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Identificador de Investigador ORCID×Sistema de Identificadores de Objetos Digitales×
CampoHabilidades de investigaciónHabilidades de investigación
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen2010 (founding); 2012 (launch)1998 (concept); 2001 (widespread adoption)
Autor originalORCID Inc., a non-profit founded in 2010 by Liz Haak and othersNorman Paskin, CrossRef and International DOI Foundation (1998)
TipoStandardStandard
Fuente seminalHaak, L. L., Fenner, M., Paglione, L., Pentz, E., & Ratner, H. (2012). ORCID: A system to uniquely identify researchers. Learn. Publ., 25(4), 259–264. DOI ↗Paskin, N. (2010). Digital Object Identifier (DOI) system. Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences, 3rd ed., 1586–1592. ISBN: 978-0-8493-9712-7
AliasORCID, researcher identifier, ORCID iDDOI, Digital Object Identifier, persistent identifier
Relacionados44
ResumenORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) is a free, unique, persistent 16-digit identifier assigned to researchers that distinguishes them from others with the same or similar names. Launched in 2012 by ORCID Inc., a non-profit organization, the ORCID system addresses a critical problem in scholarly communication: name ambiguity. Millions of researchers worldwide share names (e.g., 'Smith, J.'). Without a unique identifier, citations and publications are difficult to attribute correctly, author H-indices are miscalculated, and researchers are credit for work they did not do. An ORCID iD is free, permanent, and owned by the researcher; it persists regardless of affiliation changes or career transitions.A Digital Object Identifier (DOI) is a unique, persistent alphanumeric code that identifies a scholarly work (journal article, book chapter, dataset, preprint) and persists even if the URL changes. Introduced in 1998 by Norman Paskin and the International DOI Foundation, DOIs are now standard in academic publishing. They consist of a prefix (assigned to a publisher or organization) and a suffix (assigned to an individual work), formatted as 10.XXXX/XXXXX (e.g., 10.1371/journal.pmed.1000097). DOIs are registered with international agencies (CrossRef, DataCite, mEDRA) and resolve through the centralized resolver https://doi.org/, ensuring that a DOI will direct users to the correct article regardless of whether the publisher's website changes location.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: ORCID Researcher Identifier · Digital Object Identifier System. Recuperado el 2026-06-18 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare