Identifiers for Earth Science Data Sets: Where We Have Been and Where We Need to Go

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5334/dsj-2017-023

Keywords:

Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs), Persistent Identifiers, Data Citation, DataCite, Google Scholar, Provenance

Abstract

Considerable attention has been devoted to the use of persistent identifiers for assets of interest to scientific and other communities alike over the last two decades. Among persistent identifiers, Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs) stand out quite prominently, with approximately 133 million DOIs assigned to various objects as of February 2017. While the assignment of DOIs to objects such as scientific publications has been in place for many years, their assignment to Earth science data sets is more recent. Applying persistent identifiers to data sets enables improved tracking of their use and reuse, facilitates the crediting of data producers, and aids reproducibility through associating research with the exact data set(s) used. Maintaining provenance – i.e., tracing back lineage of significant scientific conclusions to the entities (data sets, algorithms, instruments, satellites, etc.) that lead to the conclusions, would be prohibitive without persistent identifiers. This paper provides a brief background on the use of persistent identifiers in general within the US, and DOIs more specifically. We examine their recent use for Earth science data sets, and outline successes and some remaining challenges. Among the challenges, for example, is the ability to conveniently and consistently obtain data citation statistics using the DOIs assigned by organizations that manage data sets.

Author Biography

Justin C. Goldstein, US Global Change Research Program, Washington DC; and ICF, Fairfax, VA

(2012-2017) - US Global Change Research Program: Washington, DC. Employed by the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) 2012 - 2015, ICF 2015 - 2017.

 

*At the time of publication, Justin is now affiliated with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Washington, DC, USA), however this research in this paper was conducted during his tenure at the institutions mentioned above.

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Published

2017-04-21