A colleague urged her friends to join ORCID: http://about.orcid.org/, but I 
really do not much more about it beyond this short Wikipedia piece: 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ORCID, 


" ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) is a nonproprietary alphanumeric 
code to uniquely identify scientific and other academic authors . [1] [2] [3] 
This addresses the problem that a particular author's contributions to the 
scientific literature can be hard to electronically recognize as most personal 
names are not unique, they can change (such as with marriage), have cultural 
differences in name order, contain inconsistent use of first-name abbreviations 
and employ different writing systems . It would provide for humans a persistent 
identity — an "author DOI" — similar to that created for content-related 
entities on digital networks by digital object identifiers (DOIs). [4] 

The ORCID organization offers an open and independent registry intended to be 
the de facto standard for author identification in science and related academic 
publishing . On 16 October 2012, ORCID launched its registry services [ 5 ] [ 6 
] and started issuing user identifiers. [ 7 ] " 




Sounds to me like the author's equivalent of an article's DOI. Have any of you 
heard of it? Any comments would be welcome. 




MIguel 



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