to ORCID. ORCID is an open, non-profit organization that provides a persistent digital identifier for researchers. It allows researchers to connect their various activities and affiliations together through a single identifier. ORCID aims to become an international standard that distinguishes researchers from each other through unique, researcher-controlled identifiers. The presentation outlines ORCID's core principles of researcher control, community governance, openness and persistence. It also discusses ORCID's governance structure, vision, community and integration with various research systems and publishers.
What’s New in ORCID Tech 2016 (Robert Peters)ORCID, Inc
This document summarizes new features and updates from ORCID in 2016. Key points include: opening the ORCID license to be free instead of $400/year; increased support for additional languages and Unicode scripts; growth in the number of user connections through Facebook, Google, and institutions; updates to the V2 API to improve scalability and clarity; additional details shown for individual profiles; and planned improvements like a member directory and cross-linking institutional sign-ins.
ORCID as a Community Initiative (Miyairi)ORCID, Inc
This document discusses ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) and its role as a community initiative. It notes that ORCID allows publishers, repositories, associations, funders, and universities to collect researcher IDs and connect them to publications, grants, and other work. This enables information to be entered once and then reused across different systems. The document provides membership details and statistics on ORCID adoption in Asia Pacific countries. It emphasizes that ORCID is a community effort that requires support from researchers' affiliated organizations to promote its benefits.
The document discusses several ways that ORCID IDs can be integrated into research workflows and systems. It describes how OJS (Open Journal Systems) allows manuscripts submitted through it to be associated with an ORCID ID. It also outlines how Hong Kong Baptist University is working to give all faculty ORCID IDs to upload employment and works information. Additionally, it notes that SciENCV through the National Library of Medicine allows adding publications and funding to an ORCID profile, and that Scopus enables linking publications to an ORCID record. Finally, it encourages giving permissions to ORCID-enabled systems to help make a researcher more visible and have their activities captured in their ORCID record.
ORCID overview: why your lifelong identifier is important in the digital age ...ORCID, Inc
ORCID is a nonprofit organization that provides researchers with a unique identifier to distinguish themselves from others with similar names. Over 2.6 million researchers have registered for an ORCID ID to connect their academic work and contributions. ORCID helps link researchers to their publications, funding, and other research activities to improve recognition and discoverability. Many publishers, funders, universities, and other organizations are integrating ORCID to make it easier for researchers to manage their information and comply with ID requirements. Researchers are encouraged to register for a free ORCID ID to reliably connect their work, alleviate mistaken identity issues, and help make the research process more efficient.
Introduction and ORCID overview (N. Miyairi)ORCID, Inc
This document summarizes an ORCID workshop held in Singapore on April 6, 2016. The workshop provided an overview of ORCID, including its goals of uniquely identifying researchers and connecting them to their contributions. It discussed ORCID's growth in members and users, how researchers can create and claim their ORCID profile, and ways ORCID is being integrated by publishers, funders, and institutions to help automate the collection and linking of research information. The workshop also covered examples of ORCID adoption in the Asia-Pacific region and strategies for implementing ORCID at the organizational level.
ORCID Consortium in Australia (N. Simmons)ORCID, Inc
The document summarizes the development of the ORCID Consortium in Australia. It describes how an ORCID working group was formed in 2014 to explore adopting ORCID as a common researcher identifier. This led to the release of a joint statement of principles in support of ORCID in 2015. In 2016, an Australian ORCID Consortium was officially launched with 40 founding member institutions to help facilitate widespread ORCID adoption. The Consortium aims to realize benefits of ORCID for researchers, institutions, and the nation by improving data quality and research visibility.
ORCID Indonesia Workshop provides an introduction to ORCID. ORCID is an open, non-profit organization that provides a persistent digital identifier for researchers. It allows researchers to connect their various activities and affiliations together through a single identifier. ORCID aims to become an international standard that distinguishes researchers from each other through unique, researcher-controlled identifiers. The presentation outlines ORCID's core principles of researcher control, community governance, openness and persistence. It also discusses ORCID's governance structure, vision, community and integration with various research systems and publishers.
What’s New in ORCID Tech 2016 (Robert Peters)ORCID, Inc
This document summarizes new features and updates from ORCID in 2016. Key points include: opening the ORCID license to be free instead of $400/year; increased support for additional languages and Unicode scripts; growth in the number of user connections through Facebook, Google, and institutions; updates to the V2 API to improve scalability and clarity; additional details shown for individual profiles; and planned improvements like a member directory and cross-linking institutional sign-ins.
ORCID as a Community Initiative (Miyairi)ORCID, Inc
This document discusses ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) and its role as a community initiative. It notes that ORCID allows publishers, repositories, associations, funders, and universities to collect researcher IDs and connect them to publications, grants, and other work. This enables information to be entered once and then reused across different systems. The document provides membership details and statistics on ORCID adoption in Asia Pacific countries. It emphasizes that ORCID is a community effort that requires support from researchers' affiliated organizations to promote its benefits.
The document discusses several ways that ORCID IDs can be integrated into research workflows and systems. It describes how OJS (Open Journal Systems) allows manuscripts submitted through it to be associated with an ORCID ID. It also outlines how Hong Kong Baptist University is working to give all faculty ORCID IDs to upload employment and works information. Additionally, it notes that SciENCV through the National Library of Medicine allows adding publications and funding to an ORCID profile, and that Scopus enables linking publications to an ORCID record. Finally, it encourages giving permissions to ORCID-enabled systems to help make a researcher more visible and have their activities captured in their ORCID record.
ORCID overview: why your lifelong identifier is important in the digital age ...ORCID, Inc
ORCID is a nonprofit organization that provides researchers with a unique identifier to distinguish themselves from others with similar names. Over 2.6 million researchers have registered for an ORCID ID to connect their academic work and contributions. ORCID helps link researchers to their publications, funding, and other research activities to improve recognition and discoverability. Many publishers, funders, universities, and other organizations are integrating ORCID to make it easier for researchers to manage their information and comply with ID requirements. Researchers are encouraged to register for a free ORCID ID to reliably connect their work, alleviate mistaken identity issues, and help make the research process more efficient.
Introduction and ORCID overview (N. Miyairi)ORCID, Inc
This document summarizes an ORCID workshop held in Singapore on April 6, 2016. The workshop provided an overview of ORCID, including its goals of uniquely identifying researchers and connecting them to their contributions. It discussed ORCID's growth in members and users, how researchers can create and claim their ORCID profile, and ways ORCID is being integrated by publishers, funders, and institutions to help automate the collection and linking of research information. The workshop also covered examples of ORCID adoption in the Asia-Pacific region and strategies for implementing ORCID at the organizational level.
ORCID Consortium in Australia (N. Simmons)ORCID, Inc
The document summarizes the development of the ORCID Consortium in Australia. It describes how an ORCID working group was formed in 2014 to explore adopting ORCID as a common researcher identifier. This led to the release of a joint statement of principles in support of ORCID in 2015. In 2016, an Australian ORCID Consortium was officially launched with 40 founding member institutions to help facilitate widespread ORCID adoption. The Consortium aims to realize benefits of ORCID for researchers, institutions, and the nation by improving data quality and research visibility.
