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Presentation: ORCID & Its HKU Implementation

TitleORCID & Its HKU Implementation
Authors
Issue Date2013
PublisherThe Pacific Rim Digital Library Alliance (PRDLA).
Citation
Meeting of the Pacific Rim Digital Library Alliance (PRDLA), Vancouver, Canada, 2-4 October 2013 How to Cite?
AbstractORCID is a game changer. Up to now, those who do research and those who manage and use research have struggled mightily with proper individual identification in publications, patents, grants, architectural prizes, educational objects and more. The many problems of identity management are further exacerbated when dissimilar Chinese (漢字 Hanzi) names are transliterated into Roman homonyms and homographs. To solve these problems ORCID has sought and received buy-in from individuals, publishers, aggregators, funders and others. The University of Hong Kong (HKU) Libraries were part of the ORCID Technical Working Group from the beginning. Using ResearcherID, a precursor to ORCID, they created and populated ResearcherIDs for all HKU faculty. With this experience, and with newly downloaded and manually disambiguated publication data from Scopus for each HKU faculty member, HKU is now creating and populating ORCIDs for each member, on an “opt-out” basis. The HKU University Research Committee will soon direct all members to use their ORCIDs when submitting publications, applying for grants, etc.
DescriptionConference theme: Community and Collaboration – the Digital Pacific
Session 4
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/191175

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorPalmer, DT-
dc.date.accessioned2013-09-22T10:17:33Z-
dc.date.available2013-09-22T10:17:33Z-
dc.date.issued2013-
dc.identifier.citationMeeting of the Pacific Rim Digital Library Alliance (PRDLA), Vancouver, Canada, 2-4 October 2013en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/191175-
dc.descriptionConference theme: Community and Collaboration – the Digital Pacific-
dc.descriptionSession 4-
dc.description.abstractORCID is a game changer. Up to now, those who do research and those who manage and use research have struggled mightily with proper individual identification in publications, patents, grants, architectural prizes, educational objects and more. The many problems of identity management are further exacerbated when dissimilar Chinese (漢字 Hanzi) names are transliterated into Roman homonyms and homographs. To solve these problems ORCID has sought and received buy-in from individuals, publishers, aggregators, funders and others. The University of Hong Kong (HKU) Libraries were part of the ORCID Technical Working Group from the beginning. Using ResearcherID, a precursor to ORCID, they created and populated ResearcherIDs for all HKU faculty. With this experience, and with newly downloaded and manually disambiguated publication data from Scopus for each HKU faculty member, HKU is now creating and populating ORCIDs for each member, on an “opt-out” basis. The HKU University Research Committee will soon direct all members to use their ORCIDs when submitting publications, applying for grants, etc.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.publisherThe Pacific Rim Digital Library Alliance (PRDLA).-
dc.relation.ispartofMeeting of the Pacific Rim Digital Library Alliance-
dc.titleORCID & Its HKU Implementationen_US
dc.typePresentationen_US
dc.identifier.emailPalmer, DT: dtpalmer@hku.hk-
dc.description.naturepublished_or_final_version-
dc.identifier.hkuros230510-

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