[openbiblio-dev] ORCID Releases Mock API Web Application

Tom Morris tfmorris at gmail.com
Fri Nov 11 20:54:58 UTC 2011


To answer my own question, I did a little searching and found that
ORCID IDs (ORCIDs?) are currently forecast to begin being assigned in
Q2 2012.

http://benosteen.wordpress.com/2011/09/22/orcid-executive-update-sept-11/

Tom

On Fri, Nov 11, 2011 at 2:51 PM, Tom Morris <tfmorris at gmail.com> wrote:
> That looks interesting, but it'd be a lot more interesting with live
> data.  Do they have a schedule?  I couldn't find anything in their
> FAQ.  A lot of the complexity in their system is probably to deal with
> the public/protected/private segmentation of data, but presumably
> you're principally (only?) interested in the public data which should
> be available more quickly.
>
>> Thad, I hope you may be able to assist with some of the large scale aspects of this by
>> supporting a Google Refine installation which would hook into these sources.
>
> If Thad's going to be writing a Refine reconciliation service, the
> example client app
> (https://github.com/ORCID/ORCID-Example-Client-Application) may be a
> probably a more useful starting point than the dummy server, but since
> ORCID is collecting millions of dollars and hiring staff in 2012,
> perhaps they'd like to directly offer the Refine reconciliation
> service as an alternate RESTful protocol for their server
> (http://code.google.com/p/google-refine/wiki/ReconciliationServiceApi)
>
>> I have several million, more or less open, name authority records in mathematics and related fields
>> ... which I would like to match into ORCID and other name authority sources ... as soon as feasible
>
> Several million authors would be a lot to do by hand, even using
> something like Refine and a custom reconciliation service.  You
> probably want to work out a workflow which uses a combination of
> machine and human processes to do the matching with high probability
> matches been done automatically.
>
> Since Refine doesn't have any queuing or collaboration features
> currently, the easiest short term approach is to chunk the data into
> morsels that a person could deal with in a single session and then
> distribute those morsels among your workers.
>
> Tom
>
> On Fri, Nov 11, 2011 at 12:19 PM, Jim Pitman <pitman at stat.berkeley.edu> wrote:
>>
>> This is a development we should be tracking closely.  Anyone willing to help test the API and
>> study the code to prepare for leveraging  ORCID capabilities for openbiblio purposes?
>> I have several million, more or less open, name authority records in mathematics and related fields
>> (cs, statistics, economics) which I would like to match into ORCID and other name authority sources
>> (LOC, VIAF, Microsoft, AuthorClaim, ScienceCard, Google, Freebase, Wikipedia, ....) as soon as feasible to establish open access
>> to bulk name authority data as part of the BibSoup effort.
>>
>> Thad, I hope you may be able to assist with some of the large scale aspects of this by
>> supporting a Google Refine installation which would hook into these sources.
>>
>>
>> --Jim
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> >From Brian.Wilson at thomsonreuters.com  Fri Nov 11 08:22:23 2011
>>>To: ORCID TWG Members and Supporters
>>>Subject: ORCID Releases Mock API Web Application
>>
>> Dear ORCID TWG Members and Supporters,
>>
>> We are extremely happy to announce that the ORCID development team has made the first ORCID code release.
>>
>> The ORCID-Mock-API-Web-Application is ready for people to download and run.   The Github repository for it is open to anybody as of now.
>>
>> This deployable WAR file provides a full implementation of the "ORCID Phase 1 Query API" (http://goo.gl/ctWlR) which third parties can use in order to start writing clients that require read-only access to the ORCID system. The system includes the ability to query for a researcher's "protected" profile elements though authentication via OAuth2. The big restriction is that, at the moment, this system is not tied to the real back-end database and will only deliver the included hard-coded, fake, ORCID profile.
>>
>> The development team has confirmed that it is easy to deploy this WAR in a standard servlet container (e.g.  Apache Tomcat 7) and that it works with existing third party OAuth client libraries.  ORCID will soon be (separately) releasing some of the code that he developed in Ruby to serve as further examples.
>>
>> The WAR is available on Github at:
>> https://github.com/ORCID
>>
>> Please report any issues you encounter with the system here:
>> https://github.com/ORCID/ORCID-Mock-API-Web-Application/issues
>>
>> General development questions, etc. can be directed to:
>> devsupport at orcid.org<mailto:devsupport at orcid.org>
>>
>> The next release of the Mock API WAR will include the ability to deposit/update profiles to the system.
>>
>> We'd like to thank everyone from the ORCID technical community for their thoughtful contributions to the API specification development, and more generally, for working collaboratively over the past two years to bring an important idea to fruition.  I'll quote Geoff Bilder when noting that our work has contributed to something that, "promises to become foundational scholarly cyberinfrastructure".  In addition, we should thank Mummi Thorisson and the Semantico team for beginning to deliver on our shared vision.  Most importantly, we owe a debt of gratitude to Geoff Bilder who possesses the vision... and stamina... to drive such a broad group of interests to such a promising execution phase.
>>
>> Please feel free to forward this email to other interested parties.  There have been some changes to our membership that I've tried to adjust in our email list, but if I've left anyone out, or there are others who would like to be included on future mailings, please have them contact me.
>>
>> Kind regards,
>> [cid:image001.jpg at 01CCA063.16AFD3D0]
>> Chair, ORCID Technical Working Group
>>
>> * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
>> Brian Wilson
>> Vice President, Chief Architect
>> Intellectual Property and Science
>> Thomson Reuters
>> brian.wilson at thomsonreuters.com
>> science.thomsonreuters.com<http://science.thomsonreuters.com/>
>>
>> This e-mail is for the sole use of the intended recipient and contains information that may be privileged and/or confidential. If you are not an intended recipient, please notify the sender by return e-mail and delete this e-mail and any attachments.
>> ----------------------------
>> ----------------------------------------------
>> Jim Pitman
>> Professor of Statistics and Mathematics
>> University of California
>> 367 Evans Hall # 3860
>> Berkeley, CA 94720-3860
>>
>> ph: 510-642-9970  fax: 510-642-7892
>> e-mail: pitman at stat.berkeley.edu
>> URL: http://www.stat.berkeley.edu/users/pitman
>>
>>
>>
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>




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