From the ORCID Outreach Meeting, May 21-22, 2014, Chicago, Illinois, USA, https://orcid.org/content/orcid-outreach-meeting-and-codefest-may-2014
ORCID identifiers in access management
Universities and other research organizations have begun utilizing the ORCID identifier to manage access to repositories and research information systems. This session will feature a discussion of integration opportunities, policy and privacy issues, and demonstrations by research organizations.
Moderator: Ed Pentz, Executive Director, CrossRef
Presenters:
Keith Hazelton, Senior IT Architect the University of Wisconsin-Madison/Chair of Internet2 MACE-Dir working group
Jared Lyle, Director of Curation Services, Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR), University of Michigan
Ken Okaya, Product Manager, Rightsholder Services, Copyright Clearance Center / slides
Doug Hahn, Senior Information Technology Manager, Texas A&M University
Elaine Westbrooks, Associate University Librarian for Research, University of Michigan
1. ORCID Identifiers @ ICPSR
Jared Lyle
lyle@umich.edu
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8623-7612
ORCID Outreach Meeting
Chicago
21 May 2014
2. What is ICPSR?
• Repository of social science data established in
1962 for data sharing and preservation
• Membership-based organization -- over 740
institutional members (colleges and
universities) from around the world
• Source for training in statistics and data
curation through the Summer Program
7. Sponsored Archives
• Child Care and Early Education Research Connections
• Data Sharing for Demographic Research
• Health and Medical Care Archive
• Measures of Effective Teaching Longitudinal Database
• National Addiction & HIV Data Archive Program
• National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging
• National Archive of Criminal Justice Data
• Resource Center for Minority Data
• Substance Abuse & Mental Health Data Archive
15. “Since data are still considered an alternative
metric of a researcher's impact, the more data
repositories and altmetric organizations can take
advantage of ORCIDs, the more a researcher's
impact becomes apparent (not to mention the
value of shared research data).”
-Elizabeth Moss (ICPSR)
16. "It [an ORCID] would be attached to researchers' journal
publications, and could also be assigned to data sets they
helped to generate, comments on their colleagues' blog
posts or unpublished draft papers, edits of Wikipedia
entries and much else besides. This kind of
'microattribution' could ultimately make it possible for
each researcher to have a constantly updated 'digital
curriculum vitae' providing a picture of his or her
contributions to science going far beyond the simple
publication list."
“Credit where credit is due” editorial
(http://doi.org/10.1038/462825a)
24. • Whether to use?
– Wait or lead?
– Integration with Michigan ecosystem?
• How to implement?
– Retrofit, integrate, or build into new system?
• Using ORCID to link data with publications.
26. • What do our users want?
• What is most beneficial to the community?
27. • Make the primary email address in ORCID
viewable to trusted third parties by default.
• Allow depositor to link previous deposits to
ORCID ID upon submission.
• Once ORCID IDs for all University of Michigan
faculty and staff, consider retrofit to add those
ORCID IDs to our collection.
• Authority control for authors -- clean up
underlying database so authors can be
disambiguated.
• Linking data with publications.