Open Bibliography and Open Bibliographic Data » npg http://openbiblio.net Open Bibliographic Data Working Group of the Open Knowledge Foundation Tue, 08 May 2018 15:46:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.3.1 Nature’s data platform strongly expanded http://openbiblio.net/2012/07/20/natures-data-platform-strongly-expanded/ http://openbiblio.net/2012/07/20/natures-data-platform-strongly-expanded/#comments Fri, 20 Jul 2012 20:05:06 +0000 http://openbiblio.net/?p=2862 Continue reading ]]> Nature has largely expanded its Linked Open Data platform that was launched in April 2012. From today’s press release:

Logo of the journal Nature used in its first issue on Nov. 4, 1869

“As part of its wider commitment to open science, Nature Publishing Group’s (NPG) Linked Data Platform now hosts more than 270 million Resource Description Framework (RDF) statements. It has been expanded more than ten times, in a growing number of datasets. These datasets have been created under the Creative Commons Zero (CC0) waiver, which permits maximal use/reuse of this data. The data is now being updated in real-time and new triples are being dynamically added to the datasets as articles are published on nature.com.

Available at http://data.nature.com, the platform now contains bibliographic metadata for all NPG titles, including Scientific American back to 1845, and NPG’s academic journals published on behalf of our society partners. NPG’s Linked Data Platform now includes citation metadata for all published article references. The NPG subject ontology is also significantly expanded.

The new release expands the platform to include additional RDF statements of bibliographic, citation, data citation and ontology metadata, which are organised into 12 datasets – an increase from the 8 datasets previously available. Full snapshots of this data release are now available for download, either by individual dataset or as a complete package, for registered users at http://developers.nature.com.

This is exciting, especially the commitment to real-time updates is a great move and shows how serious Linked Open Data becomes in general and in particular in the realm of bibliographic data. Also, Nature now uses the Data Hub and has registered the data seperated into several datasets.

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Nature releases Metadata for 450k Articles into the Public Domain http://openbiblio.net/2012/04/05/nature-releases-metadata-for-450k-articles-into-the-public-domain/ http://openbiblio.net/2012/04/05/nature-releases-metadata-for-450k-articles-into-the-public-domain/#comments Thu, 05 Apr 2012 10:04:16 +0000 http://openbiblio.net/?p=2594 Continue reading ]]> Yesterday Nature Publishing Group announced the launch of a Linked Data platform with RDF descriptions of more than 450,000 articles published by NPG since 1869.

From the press release:

Nature Publishing Group (NPG) today is pleased to join the linked data community by opening up access to its publication data via a linked data platform. NPG’s Linked Data Platform is available at http://data.nature.com.

The platform includes more than 20 million Resource Description Framework (RDF) statements, including primary metadata for more than 450,000 articles published by NPG since 1869. In this first release, the datasets include basic citation information (title, author, publication date, etc) as well as NPG specific ontologies. These datasets are being released under an open metadata license, Creative Commons Zero (CC0), which permits maximal use/re-use of this data.

NPG’s platform allows for easy querying, exploration and extraction of data and relationships about articles, contributors, publications, and subjects. Users can run web-standard SPARQL Protocol and RDF Query Language (SPARQL) queries to obtain and manipulate data stored as RDF. The platform uses standard vocabularies such as Dublin Core, FOAF, PRISM, BIBO and OWL, and the data is integrated with existing public datasets including CrossRef and PubMed.

That’s great news having such an important publisher moving towards open bibliographic data. As of yet, there are no dumps of the data available. Also, there is no entry on the Data Hub. Anybody?

There might be some problems with the platform from some browsers, but it is being worked on.

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