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Researching digital objects
Published in Catherine Dawson, A–Z of Digital Research Methods, 2019
The website of the International DOI Foundation (www.doi.org) provides Digital Object Identifier (DOI) services and registration. This is a ‘technical and social infrastructure for the registration and use of persistent interoperable identifiers, called DOIs, for use on digital networks’. DOIs can be assigned to any entity (physical, digital or abstract). A useful handbook and practical factsheets can be found on the website.
Identifiers and Identification
Published in Mike Cox, Linda Tadic, Ellen Mulder, Descriptive Metadata for Television An End-to-End Introduction, 2006
Mike Cox, Linda Tadic, Ellen Mulder
Digital object identifiers are names assigned to any entity for use on digital networks. The DOI system is claimed to provide a framework for supplying persistent identification, managing intellectual content and metadata, linking customers with content suppliers, facilitating electronic commerce, and enabling automated management of media. The DOI is a key component of the CNRI handle (discussed later). DIIs are purchased from the foundation and there is a charge for each one issued.
A functional BCI model by the IEEE P2731 working group: data storage and sharing
Published in Brain-Computer Interfaces, 2021
Luigi Bianchi, Alberto Antonietti, Garima Bajwa, Raffaele Ferrante, Mufti Mahmud, Pradeep Balachandran
The requirements developed by the WG in this paper align with the FAIRification process applied to BCI data. The FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Re-usable) principles [17] are outlined below: FindableData and metadata descriptions should be rich enough to enable attribute-based search.Data should be stored in a secure and persistent open repository.AccessibleData and metadata descriptions should support a variety of human-readable and machine-readable formats, and should be assigned persistent identifiers (e.g. DOI).Data and metadata should be accessible to humans and machines through appropriate authorization and well-defined protocols.InteroperableData and metadata description should follow nonproprietary, open file formats and well-defined, standard vocabulary.Re-usableMetadata description should be machine processable and verifiable to support easy data citation.