2 minute read.PatentCite
If you’ve ever thought that scholarly citation practice was antediluvian and perverse- you should check-out patents some day.
Over the past year of so Crossref has been working with Cambia and the The Lens to explore how we can better link scholarly literature to and from the patent literature. The first object of our collaboration was to attempt to link patents hosted on the new, beta version of The Lens to the Scholarly literature. To do this, Crossref and Cambia been enhancing Crossref’s citation matching mechanisms in order to better resolve the wide variety of eclectic and terse patent citation styles to Crossref DOIs.
You can see the results of these ongoing attempts on the The Lens beta site where all of The Len’s 8 million+ 80 million+ patents and applications (obtained through subscriptions with WIPO, USPTO, EPO and IP Australia) are starting to be linked directly to the scholarly literature. See, for example:
http://beta.lens.org/lens/patent/US\_RE42150\_E1/citations
[Editor’s update: Link is broken. Removed January 2021]
Crossref has taken this matched data and has now released a Crossref Labs *experimental* service , called PatentCite, that allows you to take any Crossref DOI and see what Patents in the The Lens system cite it.
As with all Crossref Labs services- this one is likely to be:
a) As stable as the global economy
c) As reliable as a UK train
ii) Out-of-date. It is based on a snapshot of Crossref /Lens data.
- As accurate as my list ordering
Howzat for an SLA?
As we get feedback from Crossref’s membership and as we gain more experience linking Patents to and from the scholarly literature, we will explore including this functionality in our production CitedBY service. But until then- please send us your feedback on this experimental service.
Further reading
- Feb 24, 2014 – Many Metrics. Such Data. Wow.
- Apr 3, 2024 – Testing times
- Mar 15, 2024 – Credential Checking at Crossref
- Sep 28, 2023 – Feedback on automatic digital preservation and self-healing DOIs
- Jun 29, 2023 – A Request for Comment - Automatic Digital Preservation and Self-Healing DOIs
- Jun 21, 2023 – Crossref Research and Development: Releasing our Tools from the Ground Up
- Oct 19, 2022 – Forming new relationships: Contributing to Open source
- Sep 6, 2022 – Accessibility for Crossref DOI Links: Call for comments on proposed new guidelines