People, places, and things: Persistent identifiers in the scholarly communication landscape \textbar Gould \textbar College & Research Libraries News. Gould, M. October, 2022.
People, places, and things: Persistent identifiers in the scholarly communication landscape \textbar Gould \textbar College & Research Libraries News [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Persistent identifiers are a key element in the scholarly communication landscape. However, many scholarly communication librarians may not be familiar with persistent identifiers and what to do with them. I should know—I used to be one of these librarians.When I worked as a scholarly communication librarian, I knew a few basic things about persistent identifiers. I knew what an ORCID iD was and I could explain to researchers why they should have one. I knew what a DOI was, but I did not know that there are different types of DOIs for different types of things, or that there’s more to a DOI than the identifier itself. But I didn’t know there were other persistent identifiers relevant to scholarly communication, like identifiers for affiliations or funders or grants. And I certainly didn’t know that persistent identifiers can be commercialized and paywalled, just like research outputs.
@article{gould_people_2022,
	title = {People, places, and things: {Persistent} identifiers in the scholarly communication landscape {\textbar} {Gould} {\textbar} {College} \& {Research} {Libraries} {News}},
	shorttitle = {People, places, and things},
	url = {https://crln.acrl.org/index.php/crlnews/article/view/25638},
	doi = {https://doi.org/10.5860/crln.83.9.398},
	abstract = {Persistent identifiers are a key element in the scholarly communication landscape. However, many scholarly communication librarians may not be familiar with persistent identifiers and what to do with them. I should know—I used to be one of these librarians.When I worked as a scholarly communication librarian, I knew a few basic things about persistent identifiers. I knew what an ORCID iD was and I could explain to researchers why they should have one. I knew what a DOI was, but I did not know that there are different types of DOIs for different types of things, or that there’s more to a DOI than the identifier itself. But I didn’t know there were other persistent identifiers relevant to scholarly communication, like identifiers for affiliations or funders or grants. And I certainly didn’t know that persistent identifiers can be commercialized and paywalled, just like research outputs.},
	language = {en-US},
	urldate = {2022-10-10},
	author = {Gould, Maria},
	month = oct,
	year = {2022},
}

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