Jumping in a little late...

David Lowe brought to my attention the recent discussion of ORCID and ISNI and 
VIAF on the CODE4LIB listserv.  I wanted to toss into the discussion a few more 
pieces of information about ORCID.

ORCID is user-driven, and as posters have noted individuals may register (for 
free) or their employers can create an ORCID record on their behalf. In 
addition, ORCID identifiers are being integrated into "publishing" (really, 
making public) workflows such as manuscript submission, grant application, 
hiring/on-boarding, thesis completion, dataset deposits, peer review, and 
more--so that it becomes a component of the metadata in a variety of records. 
ORCID also supports linkages to name variants (across languages) and other 
person identifiers such as Scopus Author ID, ResearcherID, and ISNI.  

As noted, there is some (limited) support for RDF.  We should be able to do 
more with this next year.  While ORCID does not have central library authority 
control, a consumer of ORCID information can obtain data provenance 
information. So, in addition to the linkages between the ORCID identifier and 
other identifiers (for people, research objects, and organizations), users may  
obtain the source of that linkage--whether the claim was made by the record 
holder, their employer, or a trusted third party such as a publisher.  We are 
currently working on functionality to support third-party assertions (by ORCID 
member organizations) on the individual self-assertions (more here: 
http://orcid.org/blog/2014/06/02/working-group-recommendations-multiple-assertions).

ISNI, ORCID, and VIAF support different use cases, and power comes in working 
together to support interoperability between data systems.  For example, ISNI 
incorporates library authority control, necessary for managing records for 
deceased or otherwise inactive researchers.  Together, ISNI, ORCID, and VIAF 
provide the means for libraries, automated algorithms, and the researchers 
themselves to collaborate in managing the person disambiguation process.  ORCID 
and ISNI have been working together to support interoperability between the two 
systems, most recently by providing a tool to link a person's ISNI with their 
ORCID record (more on this collaboration here: 
http://www.isni.org/content/isni-and-orcid-sign-memo-understanding).

Cheers,

-Laure

Laurel L. Haak, PhD
Executive Director, ORCID
[email protected]
Tel: +1-301-922-9062
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5109-3700 
http://orcid.org

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