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WHAT IS A DOI: This short video by John Bond of Riverwinds Consulting explains what a DOI (or digital object identifier) is. MORE VIDEOS on DOIs can be found at: • What is a DOI or Digital Object Ident... FIND OUT more about John Bond and his publishing consulting practice at www.RiverwindsConsulting.com SEND IDEAS for John to discuss on Publishing Defined. Email him at [email protected] or see http://www.PublishingDefined.com CONNECT Twitter: / johnhbond LinkedIn: / johnbondnj Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/113338584... Goodreads: / john-bond YouTube: / johnbond BOOKS by John Bond: The Story of You: http://www.booksbyjohnbond.com/the-st... You Can Write and Publish a Book: http://www.booksbyjohnbond.com/you-ca... TRANSCRIPT: Hi there. I am John Bond from Riverwinds Consulting and this is Publishing Defined. Today I am going to give a brief explanation of DOI or digital object identifier. A DOI is a unique identifier for electronic documents such as a journal article. It is a set of numbers, letters, and/or symbols. Here is an example of what the DOI or digital object identifier looks like for the JAMA article that President Obama wrote. (doi:10.1001/jama.2016.9797) DOIs are most commonly associated, as I said, with journal articles, but they can represent a range of other content such as an individual table or figure, a white paper, a book chapter, research data sets, and many other items. DOIs are most commonly found on the first or main page of a journal article, or the particular item. DOIs are so pervasive now with well-respected journals, one rarely has to hunt to find one. Finding one for an article that you don’t have access to, is usually addressed by a quick web search using the article title and the letters DOI. The DOI is split into two parts: the prefix which indicates the registrant and the suffix which is chosen by the registrant for that item. Stored in association with the DOI is metadata for the item, including its URL. Using a DOI when referring to an item is more predictable or persistent than using the URL, as many times URLs may change. The DOI system began in 2000 and is managed by the International DOI Foundation and its affiliates. According to DOI.org, as of 2017, there are 133 million DOI names assigned and over 5 billion DOI resolutions per year. Go to DOI.org or CrossRef.org for a wealth of other information. Well that’s it. Please subscribe to my YouTube channel or click to see a playlist for more videos on DOIs. And make comments below or email me with questions. Thank you very much and take care.