ORCID: connecting research and researchersNobuko Miyairi
The document discusses ORCID, a non-profit organization that provides unique identifiers for researchers and links to other identification systems to solve name ambiguity. It notes that over 2 million researchers have registered for an ORCID identifier. ORCID is supported by institutional members and allows researchers to create and maintain their own record free of charge. The document outlines how ORCID identifiers are being integrated by publishers, funders, universities and other organizations to identify and connect researchers to their work and affiliations.
The document provides information about integrating ORCID APIs into other systems. It discusses the three main steps to integration: Plan, Build, and Communicate.
The Plan step involves determining how the integration will work, such as which ORCID data elements to connect with which data elements in the other system. The Build step is building and testing the integration, including setting up the OAuth authentication flow. The Communicate step is designing connection points for users, such as permission buttons and authorization pages.
The document then discusses ORCID API features like the public vs member APIs and scopes/permissions. It provides examples of vendor systems that have integrated ORCID and screenshots of OAuth authorization flows. In summary, the document
The document discusses several ways that ORCID IDs can be integrated with other research systems and services. It describes how OJS (Open Journal Systems) allows authors to integrate their ORCID ID during manuscript submission to automatically capture publications. It also explains how Hong Kong Baptist University is working to equip all faculty with ORCID IDs to upload employment and works information. Additionally, it outlines how SciENCV and Scopus can be linked to an ORCID profile to auto-populate and clean up research profiles. The document encourages giving permissions to ORCID-enabled systems so research activities are discoverable through an ORCID ID.
ORCID as a Community Initiative (N. Miyairi)ORCID, Inc
1) ORCID is a nonprofit organization that provides unique identifiers for researchers and connects their works and affiliations. It aims to solve name ambiguity issues.
2) Over 3 million researchers from over 40 countries have signed up for ORCID IDs. Major research institutions, publishers, and funders have integrated ORCID into their systems.
3) In Asia Pacific, China has the most ORCID ID holders, followed by India and Japan. Several countries have formed ORCID consortia to promote adoption.
ORCID integration at Thomson Reuters (S.D. Seng)ORCID, Inc
The document discusses the partnership between Thomson Reuters and ORCID to integrate ORCID IDs into Thomson Reuters scholarly research products. Some key points:
- Thomson Reuters products like Web of Science, ResearcherID, Converis, and ScholarOne now integrate ORCID IDs to improve author identification and attribution.
- Over 5.6 million records in Web of Science now include ORCID IDs, allowing users to access an author's complete works directly from their ORCID profile.
- Beginning in 2016, Web of Science will use ORCID IDs within its author disambiguation system to more accurately cluster authors and their works.
- Integration allows users to seamlessly exchange data between Thomson Reuters products and
The document discusses ORCID, a non-profit organization that provides unique identifiers for researchers and links to other identification systems. It aims to solve name ambiguity in scholarly research. ORCID creates a central registry for researchers to generate identifiers and connect their works. Researchers can freely create and manage their ORCID profile and choose privacy settings. The organization has over 2 million registered researchers and 400 member organizations. It helps integrate identification into research workflows and reduce reporting burdens.
Elsevier Integration with ORCID (A. van Servellen)ORCID, Inc
This document discusses Elsevier's integration with ORCID across various Elsevier products and services. It provides an overview of how Scopus, Pure, and SciVal are integrating with ORCID to link authors' publication histories to their ORCID profiles. The goal is to have a single profile for researchers that is organized, maintained, and discoverable across platforms. Elsevier views ORCID as an important initiative and looks forward to the benefits of increased researcher adoption of ORCID IDs.
The document discusses the adoption of ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) in research workflows. It provides an overview of ORCID as a non-profit organization that assigns unique identifiers to individual researchers. Over 1.6 million researchers have already obtained an ORCID iD. The document outlines how ORCID is being integrated in systems used by publishers, scholarly societies, funders, universities and more to improve name disambiguation, track researchers' outputs and activities, and enable interoperability across research systems globally.
ORCID is a non-profit organization that provides researchers with unique identifiers to disambiguate their names and link their works. It is growing, with over 1.6 million researchers registered. ORCID connects different identification systems through its members and APIs, while allowing researchers to control their own records. New features like auto-updating from publishers to ORCID reduce reporting burdens. The presentation encourages researchers to register for an ORCID ID and integrate it into their workflows.
ORCID Tokyo Workshop - Introductions & Welcome (D. Wright)ORCID, Inc
The document summarizes an ORCID Tokyo Workshop that took place on June 21, 2016. It provides details about the workshop such as welcoming remarks from the Director of Membership at ORCID, Douglas Wright. It also notes that ORCID received a $3 million grant from The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust to support the adoption of ORCID identifiers internationally. The agenda outlines four sessions on ORCID overview and updates, its use by publishers and associations, use by research institutions and universities, and possibilities for implementation in Japan.
Wiley’s philosophy, policy and procedure for ORCID (K. Sasaki)ORCID, Inc
Wiley promotes the use of ORCID identifiers to connect researchers to their work. Wiley allows authors to include an ORCID ID during submission, displays it in publications, and shares the information with CrossRef. Wiley runs campaigns to encourage ORCID registration, which have increased weekly registrations. Wiley's goal is to significantly increase the number of submissions that include ORCID IDs to help authors with career progression and research discovery.
ORCID Overview: Why your Lifelong Identifier is Important in the Digital Age ...ORCID, Inc
"ORCID overview: why your lifelong identifier is important in the digital age" presented by Nobuko Miyairi, ORCID Regional Director for Asia Pacific, at the ORCID workshop on 28 February 2017.
ORCID iDs in the Academic Publishing Workflow: ORCID and the Publishing Commu...ORCID, Inc
This document summarizes a webinar presented by ORCID on implementing ORCID iDs in the academic publishing workflow. The webinar discussed how ORCID iDs can be used for manuscript submission, publication, and linking works to authors' ORCID profiles. It provided an overview of ORCID as an organization and registry, benefits to the research community, growth in usage, international participation, member organizations, features and services offered, integration options, upcoming developments, and how publishers can get involved.
ORCID survey: What do our researchers think about ORCID? (C. Chan)ORCID, Inc
This document summarizes the findings from a survey of researchers at HKBU about their understanding and use of ORCID. It found that while around 75% had signed up for an ORCID, many did not fully understand what ORCID is or its benefits. Common misconceptions were that ORCID is just another research profile system like ResearchGate or Academia.edu. Suggestions to increase ORCID usage included better educating researchers that ORCID provides a way to connect research information across different systems without duplicating effort, though its benefits are not yet obvious due to low adoption rates. Continued outreach and education was recommended to address the "chicken and egg" problem of ORCID
IFLA Poster: Optimizing Discoverability of Research and ScholarshipORCID, Inc
ORCID Ambassador Consol Garcia, http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8085-0088, presented this poster at the 2014 IFLA World Library and Information Congress, 16-22 August 2014, Lyon, France.
The document summarizes updates from ORCID, a non-profit organization that provides unique identifiers for researchers and connects them to their contributions. It discusses ORCID's growth from 2010 to present, with over 2.3 million researchers now registered. ORCID membership has expanded significantly, including many members in Asia Pacific like research institutions, universities, and repositories in countries like Australia, China, Japan, and South Korea. The organization aims to connect different identification systems through open and persistent digital identifiers in order to simplify attribution of contributions for researchers and institutions.
ORCID provides persistent digital identifiers for researchers and connects their activities and affiliations through its APIs. The ORCID Public API allows anyone to authenticate users and access public data, while the Member API provides additional capabilities for ORCID member organizations. These APIs can be used to collect ORCID IDs, display them on websites and in metadata, and connect systems to ORCID records by adding or updating data with user permission.
The document discusses ORCID, a system for providing researchers with unique identifiers. It notes that without identifiers, it is difficult to accurately connect researchers with their work. ORCID aims to address this by assigning each researcher a unique 16-digit number and ID and enabling the import and export of researcher profiles and publication data between different systems. The document outlines how ORCID is being integrated into publishing, funding, and other research workflows to link researcher profiles with their activities.
This document provides an overview of the ORCID APIs. It discusses the different types of APIs (public, member), how to access them including getting credentials, and examples of common operations like searching for records, retrieving details of a record, getting authenticated ORCID IDs, adding information to a record, and creating new ORCID records. The document also demonstrates how to use various tools like the OAuth playground and cURL to interact with the APIs.
ORCID: connecting research and researchersNobuko Miyairi
The document discusses ORCID, a non-profit organization that provides unique identifiers for researchers and links to other identification systems to solve name ambiguity. It notes that over 2 million researchers have registered for an ORCID identifier. ORCID is supported by institutional members and allows researchers to create and maintain their own record free of charge. The document outlines how ORCID identifiers are being integrated by publishers, funders, universities and other organizations to identify and connect researchers to their work and affiliations.
The document provides information about integrating ORCID APIs into other systems. It discusses the three main steps to integration: Plan, Build, and Communicate.
The Plan step involves determining how the integration will work, such as which ORCID data elements to connect with which data elements in the other system. The Build step is building and testing the integration, including setting up the OAuth authentication flow. The Communicate step is designing connection points for users, such as permission buttons and authorization pages.
The document then discusses ORCID API features like the public vs member APIs and scopes/permissions. It provides examples of vendor systems that have integrated ORCID and screenshots of OAuth authorization flows. In summary, the document
The document discusses several ways that ORCID IDs can be integrated with other research systems and services. It describes how OJS (Open Journal Systems) allows authors to integrate their ORCID ID during manuscript submission to automatically capture publications. It also explains how Hong Kong Baptist University is working to equip all faculty with ORCID IDs to upload employment and works information. Additionally, it outlines how SciENCV and Scopus can be linked to an ORCID profile to auto-populate and clean up research profiles. The document encourages giving permissions to ORCID-enabled systems so research activities are discoverable through an ORCID ID.
ORCID as a Community Initiative (N. Miyairi)ORCID, Inc
1) ORCID is a nonprofit organization that provides unique identifiers for researchers and connects their works and affiliations. It aims to solve name ambiguity issues.
2) Over 3 million researchers from over 40 countries have signed up for ORCID IDs. Major research institutions, publishers, and funders have integrated ORCID into their systems.
3) In Asia Pacific, China has the most ORCID ID holders, followed by India and Japan. Several countries have formed ORCID consortia to promote adoption.
ORCID integration at Thomson Reuters (S.D. Seng)ORCID, Inc
The document discusses the partnership between Thomson Reuters and ORCID to integrate ORCID IDs into Thomson Reuters scholarly research products. Some key points:
- Thomson Reuters products like Web of Science, ResearcherID, Converis, and ScholarOne now integrate ORCID IDs to improve author identification and attribution.
- Over 5.6 million records in Web of Science now include ORCID IDs, allowing users to access an author's complete works directly from their ORCID profile.
- Beginning in 2016, Web of Science will use ORCID IDs within its author disambiguation system to more accurately cluster authors and their works.
- Integration allows users to seamlessly exchange data between Thomson Reuters products and
The document discusses ORCID, a non-profit organization that provides unique identifiers for researchers and links to other identification systems. It aims to solve name ambiguity in scholarly research. ORCID creates a central registry for researchers to generate identifiers and connect their works. Researchers can freely create and manage their ORCID profile and choose privacy settings. The organization has over 2 million registered researchers and 400 member organizations. It helps integrate identification into research workflows and reduce reporting burdens.
Elsevier Integration with ORCID (A. van Servellen)ORCID, Inc
This document discusses Elsevier's integration with ORCID across various Elsevier products and services. It provides an overview of how Scopus, Pure, and SciVal are integrating with ORCID to link authors' publication histories to their ORCID profiles. The goal is to have a single profile for researchers that is organized, maintained, and discoverable across platforms. Elsevier views ORCID as an important initiative and looks forward to the benefits of increased researcher adoption of ORCID IDs.
The document discusses the adoption of ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) in research workflows. It provides an overview of ORCID as a non-profit organization that assigns unique identifiers to individual researchers. Over 1.6 million researchers have already obtained an ORCID iD. The document outlines how ORCID is being integrated in systems used by publishers, scholarly societies, funders, universities and more to improve name disambiguation, track researchers' outputs and activities, and enable interoperability across research systems globally.
ORCID is a non-profit organization that provides researchers with unique identifiers to disambiguate their names and link their works. It is growing, with over 1.6 million researchers registered. ORCID connects different identification systems through its members and APIs, while allowing researchers to control their own records. New features like auto-updating from publishers to ORCID reduce reporting burdens. The presentation encourages researchers to register for an ORCID ID and integrate it into their workflows.
ORCID Tokyo Workshop - Introductions & Welcome (D. Wright)ORCID, Inc
The document summarizes an ORCID Tokyo Workshop that took place on June 21, 2016. It provides details about the workshop such as welcoming remarks from the Director of Membership at ORCID, Douglas Wright. It also notes that ORCID received a $3 million grant from The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust to support the adoption of ORCID identifiers internationally. The agenda outlines four sessions on ORCID overview and updates, its use by publishers and associations, use by research institutions and universities, and possibilities for implementation in Japan.
Wiley’s philosophy, policy and procedure for ORCID (K. Sasaki)ORCID, Inc
Wiley promotes the use of ORCID identifiers to connect researchers to their work. Wiley allows authors to include an ORCID ID during submission, displays it in publications, and shares the information with CrossRef. Wiley runs campaigns to encourage ORCID registration, which have increased weekly registrations. Wiley's goal is to significantly increase the number of submissions that include ORCID IDs to help authors with career progression and research discovery.
ORCID Overview: Why your Lifelong Identifier is Important in the Digital Age ...ORCID, Inc
"ORCID overview: why your lifelong identifier is important in the digital age" presented by Nobuko Miyairi, ORCID Regional Director for Asia Pacific, at the ORCID workshop on 28 February 2017.
ORCID iDs in the Academic Publishing Workflow: ORCID and the Publishing Commu...ORCID, Inc
This document summarizes a webinar presented by ORCID on implementing ORCID iDs in the academic publishing workflow. The webinar discussed how ORCID iDs can be used for manuscript submission, publication, and linking works to authors' ORCID profiles. It provided an overview of ORCID as an organization and registry, benefits to the research community, growth in usage, international participation, member organizations, features and services offered, integration options, upcoming developments, and how publishers can get involved.
