Saturday 12 April 2014

Ten things you need to know about ORCID right now | Impactstory blog



 Source: http://blog.impactstory.org/ten-things-you-need-to-know-about-orcid-right-now/

Ten things you need to know about ORCID right now

An ORCID identifier for Mike Eisen (or as we know him, http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7528-738X)

An ORCID identifier for Mike Eisen (aka http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7528-738X)
Have you ever tried to search for an author, only to
discover that he shares a name with 113 other researchers? Or realized
that Google Scholar stopped tracking citations to your work after you
took your spouse’s surname a few years back?
If so, you’ve probably wished for ORCID.

ORCID IDs
are permanent identifiers for researchers. Community uptake has
increased tenfold over the past year, and continues to be adopted by new
institutions, funders, and journals on a daily basis. ORCID may prove
to be one of the most important advances in scholarly communication in
the past ten years.


Here are ten things you need to know about ORCID and its importance to you.

1. ORCIDs protects your unique scholarly identity

There are approximately 200,000 people per unique surname in China. That’s a lot of “J Wang”s–more than 1200 in nanoscience alone! Same for lots of other names: we’re just not as uniquely named as we think.

Not a Wang? You’ll probably still need ORCID if you plan to assume
your spouse’s family name, or accidentally omit your middle initial from
the byline when submitting a manuscript.

ORCID solves the author name
problem by giving individuals a unique, 16-digit numeric identification
number that lasts over time.


The numbers are stored in a central
registry, which will power a research infrastructure that ensures that
people find the correct “J Wang” and
get credit for all their publications.

2. Creating an ORCID identifier takes 30 seconds

Setting up an ORCID record is easier than setting up a Facebook account, and literally only takes 30 seconds.

Plus, if you’ve published before, you likely already have a ResearcherID or Scopus Author ID, or you may have publications indexed in CrossRef–which
means that you can easily import information from those systems into
your ORCID record, letting those websites do the grunt work for you.


3. ORCID is getting big fast

Growth in ORCID identifiers, from Oct. 2012-Mar. 2014

Growth in ORCID identifiers, from Oct. 2012-Mar. 2014
Even if you haven’t yet encountered ORCID, you likely will soon. The number of ORCID users grew ten-fold over 2013, and continues to grow daily.
You’ll likely encounter ORCID identifers more and more often on journal
websites and funding applications–a great reason to better understand
ORCID’s purpose and uses.

4. ORCID lasts longer than your email address

Anyone who has ever moved
institutions knows the pain of losing touch with colleagues once access
to your old university email disappears. ORCID eases that pain by
storing your most recent email address.
If you choose to share it, your email address can be shared across
platforms–meaning you spend less time updating your many profiles.


5. ORCID supports 37 types of “works,” from articles to dance performances

Any type of scholarly output you create, ORCID can handle.

Are you a traditional scientists, who writes only papers and the occasional book chapter? ORCID can track ‘em.

Are you instead a cutting-edge computational biologist who releases datasets and figures for your thesis, as they are created? ORCID can track that, too.

Not a scientist at all, but an art professor? You can import your works using ORCID, as well, using ISNI2ORCID… you get the idea.

ORCID will even start importing information about your service to your discipline soon!

6. You control who views your ORCID information

Concerned about the privacy implications of ORCID? You’re in luck–ORCID has granular privacy controls.

When setting up your ORCID record, you can select the default privacy settings for all of your content–Open to everyone, Open to trusted parties (web services that you’ve linked to your ORCID record), or Open only to yourself. Once your profile is populated, you can set custom privacy levels for each item, easy as pie.

7. ORCID is glue for all your research services

You can connect your ORCID account with websites including Web of Science, Figshare, and Impactstory, among many others.

Once they’re connected, you can easily push information
back and forth between services–meaning that a complete ORCID record
will allow you to automatically import the same information to multiple
places, rather than having to enter the same information over and over
again on different websites.
And new services are connecting to ORCID every day, sharing information across an increasing number of platforms–repositories, funding agencies, and more!

8. Journals, funders & institutions are moving to ORCID

Some of the world’s largest publishers, funders, and institutions have adopted ORCID.

Over 1000 journals, including publications by PLOS, Nature, and Elsevier,
are using ORCID as a way to make it easier for authors to manage their
information in manuscript submission systems. ORCID can also collect
your publications from across these varied services, making it possible
to aggregate author-level metrics.


Funding agencies are integrating their systems with ORCID for similar reasons. Funders from the Wellcome Trust to the NIH
now request that grantees use ORCIDs to manage information in their
systems, and many other funding agencies across the world are following
suit.
In 2013, universities accounted for the largest percentage of all new ORCID members. ORCID helps institutions track your work, compile information for university-level reporting (i.e., total funding received by its scholars), and more efficiently manage information on faculty profiles.
By eliminating redundancies and automating some reporting functions,
ORCID will be especially helpful in reducing time and monies spent on REF and other assessment activities.

9. When everyone has an ORCID identifier, scholarship gets better

How many hours have you wasted by filling in your address,
employment history, collaborator names and affiliations, etc when
applying for grants or submitting manuscripts? For many publishers and
funders, you can now simply supply your ORCID identifier, saving you
precious time to do research.

10. ORCID is open source, open data, and community-driven

It’s also Open by design. ORCID is an open source web-app that allows other web-apps to use its open API and mine its open data. (We actually use ORCID’s open API to easily import information into your Impactstory profile.) Openness like ORCID’s supports innovation and transparency, and can keep us from focusing myopically on limited publication types or single indicators of impact.
And there we have it–ten things you now know about ORCID.
Reference them and you’ll sound like an expert at your next department
meeting (to which you should of course bring your custom ORCID mug). :)
Do you use ORCID? Leave your ORCID identifier in the comments, along with your thoughts about the system.
Thanks to ORCID’s Rebecca Bryant for feedback on this post.


Ten things you need to know about ORCID right now | Impactstory blog

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