2015
DOI: 10.1007/s12145-015-0231-5
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DOI for geoscience data - how early practices shape present perceptions

Abstract: The first minting of Digital Object Identifiers (DOI) for research data happened in 2004 in the context of the project "Publication and citation of primary scientific data" (STD-DOI). Some of the concepts and perceptions about DOI for data today have their roots in the way this project implemented DOI for research data and the decisions made in those early days still shape the discussion about the use of persistent identifiers for research data today. This project also laid the foundation for a tighter integra… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
(49 reference statements)
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“…However science is innovative by nature and thus research data as a product of science is dynamic, especially high volume data released early in the project, like in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP, 2017). Klump et al (2016) suggest to characterize the kind of dynamic data changes as growing, evolving and fragmented datasets, where data is appended for growing datasets, data is revised and new versions are appended for evolving datasets, and data is partly replaced for fragmented datasets. Hereafter, only growing and evolving datasets will be discussed using the more general term evolving data.…”
Section: Citations Of Static and Evolving Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However science is innovative by nature and thus research data as a product of science is dynamic, especially high volume data released early in the project, like in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP, 2017). Klump et al (2016) suggest to characterize the kind of dynamic data changes as growing, evolving and fragmented datasets, where data is appended for growing datasets, data is revised and new versions are appended for evolving datasets, and data is partly replaced for fragmented datasets. Hereafter, only growing and evolving datasets will be discussed using the more general term evolving data.…”
Section: Citations Of Static and Evolving Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Computational solutions for data citation often rely on persistent identifiers such as Digital Object Identifiers (DOI), Persistent Uniform Resource Locator (PURL) and the Archival Resource Key (ARK) [22, 32]. While persistent identifiers enable the data to be located and have associated guarantees of persistence (fixity), they do not constitute a full-fledged solution for data citation.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fifthly, the persistence of identifiers for geoscientific data is especially problematic [42]. Geoscientific data can be highly dynamic and corrections or reprocessing is not unusual.…”
Section: Specifics Of Geographic Research Data Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%