ORCID survey: What do our researchers think about ORCID? (C. Chan)ORCID, Inc
This document summarizes the findings from a survey of researchers at HKBU about their understanding and use of ORCID. It found that while around 75% had signed up for an ORCID, many did not fully understand what ORCID is or its benefits. Common misconceptions were that ORCID is just another research profile system like ResearchGate or Academia.edu. Suggestions to increase ORCID usage included better educating researchers that ORCID provides a way to connect research information across different systems without duplicating effort, though its benefits are not yet obvious due to low adoption rates. Continued outreach and education was recommended to address the "chicken and egg" problem of ORCID
IFLA Poster: Optimizing Discoverability of Research and ScholarshipORCID, Inc
ORCID Ambassador Consol Garcia, http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8085-0088, presented this poster at the 2014 IFLA World Library and Information Congress, 16-22 August 2014, Lyon, France.
The document summarizes updates from ORCID, a non-profit organization that provides unique identifiers for researchers and connects them to their contributions. It discusses ORCID's growth from 2010 to present, with over 2.3 million researchers now registered. ORCID membership has expanded significantly, including many members in Asia Pacific like research institutions, universities, and repositories in countries like Australia, China, Japan, and South Korea. The organization aims to connect different identification systems through open and persistent digital identifiers in order to simplify attribution of contributions for researchers and institutions.
ORCID provides persistent digital identifiers for researchers and connects their activities and affiliations through its APIs. The ORCID Public API allows anyone to authenticate users and access public data, while the Member API provides additional capabilities for ORCID member organizations. These APIs can be used to collect ORCID IDs, display them on websites and in metadata, and connect systems to ORCID records by adding or updating data with user permission.
The document discusses ORCID, a system for providing researchers with unique identifiers. It notes that without identifiers, it is difficult to accurately connect researchers with their work. ORCID aims to address this by assigning each researcher a unique 16-digit number and ID and enabling the import and export of researcher profiles and publication data between different systems. The document outlines how ORCID is being integrated into publishing, funding, and other research workflows to link researcher profiles with their activities.
This document provides an overview of the ORCID APIs. It discusses the different types of APIs (public, member), how to access them including getting credentials, and examples of common operations like searching for records, retrieving details of a record, getting authenticated ORCID IDs, adding information to a record, and creating new ORCID records. The document also demonstrates how to use various tools like the OAuth playground and cURL to interact with the APIs.
This document introduces ORCID, an open identifier system for researchers. It describes how to get started with an ORCID iD, the components of an ORCID record including biographical data, works, funding, and more. It also outlines the ORCID API and common workflows like authenticating a user, reading and updating their record, and creating ORCID iDs. Resources for technical and non-technical integration are provided.
This document describes two ORCID plugins for the EPrints repository software: ORCID Support and ORCID Support Advance. ORCID Support provides basic ORCID functionality like storing, validating, and reporting on ORCIDs. ORCID Support Advance integrates with the ORCID member API to import, export, and update ORCID profiles. It requires users to connect their repository account to ORCID by granting permissions. Records in the repository can then be automatically added or updated on the user's ORCID profile.
The document discusses how to integrate with the ORCID API. It describes the features of the public, member, and premium member APIs. It provides examples of connecting systems like manuscript submission systems and CRIS systems to ORCID to collect and display researcher IDs. The document outlines the OAuth workflow to authenticate users and connect data to their ORCID records using the API, and resources for learning more about synchronization and custom integrations.
This document discusses how organizations can contribute data to ORCID records to help scholars establish and manage their ORCID IDs. It describes how organizations can encourage scholars to create ORCID IDs on their own sites, create IDs for employees, add works and affiliations to a scholar's ORCID record, and add their own organizational IDs. The document provides examples and steps for implementing these functions using the ORCID API. It also lists additional resources like the ORCID developer documentation, sandbox environment, and upcoming features in the October ORCID launch.
This presentation was given by guest lecturer Jordon Holt of ORCID, Inc., during the second session of the NISO Spring training series "Working with Scholarly APIs." Session Two, ORCID, was moderated by Phill Jones of MoreBrains Cooperative and held on May 5, 2022.
Learn more about design choices made for the October Launch version of the ORCID site. See the updated field list and XML schema that will be used at launch. Find out where to find resources useful in getting started with ORCID. (ORCID Training Presentation - Aug 16, 2012)
The document provides an introduction to the ORCID API, including what an API is, how the ORCID API works, and how to access the ORCID API. It discusses the ORCID registry, the sandbox and production APIs, application credentials, search queries, OAuth authentication, and examples of searching through the public API using cURL commands.
The document summarizes ORCID and its APIs. ORCID is a registry that provides unique identifiers for researchers and connects them to their activities such as publications, funding, employment, etc. The ORCID APIs allow organizations to authenticate users, collect and display ORCID identifiers, and connect information from organizational systems to researchers' ORCID records. The summary provides an overview of the ORCID APIs and how organizations can utilize them to integrate ORCID identifiers into their workflows and systems.
The key to understanding the ORCID Registry is in understanding
>> The relationships between those who interact with the Registry
>> The ORCID Record and Account
>> ORCID's privacy model
>> How to access ORCID Records
This presentation describes these key components and provides some case studies as examples.
ORCID Collect & Connect: understanding integrations and the API (M. Buys)ORCID, Inc
ORCID provides persistent digital identifiers for researchers and connects their activities and affiliations across systems. The presentation discusses ORCID's vision and services, including integrations by region and sector. It outlines goals and best practices for collect, display, connect, and synchronize functions using ORCID identifiers and APIs. Examples show displaying identifiers, connecting data through the API, and enabling synchronization between systems.
The ORCID API enables organizations to integrate ORCID identifiers into their systems and workflows. It features a public API for basic authentication and data retrieval, as well as member APIs that allow adding, updating, and connecting data to ORCID records. Organizations can collect ORCID IDs through their systems and connect reviews, publications, and other information to researchers' ORCID profiles. The ORCID API supports various integration methods like vendor system connections or custom developments.
This presentation provides an overview of how to build and manage an ORCID profile. It discusses linking ORCID with other researcher profiles like ResearcherID and Scopus to automatically add publications. It also explains how to manually add publications, funding, patents and other works. The presentation provides information on permission settings, visibility settings, and using linked profiles on ResearcherID and Scopus to obtain metrics like an H-index.
In early 2014 ORCID worked with F1000 and CASRAI to create a working group to look at Peer Review Activity and the fields use to describe it.
These slides are from a recorded webinar where we discussed the background of the working group on peer review and how the group's work evolved into a standard set of fields for describing peer review activity. We reviewed how these fields are expressed and interpreted within the ORCID website and API, and reviewed the next steps for implementing an early adopter integration for this new functionality. Please also see our webpage about the Peer Review Early Adopter program at: orcid.org/content/peer-review-early-adopter-program
The document discusses ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) which is a persistent digital identifier for researchers. It describes ORCID as seeking to become the standard identifier for academic research by uniquely identifying individual researchers and linking them to their contributions. The summary also notes that ORCID membership provides benefits like higher API access limits and the ability to add and update some user data with permission.
