Persistent identifiers (PIDs) are reference keys to pieces of digital information or digital objects (Meadows and Haak 2018). PIDs are long-lasting, trustworthy and ideally globally unique, allowing information to be unambigiously associated with a digital object. This allows, for example, collection objects to be annotated with data (e.g., improved geographic coordinates) from different web services and databases (Page 2008). In 2014, Norway began an initiative to provide all museum specimens at the University of Oslo's Natural History Museum (UiO NHM) with PIDs persistent and globally unique identifiers (PIDs) in the form of universally unique identifiers (UUIDs) prefixed by a persistent uniform resource locator (PURL) (Endresen and Svind...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) – for people (researchers), places (their organizations) and things (t...
Persistent identifiers (PID) have existed for more than 20 years and have become well established as...
Two complementary movements have energized the need for improved information about research: Open Sc...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) are reference keys to pieces of digital information or digital objects...
Persistent identifiers (PID) to identify digital representations of physical specimens in natural sc...
Persistent identifiers (PID) to identify digital representations of physical specimens in natural sc...
One of the most desired (and still missing) elements to enable the concept of Digital Extended (Webs...
Persistent identifiers (PID’s) are essential for getting access and referring to library, archive an...
The Persistent Identifier (PID) project of the Dutch Digital Heritage Network (DHN) promotes sustain...
Persistent Identifier (PIDs) are a necessary tool to assure referenceability and - as their name say...
The studies have aimed to overcome the confusing variety of existing persistent identifier systems, ...
Knowledge Exchange commissioned three studies to investigate whether a URN:NBN based system could of...
A short introduction why “persistent identifiers” are needed and what systems are currently availabl...
The Persistent Identifier (PID) project of the Dutch Digital Heritage Network (DHN) promotes sustain...
Digital specimens are new information objects on the internet, which act as digital surrogates of th...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) – for people (researchers), places (their organizations) and things (t...
Persistent identifiers (PID) have existed for more than 20 years and have become well established as...
Two complementary movements have energized the need for improved information about research: Open Sc...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) are reference keys to pieces of digital information or digital objects...
Persistent identifiers (PID) to identify digital representations of physical specimens in natural sc...
Persistent identifiers (PID) to identify digital representations of physical specimens in natural sc...
One of the most desired (and still missing) elements to enable the concept of Digital Extended (Webs...
Persistent identifiers (PID’s) are essential for getting access and referring to library, archive an...
The Persistent Identifier (PID) project of the Dutch Digital Heritage Network (DHN) promotes sustain...
Persistent Identifier (PIDs) are a necessary tool to assure referenceability and - as their name say...
The studies have aimed to overcome the confusing variety of existing persistent identifier systems, ...
Knowledge Exchange commissioned three studies to investigate whether a URN:NBN based system could of...
A short introduction why “persistent identifiers” are needed and what systems are currently availabl...
The Persistent Identifier (PID) project of the Dutch Digital Heritage Network (DHN) promotes sustain...
Digital specimens are new information objects on the internet, which act as digital surrogates of th...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) – for people (researchers), places (their organizations) and things (t...
Persistent identifiers (PID) have existed for more than 20 years and have become well established as...
Two complementary movements have energized the need for improved information about research: Open Sc...