Digital object identifier: Difference between revisions

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When Proteopedia's Editorial Board decide that a page reaches a mature state, that page is granted a DOI, a unique identifier that will permanently point to that state of the page frozen in time. At this stage, the content of the page is equivalent to a paper publication.
When Proteopedia's Editorial Board decide that a page reaches a mature state, that page is granted a DOI, a unique identifier that will permanently point to that state of the page frozen in time. At this stage, the content of the page is equivalent to a paper publication.


The page remains open for additions and further improvement, as expected in a collaborative wiki dynamic environment. When the new information and accumulated changes represent a significative improvement in the page, it can effectively be considered as a revised version of the previous published 'paper' and will be granted a new DOI.
The page remains open for additions and further improvement, as expected in a collaborative wiki dynamic environment. When the new information and accumulated changes represent a significative improvement in the page, it can effectively be considered as a revised version of the previous published paper and will be granted a new DOI.


A Proteopedia DOI points to a Proteopedia publication resulting from a rich world-wide interaction of scientists, with a dynamism and diversity not easy to obtain by interchanging word documents between a restricted group of contributors.
A Proteopedia DOI points to a Proteopedia publication resulting from a rich world-wide interaction of scientists, with a dynamism and diversity not easy to obtain by interchanging word documents between a restricted group of contributors.

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Jaime Prilusky, Wayne Decatur, Eric Martz