Research ID's - University of Cape Town LibrariesUCT
This document discusses the importance of creating a unique researcher identifier such as an ORCID ID, ResearcherID, or Scopus ID. These identifiers allow researchers to create a profile showcasing their work, remain discoverable as their career progresses even as their names or affiliations change, and help address issues of name ambiguity. The document provides information on setting up profiles with ORCID, ResearcherID through Web of Science, and Scopus ID through Elsevier. It also gives tips on importing publications and links to help resources.
Similar to ORCID Member Site Integration: Using the API (20)
"Identifying Springer's Author (with ORCID iD) on SpringerLink and the benefits" presented by Hazman Aziz, Account Development Manager for Southeast Asia at Springer Nature, at ORCID's Malaysia workshop on 28 February 2017.
"ORCID at Universiti of Kuala Lumpur" presented by Puan Pazilah Hamzah, Senior Manager and Head of the Tunku Azizah Knowledge Centre at Universiti Kuala Lumpur, at the ORCID Malaysia workshop on 28 February 2017.
Spreading the ORCID Word: ORCID Communications Webinar (2016.12)ORCID, Inc
This webinar, delivered 13 December 2016, discusses effective practices in encouraging adoption and use of ORCID iDs by researchers in your community.
Topics include:
- Key messages about ORCID (by audience, where applicable)
- Successful techniques for delivering those messages
- Useful resources from ORCID and the ORCID Community
The document discusses Khalifa University's implementation of ORCiD identifiers to capture faculty publications, avoid name ambiguity, and easily link publications to citation profiles. Key tasks completed include starting the implementation in September, creating an intranet page for faculty sign up, and conducting training sessions. Ongoing tasks involve connecting more faculty IDs, harvesting data for the institutional repository using an ORCiD plugin, and adding features to the dashboard. The future plans are to show ORCiD links for authors, push repository data to faculty profiles, and automate collecting data for faculty pages using ORCiD.
ORCID Integration with Institutional Repositories (D. Grenz)ORCID, Inc
The document discusses KAUST's approach to integrating ORCID IDs within its institutional repository and other research systems. It began ORCID integration in 2014 by requiring IDs for electronic theses and dissertations. Since becoming an ORCID member in 2014, it has integrated ORCID throughout its repository and research evaluation processes. Over 730 IDs have been created or identified, covering over 80% of faculty and 45% of postdocs. Future goals include increasing ID coverage and automating more processes to reduce researcher workload and keep systems up-to-date.
Research in a world where machines read (M. Buys)ORCID, Inc
This document discusses ORCID, a registry that provides researchers with a unique identifier to help distinguish them from others with similar names. It notes challenges in identifying researchers due to name variations and ambiguities. ORCID aims to address this by assigning persistent digital IDs that uniquely identify individuals and can link to their professional activities and affiliations. The document outlines how ORCID benefits researchers, universities, publishers, funders and more by enabling identity verification and information sharing through its registry and API. It provides statistics on ORCID usage and member organizations.
Benefits to researchers who use ORCID (P. Purnell)ORCID, Inc
ORCID provides identifiers for individual researchers and authors to solve the problem of name disambiguation. Registration for an ORCID takes less than one minute. While journal impact factors and university rankings provide citation metrics at higher levels of aggregation, ORCID identifiers allow for assessment of citation impact at the individual researcher level through metrics like total citations and h-index.
ORCID in the Publishing Workflow (Mochammad Tanzil Multazam)ORCID, Inc
The document discusses the benefits of using ORCID for researchers, research institutions, and publishers. As a research institution, ORCID allows better management of researcher publications and metrics. For researchers, ORCID provides a way to uniquely identify work including publications, reviews, and funding, and helps integrate this information across different systems. For publishers, ORCID streamlines the publication process and disambiguates author identities. The research institution aims to implement ORCID integration in more of its systems to better track faculty work and improve research management.
The document discusses changes in the ORCID API from version 1.2 to version 2.0. Some key points discussed include:
- Version 2.0 allows reading and writing data in smaller sections or individual items rather than large chunks, improving performance.
- Permissions are simplified with just 4 scopes in version 2.0 compared to many overlapping scopes in version 1.2.
- Version 2.0 returns activity summaries with basic details rather than full representations of each activity, reducing payload size.
- Version 2.0 introduces display indexes and ordering to control item ordering, unlike version 1.2 which had no defined ordering.
This document discusses various perks and pitfalls of the ORCID API from the perspective of ORCID team members. It addresses issues like unexpected errors, difficulty adding new ID types, polling the public API being taxing, and challenges with batch creating or updating large numbers of records. The document provides suggestions for improvements like improved error messages, enabling community contributions to vocabularies, an on-demand data dump feature, and bulk work creation. The ORCID team members provide their contact information and encourage feedback to help enhance the API and user experience.
Raising Awareness & Encouraging ORCID Registrations as an Author Services Pro...ORCID, Inc
Donald Samulack presented on raising awareness and encouraging ORCID registrations as an author services provider. Name disambiguation is most needed in China and South Korea due to the high percentage of populations sharing the most common last names. Editage is increasing ORCID awareness through blog posts, Q&A, social media, and newsletters. They encourage ORCID registration through coupons, client profiles, and news on their online system. Editage has integrated ORCID into their identity and credential verification process to make it easier for clients.
Convey is a web-based financial disclosure system created by the AAMC to allow individuals to enter and maintain records of their financial interests and disclose them directly to organizations in a streamlined manner. It was developed based on IOM recommendations with input from multiple stakeholders. The system uses common data standards and allows organizations to tailor the disclosure process while collecting the necessary information. Individuals can link their disclosures to their ORCID identifier for validation and identification purposes, and organizations can choose whether to allow or require the use of ORCID IDs.
ORCID and Peer Review in EJPress (Anna Jester)ORCID, Inc
The document discusses how ORCID identifiers are used in the peer review process on the EJPress publishing platform. It describes how authors can request and link their ORCID during submission. Reviewers can then log into ORCID to confirm and receive credit for reviews. The integration allows linking reviews to the reviewer's ORCID profile for credit and tracking reviews across journals.
CHORUS: A Story About Efficiencies (Howard Ratner)ORCID, Inc
The document discusses how CHORUS helps provide a cost-effective public access solution for research. It has partnered with multiple US government agencies and funders to help grantees and researchers comply with public access policies. CHORUS builds on existing infrastructure like DOIs, funder IDs, and ORCID IDs to identify content and metadata and link to full text on publisher sites. It also discusses expanding internationally and piloting with institutions directly.
Digital Science Presentation at ORCID Outreach Meeting (Ashlea Higgs)ORCID, Inc
This document summarizes several tools and platforms that integrate with ORCID profiles to help researchers manage their work and collaborations. It describes how Altmetric, Figshare, Overleaf, ReadCube, Symplectic Elements, and UberResearch integrate with ORCID to allow researchers to link publications and other research outputs to their ORCID profile, track metrics and attention for their work, and facilitate collaboration and information sharing between tools and platforms.
ORCID Update: American Geophysical Union (Brooks Hanson)ORCID, Inc
This document discusses updates from the American Geophysical Union (AGU) regarding ORCID identifiers. It notes that as of March 2016, ORCIDs are required for corresponding authors in AGU journals and encouraged for all other authors and reviewers. As of September 2016, over 18,000 ORCIDs were associated with AGU journal accounts. It also discusses recent alignment among publishers, repositories, and funders around data transparency and identifiers, as well as the Coalition on Publishing Data in the Earth and Space Sciences' efforts to link publishers and repositories to promote best practices around citations and identifiers.
