OCLC Report: Registering Researchers in Authority
Files
I wanted to share the announcement of the very recently released
report "Registering Researchers in Authority Files"
from Karen Smith-Yoshimura at OCLC research in collaboration
with an international task force. The convergence of traditional
authority files, researcher ID registries like ORCID, and other
biographical and bibliographical resouces has been a substantial
concern for CNI's program over the past few years, and those attending
the CNI membership meetings have seen a number of presentations
recently exploring developments in this area.
The background and links to the report are at:
http://www.oclc.org/research/publications/library/2014/oclcresearch-registering-researchers-2014-overview.html
Karen's report is a very helpful summary of recent developments,
with particular emphasis on the relationships to traditional name
authority infrastructure. Essential reading for those tracking these
issues.
Clifford Lynch
Director, CNI
------------------------------
Written by OCLC Research Program Officer Karen Smith-Yoshimura and a
13-member task group comprised of specialists from the US, UK and
the Netherlands, this report summarizes their research into approaches
to providing authoritative researcher identifiers.
Registering researchers in some type of authority file or
identifier system has become more compelling as both institutions and
researchers recognize the need to compile their scholarly output. The
report presents functional requirements and recommendations for six
stakeholders: researchers, funders, university administrators,
librarians, and identity management systems, and aggregators
(including publishers). It also provides an overview of the researcher
identifier landscape, changes in the field, emerging trends, and
opportunities.
See the Registering Researchers in Authority Files overview page for key highlights and to download the
report in 8.5x11 or A4 formats. Supplementary data sets are also available for
download, including: 18 use-case scenarios for the six stakeholders;
functional requirements derived from the use-case scenarios; the list
of 100 research networking and identifier systems the task group
considered; characteristics profiles of 20 research networking and
identifier systems; mappings of each of the 20 systems to the
functional requirements; and a researcher identifier information flow
diagram.
|