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<article-id> Article Identifier
Unique external identifier assigned to an article.
Usage/Remarks
Multiple Identifiers
There may be many identifiers for a single article, and each <article-id> holds only one. While such an identifier may be a unique identifier in some system,
an article can be identified in many systems. The content for this element may be
assigned by a publisher, a jobber, Crossref, or PubMed Central, for example. Examples
of such identifiers include the publisher’s tracking number, a DOI, a PNAS number,
etc.
Attribute Best Practice
Type of Identifier Best Practice
Best Practice is to use the @pub-id-type attribute to indicate the type of the external identifier, such as a publisher’s
identifier, a
DOI, a PMID, an aggregator’s or archive’s identifier, the identifier assigned by an
indexing or hosting service, or similar. (See @pub-id-type for values.)
Authority for Identifier Best Practice
The attribute @assigning-authority should name the organization or system that assigned the identifier or administers
the identifier (such as Crossref, OCLC, GenBank, Figshare).
External Identifier
The <article-id> element holds
an external identifier, typically assigned to a
document by an agency such as the publisher, an archive, an aggregator or hosting
service, or Crossref or other DOI authority. The contents of this element should not
be confused with the @id attribute, which holds an internal document identifier that can be used by software to perform a simple link inside
the document.
Conversion Note
An archive may attempt to carry all the identifiers associated with an article. For
example, during conversion PubMed Central will create <article-id>s for identifiers that come from the publisher as elements or as attributes on the
original article.
Historical Note
Until JATS version 1.2d2
(2018), the @contrib-id-type’s value conflated two
meanings: the attribute could hold the
type of identifier (such as an ORCID or a arXiv Identifier), or it could hold the
name of the organization or system
that defined or registered the identifier (such as ORCID or Elsevier). There was no
way to state both that
the identifier content of the element was a Scopus Identifier and that the
administrator was
Elsevier. Although all the previous @contrib-id-type values will continue to be accepted, for Best Practice, the @assigning-authority
should name an organization, and the @pub-id-type attribute should describe the identifier type.
Models and Context
May be contained in
Description
Text, numbers, or special characters
Content Model
<!ELEMENT article-id (#PCDATA) >
Tagged Samples
Multiple IDs, differentiated by @pub-id-type
<article dtd-version="1.3"> <front> <journal-meta>...</journal-meta> <article-meta> <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">1037</article-id> <article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.1128/JCM.39.7.2634-2636.2001</article-id> <article-id pub-id-type="pmid">11427581</article-id> <article-categories>...</article-categories> <title-group> <article-title>Molecular Identification of a <italic>Dietzia maris</italic> Hip Prosthesis Infection Isolate</article-title> </title-group> ... </article-meta> </front> ... </article>
Mathematical Reviews (MR) article identifier
...
<article-meta>
<article-id assigning-authority="mr"
pub-id-type="publisher-id">1707243</article-id>
...
</article-meta>
...
Zentralblatt MATH (zbMATH) article identifier
...
<article-meta>
<article-id pub-id-type="zbl">06451297</article-id>
...
</article-meta>
...