The document provides an update on ORCID activities from October 2016. Key points include:
- ORCID membership has grown to 536 members from 39 countries, with 60% growth and 14 regional consortia.
- Regions like Asia Pacific, Europe, and North America will focus on expanding consortia models and increasing integrations with members.
- Latin America will focus on key countries like Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia, while the Middle East/Africa region will focus on the Middle East and North Africa.
- Technical updates include a new ORCID Trust site, open elections, social/institutional sign-in integrations, and API improvements.
The document summarizes an ORCID outreach meeting that covered developing an elevator pitch for ORCID, engaging with communities, and addressing myths about ORCID. Speakers at the meeting included representatives from Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Princeton University, and the Australian Access Federation. Attendees were encouraged to develop an elevator pitch for ORCID that is 30 seconds to 2 minutes, uses plain English, tells a compelling story, and includes words like open, new, approachable, etc. The meeting also addressed common myths about ORCID like whether it is needed in addition to other profiles, how easy it is to update, privacy/security concerns, and why different services now request ORCID IDs.
Cosa hanno in comune un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ?Speck&Tech
ABSTRACT: A prima vista, un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ potrebbero avere in comune il fatto di essere entrambi blocchi di costruzione, o dipendenze di progetti creativi e software. La realtà è che un mattoncino Lego e il caso della backdoor XZ hanno molto di più di tutto ciò in comune.
Partecipate alla presentazione per immergervi in una storia di interoperabilità, standard e formati aperti, per poi discutere del ruolo importante che i contributori hanno in una comunità open source sostenibile.
BIO: Sostenitrice del software libero e dei formati standard e aperti. È stata un membro attivo dei progetti Fedora e openSUSE e ha co-fondato l'Associazione LibreItalia dove è stata coinvolta in diversi eventi, migrazioni e formazione relativi a LibreOffice. In precedenza ha lavorato a migrazioni e corsi di formazione su LibreOffice per diverse amministrazioni pubbliche e privati. Da gennaio 2020 lavora in SUSE come Software Release Engineer per Uyuni e SUSE Manager e quando non segue la sua passione per i computer e per Geeko coltiva la sua curiosità per l'astronomia (da cui deriva il suo nickname deneb_alpha).
Fueling AI with Great Data with Airbyte WebinarZilliz
This talk will focus on how to collect data from a variety of sources, leveraging this data for RAG and other GenAI use cases, and finally charting your course to productionalization.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.
HCL Notes and Domino License Cost Reduction in the World of DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-and-domino-license-cost-reduction-in-the-world-of-dlau/
The introduction of DLAU and the CCB & CCX licensing model caused quite a stir in the HCL community. As a Notes and Domino customer, you may have faced challenges with unexpected user counts and license costs. You probably have questions on how this new licensing approach works and how to benefit from it. Most importantly, you likely have budget constraints and want to save money where possible. Don’t worry, we can help with all of this!
We’ll show you how to fix common misconfigurations that cause higher-than-expected user counts, and how to identify accounts which you can deactivate to save money. There are also frequent patterns that can cause unnecessary cost, like using a person document instead of a mail-in for shared mailboxes. We’ll provide examples and solutions for those as well. And naturally we’ll explain the new licensing model.
Join HCL Ambassador Marc Thomas in this webinar with a special guest appearance from Franz Walder. It will give you the tools and know-how to stay on top of what is going on with Domino licensing. You will be able lower your cost through an optimized configuration and keep it low going forward.
These topics will be covered
- Reducing license cost by finding and fixing misconfigurations and superfluous accounts
- How do CCB and CCX licenses really work?
- Understanding the DLAU tool and how to best utilize it
- Tips for common problem areas, like team mailboxes, functional/test users, etc
- Practical examples and best practices to implement right away
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 6DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 6. In this session, we will cover Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI webinar offers an in-depth exploration of leveraging cutting-edge technologies for test automation within the UiPath platform. Attendees will delve into the integration of generative AI, a test automation solution, with Open AI advanced natural language processing capabilities.
Throughout the session, participants will discover how this synergy empowers testers to automate repetitive tasks, enhance testing accuracy, and expedite the software testing life cycle. Topics covered include the seamless integration process, practical use cases, and the benefits of harnessing AI-driven automation for UiPath testing initiatives. By attending this webinar, testers, and automation professionals can gain valuable insights into harnessing the power of AI to optimize their test automation workflows within the UiPath ecosystem, ultimately driving efficiency and quality in software development processes.
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into integrating generative AI.
2. Understanding how this integration enhances test automation within the UiPath platform
3. Practical demonstrations
4. Exploration of real-world use cases illustrating the benefits of AI-driven test automation for UiPath
Topics covered:
What is generative AI
Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath integration with generative AI
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Programming Foundation Models with DSPy - Meetup SlidesZilliz
Prompting language models is hard, while programming language models is easy. In this talk, I will discuss the state-of-the-art framework DSPy for programming foundation models with its powerful optimizers and runtime constraint system.
Have you ever been confused by the myriad of choices offered by AWS for hosting a website or an API?
Lambda, Elastic Beanstalk, Lightsail, Amplify, S3 (and more!) can each host websites + APIs. But which one should we choose?
Which one is cheapest? Which one is fastest? Which one will scale to meet our needs?
Join me in this session as we dive into each AWS hosting service to determine which one is best for your scenario and explain why!
OpenID AuthZEN Interop Read Out - AuthorizationDavid Brossard
During Identiverse 2024 and EIC 2024, members of the OpenID AuthZEN WG got together and demoed their authorization endpoints conforming to the AuthZEN API
Driving Business Innovation: Latest Generative AI Advancements & Success StorySafe Software
Are you ready to revolutionize how you handle data? Join us for a webinar where we’ll bring you up to speed with the latest advancements in Generative AI technology and discover how leveraging FME with tools from giants like Google Gemini, Amazon, and Microsoft OpenAI can supercharge your workflow efficiency.
During the hour, we’ll take you through:
Guest Speaker Segment with Hannah Barrington: Dive into the world of dynamic real estate marketing with Hannah, the Marketing Manager at Workspace Group. Hear firsthand how their team generates engaging descriptions for thousands of office units by integrating diverse data sources—from PDF floorplans to web pages—using FME transformers, like OpenAIVisionConnector and AnthropicVisionConnector. This use case will show you how GenAI can streamline content creation for marketing across the board.
Ollama Use Case: Learn how Scenario Specialist Dmitri Bagh has utilized Ollama within FME to input data, create custom models, and enhance security protocols. This segment will include demos to illustrate the full capabilities of FME in AI-driven processes.
Custom AI Models: Discover how to leverage FME to build personalized AI models using your data. Whether it’s populating a model with local data for added security or integrating public AI tools, find out how FME facilitates a versatile and secure approach to AI.
We’ll wrap up with a live Q&A session where you can engage with our experts on your specific use cases, and learn more about optimizing your data workflows with AI.
