/pidgraph-notebooks

Jupyter notebooks with examples of querying different PID graphs and providers like OpenAlex, FREYA PID Graph, ORCID, ROR, Crossref. Developed at TIB as part of the BMBF funded project TAPIR.

Primary LanguageJupyter NotebookBSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" LicenseBSD-3-Clause

pidgraph-notebooks

DOI Binder

A collection of Jupyter notebooks with examples of querying different PID providers like ORCID, ROR, Crossref and PID graphs like the FREYA PID Graph, OpenAlex and OpenAIRE for connected objects.

Currently included connections:

  • organization-organization
    • input: ROR
    • output: hierarchy of sub-organizations starting at given organization, each identified by their ROR
    • data sources: ROR
  • organization-people
    • input: ROR
    • output: list of people affiliated with the organization, each identified by their ORCID iD
    • data sources: FREYA PID Graph, OpenAlex, ORCID
  • person-works
    • input: ORCID
    • output: list of works authored/created by the person, each identified by their DOI
    • data sources: Crossref, FREYA PID Graph, OpenAlex, ORCID, OpenAIRE
  • work-projects
    • input: DOI
    • output: list of projects the work was produced in, each identified by their OpenAIRE project ID
    • data sources: OpenAIRE

Please navigate into the respective folder to see the list of available notebooks.

Run notebooks

While GitHub renders Jupyter notebooks as static HTML files (not executable), you can use this link to launch the notebooks on Binder where you can execute and modify them: Binder

Screenshot Binder


Background

In the joint project TAPIR (Partially Automated Persistent Identifier-based Reporting), partially automated procedures for research reporting are being tested in the context of university and non-university research. To this end, the question is being investigated :

To what extent can the necessary data aggregation be carried out on the basis of openly available research information using persistent identifiers?

More information in our blog post "Project TAPIR: Harvesting the power of PIDs"