DataCite
International not-for-profit organization which aims to improve data citation
title: "DataCite" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["academic-publishing", "data-publishing", "electronic-documents", "identifiers", "index-(publishing)", "library-related-organizations", "non-profit-technology"] description: "International not-for-profit organization which aims to improve data citation" topic_path: "society/education" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DataCite" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary International not-for-profit organization which aims to improve data citation ::
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/39/DataCite-Logo_primary.png" caption="Data Cite's Logo"] ::
DataCite is an international not-for-profit organization which aims to improve data citation in order to:
- establish easier access to research data on the Internet
- increase acceptance of research data as legitimate, citable contributions to the scholarly record
- support data archiving that will permit results to be verified and re-purposed for future study.
History
In August 2009 a paper was published laying out an approach for a global registration agency for research data. DataCite was subsequently founded in London on 1 December 2009 by organisations from 6 countries: the British Library; the Technical Information Center of Denmark (DTIC); the TU Delft Library from the Netherlands; the National Research Council’s Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information (NRC-CISTI); the California Digital Library (University of California Curation Center - UC3); Purdue University (USA); and the German National Library of Science and Technology (TIB).
After the founding of DataCite, leading research libraries and information centres converged for the first official members’ convention in Paris on 5 February 2010. The inclusion of five further members was approved in the office of the International Council for Science (ICSU): Australian National Data Service (ANDS); Deutsche Zentralbibliothek für Medizin (ZB MED); GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences; French Institute for Scientific and Technical Information (INIST); and Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zürich.
Technical
The primary means of establishing easier access to research data is by DataCite members assigning persistent identifiers, such as digital object identifiers (DOIs), to data sets. Although currently leveraging the well-established DOI infrastructure, DataCite takes an open approach to identifiers, and considers other systems and services that help forward its objectives.
DataCite's recommended format for a data citation is:
- Creator (PublicationYear): Title. Publisher. Identifier Or alternatively:
- Creator (PublicationYear): Title. Version. Publisher. ResourceType. Identifier
DataCite recommends that DOI names are displayed as linkable, permanent URLs.
DataCite's metadata, which follows the RDF model, can include information about a data resource's subject, funder, an accompanying abstract, and other information. For contributors to a dataset, one can indicate whether they are a researcher, data collector, data manager, editor, translator, producer, sponsor, or several other roles.
Third-party tools allow the migration of content to and from other services, such as ODIN for ORCID.
Members
Source:
- Australia:
- Canada:
- National Research Council Canada - NRC-CNRC
- China:
- Denmark:
- Estonia:
- University of Tartu (/UT)
- Finland:
- France:
- Institut de l'information scientifique et technique - INIST-CNRS
- Germany:
- German National Library of Economics - ZBW
- German National Library of Medicine - ZB MED
- German National Library of Science and Technology - TIB
- Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences - GESIS
- Göttingen State and University Library - SUB
- Gesellschaft für wissenschaftliche Datenverarbeitung mbH Göttingen - GWDG
- Hungary:
- International:
- ICSU World Data System - ICSU-WDS
- Italy:
- Japan:
- Japan Link Center - JaLC
- Netherlands:
- TU Delft Library
- Norway:
- Republic of Korea:
- Russia
- South Africa:
- Sweden:
- Switzerland:
- CERN - European Organization for Nuclear Research
- Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich - ETH
- Thailand:
- United Kingdom:
- United States:
- California Digital Library - CDL
- Office of Scientific and Technical Information, US Department of Energy - OSTI
- Purdue University Libraries - PUL
- Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research - ICPSR
- Harvard University Library
- Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers - IEEE
- Open Knowledgebase of Interatomic Models - KIM
- United States Geological Survey - USGS
- University of Southern California - USC
Other partners
In April 2017, DataCite was one of the founding partners in the Initiative for Open Citations. In January 2023, DataCite announced a partnership with the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and the Wellcome Trust to develop an Open Global Data Citation Corpus. | last1 = Vierkant | first1 = Paul | title = Wellcome Trust and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative partner with DataCite to build the Open Global Data Citation Corpus | date = 17 January 2023 | journal = DataCite Blog | doi = 10.5438/vjz9-kx84 | url = https://blog.datacite.org/data-citation-corpus-announcement-2023/ | access-date = 2023-01-17
References
References
- "What is DataCite?". DataCite.
- (2009). "Approach for a joint global registration agency for research data". Information Services & Use.
- (20 July 2014). "DataCite and DOI names for research data". Journal of Computer-Aided Molecular Design.
- "University of California becomes founding member of Datacite".
- (16 February 2010). "Purdue Libraries becomes founding member of Datacite".
- "TIB becomes founding member of Datacite".
- "ANDS joins Datacite".
- "Inist join Datacite consortium".
- "What do we do?". DataCite.
- "Why cite data?". DataCite.
- "contributorType — DataCite Metadata Schema 4.6 documentation".
- Thorisson, Gudmundur. (2013-05-13). "New ORCID-integrated data citation tool". ODIN Project.
- "Members". Datacite.
- (6 April 2017). "Press". Initiative for Open Citations.
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