This webinar is ideal for professionals seeking to harness the power of AI within their data management systems while ensuring high levels of customization and security. Whether you're a novice or an expert, gain actionable insights and strategies to elevate your data processes. Join us to see how FME and AI can revolutionize how you work with data!
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift.pdfTosin Akinosho
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift
Overview
Dive into the world of anomaly detection on edge devices with our comprehensive hands-on tutorial. This SlideShare presentation will guide you through the entire process, from data collection and model training to edge deployment and real-time monitoring. Perfect for those looking to implement robust anomaly detection systems on resource-constrained IoT/edge devices.
Key Topics Covered
1. Introduction to Anomaly Detection
- Understand the fundamentals of anomaly detection and its importance in identifying unusual behavior or failures in systems.
2. Understanding Edge (IoT)
- Learn about edge computing and IoT, and how they enable real-time data processing and decision-making at the source.
3. What is ArgoCD?
- Discover ArgoCD, a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes, and its role in deploying applications on edge devices.
4. Deployment Using ArgoCD for Edge Devices
- Step-by-step guide on deploying anomaly detection models on edge devices using ArgoCD.
5. Introduction to Apache Kafka and S3
- Explore Apache Kafka for real-time data streaming and Amazon S3 for scalable storage solutions.
6. Viewing Kafka Messages in the Data Lake
- Learn how to view and analyze Kafka messages stored in a data lake for better insights.
7. What is Prometheus?
- Get to know Prometheus, an open-source monitoring and alerting toolkit, and its application in monitoring edge devices.
8. Monitoring Application Metrics with Prometheus
- Detailed instructions on setting up Prometheus to monitor the performance and health of your anomaly detection system.
9. What is Camel K?
- Introduction to Camel K, a lightweight integration framework built on Apache Camel, designed for Kubernetes.
10. Configuring Camel K Integrations for Data Pipelines
- Learn how to configure Camel K for seamless data pipeline integrations in your anomaly detection workflow.
11. What is a Jupyter Notebook?
- Overview of Jupyter Notebooks, an open-source web application for creating and sharing documents with live code, equations, visualizations, and narrative text.
12. Jupyter Notebooks with Code Examples
- Hands-on examples and code snippets in Jupyter Notebooks to help you implement and test anomaly detection models.
2. iD
Housekeeping
• QUESTIONS? All participants are on mute
• Type question into the “question” pane, OR raise your virtual
hand to be called on.
• Will answer questions periodically, and will unmute participants
during these times.
• RECORDING: Today’s webinar will be recorded, and will be
distributed on ORCID.org.
• If you don’t want to be recorded, use the “question” pane instead
• SUPPORT: having technical challenges? GoToWebinar can help
• Global Support: http://support.citrixonline.com/webinar
• OR… Tweet @gotowebinar
ORCID.org
4. iD
Today’s Agenda
• About the ORCID Webinar Series
• Getting to know the ORCID API
• Common ways to use the API on your site
• About this Scholar: Display to-the-minute info on your site
• Keep us up-to-date: Get and store an ID to get regular updates
• Enhance my Record: Push updates to an ORCID Record
• Additional Resources
• Next steps
ORCID.org
5. iD
The ORCID Webinar Series
• ORCID Resources (Aug 16, 2012)
Learn about the four components of the ORCID Registry: the Players,
Account & Record, Privacy and Accessing Records. Discover what will
be included in the October launch and helpful resources.
• View the recording: http://goo.gl/nLpVE
• See the slides: http://goo.gl/nuc1W
• Member Site Integration (Aug 30, 2012)
Discover some common uses of the API, and learn how to incorporate
them into your own sites and services.
• Loading Production Data (Sep 13, 2012)
The production database will soon be live and you will be able to load
live data. Learn about common challenges and how to overcome them.
• Pre-Register: http://goo.gl/CHwCw
ORCID.org
7. iD
Includes future functionality…
• Some functionality describe is included in the October launch,
though are not yet present on the Developer’s Sandbox
• API Scopes
On Developer’s Sandbox by late Sept 2012
see release notes: http://dev.orcid.org/release-notes#APIV1.1.0
• orcid-record (currently orcid-profile; backward compatible)
• orcid-activities (currently orcid-works; backward compatible)
• ORCID XML Message
On Developer’s Sandbox by Sept 5, 2012
see release notes: http://dev.orcid.org/release-notes#XMLV1.0.3
• Element: grants (not yet present)
• Element: patents (not yet present)
• Element: affiliations (not yet present)
ORCID.org
8. iD
ORCID Privacy
• Information in an ORCID Record has a privacy setting
Accessible by anyone
Accessible by Account Owner, Proxy(ies),Trusted Organization(s)
Accessible by Account Owner, Proxy(ies)
• “Visibility” element in the message controls the privacy
setting
Ø Also see the first in this webinar series for more info:
http://dev.orcid.org/getting-started#Aug16
ORCID.org
9. iD
The APIs
• Public API
• No token or registration needed
• Can only access data marked as public
• Can only READ
• Member API
• Registration and token needed
• Can access data marked as public or limited
• Can READ, EDIT, APPEND; For institutions/employers, it is also
possible to CREATE
• Specific permissions must be granted by the Scholar
• ORCID Profile Change Notification API (premier members only)
ORCID.org
10. iD
The Basic API Call
• The API is RESTful and URI-based, and each call has:
• Scope
• Permission level (public or limited data)
• Timeframe
• Information about the ORCID Record is passed in an ORCID
Message
• OAuth 2.0 is used to allow the record holder to grant specific
permissions to member sites
• Permissions are enforced through an OAuth Access Token
• Error messages provide feedback on failed requests
ORCID.org
11. iD
Authenticate
• To receive privileges (trusted organization), member sites do
an authentication dance
• Request access from the user (members only) è User grants
access
• Exchange user permission to get an Access Token
(using /oauth/authenticate)
• Exchange an Access Token for ORCID data using the API calls
• The Access Token
• Token Type & Access Token - used together to authorize access to
ORCID data
• Expires In – describes how long the permission is granted
• Scope – the scope of the permission
• ORCID ID – the ID of the user who has granted permission
ORCID.org
12. iD
Public API: Read / Query
• No specific permission is needed; no access token required
Name Param Request Description
Bio orcid_id orcid-bio (or Given a contributor, give me name
blank) and affiliation data.
Activities orcid_id orcid-activities Given a contributor, tell me what
research activities they have
contributed to.
