Digital object identifier

From Proteopedia

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A DOI is uniquely assigned to an individual version of a Proteopedia page, although not all Proteopedia pages have DOIs assigned to them. When available, a DOI is the best way to reference your work in Proteopedia. For example, to reference the page [[Ribosome|http://proteopedia.org/w/Ribosome]] you would type in your resumee:
A DOI is uniquely assigned to an individual version of a Proteopedia page, although not all Proteopedia pages have DOIs assigned to them. When available, a DOI is the best way to reference your work in Proteopedia. For example, to reference the page [[Ribosome|http://proteopedia.org/w/Ribosome]] you would type in your resumee:
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Ribosome, W.Decatur et al, 2013, Proteopedia, doi:xxx/yyy/zzz
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Ribosome, W.Decatur et al, 2013, Proteopedia, http://dx.doi.org/10.999/370873/1837505
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== Reaching a Proteopedia page from its DOI ==
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Type in your web browser as URL the prefix <nowiki>http://dx.doi.org/</nowiki> followed by the DOI of a page, and it will take you to the referenced Proteopedia page.
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Revision as of 08:43, 7 October 2013

A digital object identifier (DOI) is a unique alphanumeric string assigned by a registration agency (the International DOI Foundation) to identify content and provide a persistent link to a journal article’s location on the Internet.

DOI in Proteopedia

A DOI is uniquely assigned to an individual version of a Proteopedia page, although not all Proteopedia pages have DOIs assigned to them. When available, a DOI is the best way to reference your work in Proteopedia. For example, to reference the page http://proteopedia.org/w/Ribosome you would type in your resumee:

Ribosome, W.Decatur et al, 2013, Proteopedia, http://dx.doi.org/10.999/370873/1837505

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Jaime Prilusky, Wayne Decatur, Eric Martz

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