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(to repeat a comment I made on the blog)

We're seeing a huge amount of non-traditional scholarly activity (if you'll pardon the dry phrase) happening in blogs. Alternative metrics aka altmetrics (as distinct from altmetric.com) have been taking in to consideration the scholarly activity that happens around traditional publishing for a while. Crossref, the organisation who brought you DOIs for scholarly publications, thought that it would be a good idea to help collect this kind of data as a counterpoint to traditional publishing and citations. We're building Crossref Event Data, which is a free (libre, gratis) service for collecting mentions of articles on blogs and social media, so that it can be used by the community in all kinds of ways. Discoverability, recommendations, and yes, maybe more metrics. How you use it is up to you.

The article raises a good point about blogs as primary methods of publishing rather than, for example, as a venue for the discussion of traditionally published articles. Establishing an open 'citation'-graph-like-dataset of blogs is a good first step toward that.

We're heading into Beta soon, and you can read more about it https://www.crossref.org/services/event-data . The User guide is a work in progress, but might answer any questions you have: https://www.eventdata.crossref.org/guide . You can also contact me at jwass@crossref.org if you have any questions.




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