Full orcid_id orcid-record Given a contributor, tell me his/her
bio and research activities
Search search [search terms] Given search criteria, give me a
ranked list of contributor and their
bios
• API URI: http://[API Host]/[Param]/[request]
• Developers Sandbox Public API Host: devsandbox.orcid.org
ORCID.org
13. iD
Public API: Query Examples
• Retrieve Bio for scholar with ORCID ID
0000-0003-2012-0010
• GET http://devsandbox.orcid.org/0000-0003-2012-0010/orcid-bio
• -OR- GET http://devsandbox.orcid.org/0000-0003-2012-0010
• Retrieve a list of Research Activities for the scholar with
ORCID ID 0000-0003-2012-0010
• GET http://devsandbox.orcid.org/0000-0003-2012-0010/orcid-
works
• Retrieve a list of IDs & bios for the contributors to the work
with DOI=“10.1038/nbt1109-984b”
• GET http://devsandbox.orcid.org/search/orcid-bio?q=digital-
object-ids:10.1038/nbt1109-984b
ORCID.org
14. iD
Member API: Read
• Member API
Activity Method Request Scope Expires In
Read Entire GET /[orcid_id]/ orcid-record/ When revoked
Record orcid-record read-limited by user
Read Bio GET /[orcid_id]/ /orcid-bio/read- When revoked
orcid-bio limited by user
Read Research GET /[orcid_id]/ /orcid-activities/ When revoked
Activities orcid-activities read-limited by user
Read Public GET /[orcid_id]/* /read-public When revoked
Info by ORCID
• Member API URI: http://[API Host]/[Request]
• Developers Sandbox Member API Host: api.devsandbox.orcid.org
• Requires Access Token: Authenticate information sent in the
HTTP header
ORCID.org
15. iD
Member API: Append
• All Members
Activity Method Request Scope Expires
In
Add a Research POST /[orcid_id]/ /orcid-activities/ 1 hour
Activity orcid-activities create
Add an External POST /[orcid_id]/ /orcid-bio/ 1 hour
Identifier orcid-bio/ external-
external- identifiers/create
identifiers
• For Institutions only
Activity Method Request Scope Expires In
Create a new POST /orcid-profile /orcid- When
ORCID Record record/create revoked by
ORCID
ORCID.org
16. iD
Member API: Update
• All Members
Activity Method Request Scope Expires
In
Update Bio PUT /[orcid_id]/ /orcid-bio/update 5 min
orcid-bio
Update Research PUT /[orcid_id]/ /orcid-activities/ 5 min
Activities orcid-activities update
• Should be used with caution
• Replaces ALL data formerly stored
• 1-hour and 5-min timeframes are also single use
ORCID.org
17. Member API: iD
Anatomy of an HTTP Header
• Command Line Request:
• curl -v -i -L -H 'Accept: application/xml' -H 'Authorization:
Bearer 1641444e-c0cb-48b1-be47-534941db139f' 'http://
api.devsandbox.orcid.org/search/orcid-bio?q=thorisson’
The API
• Resulting HTTP Header: Request
GET /search/orcid-bio?q=thorisson HTTP/1.1
User-Agent: curl/7.21.4 (universal-apple-darwin11.0) libcurl/7.21.4
OpenSSL/0.9.8r zlib/1.2.5
Made to the
Host: api.devsandbox.orcid.org Member API Host
Accept: application/xml
Authorization: Bearer 1641444e-c0cb-48b1-be47-534941db139f
Please provide the Received from the
Result in XML format Access Token
ORCID.org
18. iD
The API Message
Ø http://orcid.github.com/ORCID-Parent/schemas/orcid-message/1.0.3/
• Describe the XML message and its sections
• Biography – includes: ORCID
Record
• Lists of External Identifiers Biography
• Lists of Affiliations Activities
• Research Activities • Works
• Works • Grants
• Technologies
• Grants
• Technologies (including patents)
• Message Data Return Formats
ORCID.org
20. Using the API: iD
About this Scholar
A website displays info from the ORCID Record of scholar who has an ID
1 2 3
User is on a site Site performs a search based Site parses the
and wants more on known information. returned ORCID
info about a scholar Message & displays
public data to user
What to Query? Public API Search Display Data
http://devsandbox.orcid.org/search/
orcid-bio/?q=[search terms]
ORCID.org
21. Other Uses: iD
About this Scholar
This process can be used in several situations:
• Filling a form about the user by pulling from their ORCID Record
• Filling a form about collaborators when the researcher knows
their ORCID IDs
• Displaying “works by this scholar” by receiving a current list from
the scholar’s ORCID Record
• Use information in an ORCID Record to help identify conflict-of-
interest challenges for peer reviews
ORCID.org
22. Using the API: iD
Keep Us Up-to-date
A Scholar establishes a trust relationship while at a member site
1 2 3
? READ
READ
READ
Member site asks Scholar reviews the Member site becomes
for ongoing READ request and establishes trusted; may receive
permissions from a trust relationships record updates
Scholar
OAuth Dance OAuth/authenticate API GET read-limited
Get & store “until revoked” read- api.devsandbox.orcid.org/
limited access token [orcid_id]/orcid-record
ORCID.org
23. Other Uses: iD
Keep Us Up-to-date
This process can be used in several situations:
• Updating your records for a researcher
• Trigger an activity when certain items change for a researcher
• NOTE: Callback API can be used to automatically be notified
when things change on the scholar’s record.
ORCID.org
24. Using the API: iD
Enhance My Record
A Scholar establishes a trust relationship with member site to add to their Record
1 2 3
ADD TO READ
APPEND
READ
APPEND
? READ
Member site asks Scholar reviews the Member site becomes
for one-time request and establishes trusted; may add
APPEND trust relationships activities one time
permission
OAuth Dance OAuth authenticate API POST
Get ONE TIME access token api.devsandbox.orcid.org/
/orcid-activities/create [orcid_id]/orcid-activities
ORCID.org
25. Other Uses: iD
Enhance My Record
This process can be used in several situations:
• Encouraging a researcher to add their ORCID ID by offering to
add the manuscript to their record.
• Offer to add a list of research activities to a researcher’s record
in exchange for reviewing the data that your site has stored for
him/her.
ORCID.org
27. iD
Key Resources
• Developer Technical Documentation
http://dev.orcid.org/resources
• Structure of the ORCID ID
http://dev.orcid.org/structure-orcid-identifier
• Read / Query API
http://dev.orcid.org/docs/query-api
• Update / Append API
http://dev.orcid.org/docs/deposit-update-api
• The ORCID API Message
http://orcid.github.com/ORCID-Parent/schemas/orcid-message/1.0.3/
• UML Flow Diagram
http://goo.gl/I9wIB
• Technical Support (Available after launch)
ORCID.org
28. iD
To Be Released in October
For Individuals
• Public Registry – Anyone can create an ORCID ID and search
the Registry
• ORCID Record
• Link ID to other identifier schemes, synch data
• Enhance ID with information on research activities, including
biography, works, grants and technology/products
For Member Organizations
• Updated APIs / XML
• Create IDs for employees and students (institutions only)
• Trusted relationship management to share information
ORCID.org
29. iD
Resource: News/Documentation
• Developers Portal (dev.orcid.org)
• Latest about the Launch (dev.orcid.org/launch)
• Documentation, code samples (dev.orcid.org/resources)
• Blog with the latest updates (dev.orcid.org/blog)
• Links to support (available in Oct)
ORCID.org
30. iD
Resource: Sandbox-Try the API
• Sandbox Site (devsandbox.orcid.org)
• Fully functioning API
• Tokens available at dev.orcid.org/create-client-app
• Limited web interface
• In synch with the production server and Registry
• Non-persistent. Data is refreshed periodically
ORCID.org
31. iD
Next Steps
q Get a token to use the Sandbox
(dev.orcid.org/create-client-app)
q Review documentation
(dev.orcid.org/resources)
q Signup for the next webinar
(/goo.gl/dGrRe)
• Sep 16—Loading Production Data
q Subscribe to the blog for the latest updates
(RSS: dev.orcid.org/blog/51/feed)
ORCID.org