![]() ![]() ![]() There are interfaces for people (to look up small numbers of DOIs): Metadata Search, and Simple Text Query. We have various options for retrieving metadata - some are more suitable for human use, and some for machine use. To retrieve metadata from Crossref, you do not need to be a member. And of course, members themselves are able to use our free APIs and public data files too. ![]() They use our free APIs to help them get the most complete, up-to-date set of metadata from all of our publisher members. Manuscript tracking services, search services, bibliographic management software, library systems, author profiling tools, specialist subject databases, scholarly sharing networks - all of these (and more) incorporate scholarly metadata into their software and services. Learn more about the metadata each member is depositing with us using our Participation Reports. ![]() While we collect and distribute metadata, we do not change members’ metadata. We make this metadata openly available via our APIs and public data files, which means people and machines can incorporate it into their research tools and services. The metadata includes a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) in each record, which links to the content even if it moves to a new website. Metadata does not include the full-text of the content itself, just information about the content. They send us information called metadata which we collect and store in a standard way. Members register content with us to let the world know it exists. The collective power of our members’ metadata is available to use through a variety of tools and APIs-allowing anyone to search and reuse the metadata in sophisticated ways. ![]()
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