Looking back at 2025, #OpenCitations focused on strengthening the foundations: stronger workflows, resilient infrastructure, and deeper community collaboration.

Read the story behind the work in our year in review on the #OpenCitationsBlog
👉 https://opencitations.hypotheses.org/4106

For #OpenCitations, it has become a tradition to take a moment at the end of January to reflect on the achievements of the past year and plan for the future with a clearer mind. In 2024, we have been working on behind-the-scenes improvements that will transform the OpenCitations experience for our users and services in 2025. Revisit the key steps of last year with us in the new blog post on #OpenCitationsBlog: https://opencitations.hypotheses.org/3774
Wheels Are in Motion: OpenCitations’ progress in 2024

January is a strange month. After the festive whirl of December’s gatherings, it quickly shifts into the hustle and bustle of the new year’s commitments and the work that follows the holidays. For us at OpenCitations, however, it has become a tradition to take a moment at the end of this month to pause after … Continue reading Wheels Are in Motion: OpenCitations’ progress in 2024

OpenCitations blog

📢Apply now to the Workshop on Open Citations and Open Scholarly Metadata 2025 (28-29 May, Bologna, Italy), the call for participation and contributions is open!

📌Deadline: 13 January 2025

👉See https://workshop-oc.github.io for all the details.

🗞️Read the announcement on #OpenCitationsBlog: https://opencitations.hypotheses.org/3700

#WOOC2025 #Bologna #OpenScience
@BarcelonaDORI @unibo

Workshop on Open Citations

#OpenCitations is included in Infra Finder, a new tool from @investinopen designed to increase adoption of and investment in open infrastructure.
🔎Check out our entry and explore: https://infrafinder.investinopen.org/solutions/opencitations
📰Learn more on #OpenCitationsBlog: https://opencitations.hypotheses.org/3605
Solution: OpenCitations | Infra Finder

Infra Finder provides verified information on open infrastructures’ technical attributes, community engagement, governance, key policies, and more.

If you enjoy #OpenCitations contents on #OpenCitationsBlog and find them helpful for your research, please note that all our blog posts have registered DOIs and are indexed on the @rogue_scholar archive: https://rogue-scholar.org/blogs/opencitations
@opencitations
Rogue Scholar: OpenCitations blog

Rogue Scholar: The blog of the OpenCitations Infrastructure

Rogue Scholar
#2023, what a year for #OpenCitations! To say goodbye properly to the past year, we have dedicated these first weeks of #2024 to relive the main milestones, successes and encounters of 2023, and to plan our future activities. Read our new post on #OpenCitationsBlog, and come with us on this brief time travel: https://opencitations.hypotheses.org/3536
@scossfunding @openaire_eu @graspos @coarassessment @eoscassociation @jisc
Looking back to look ahead: OpenCitations’ achievements in 2023

The first month of the new year has almost come to an end, and we at OpenCitations have dedicated these weeks after the holiday season to retrace the progress we reached as an open infrastructure throughout 2023, an activity that has become a tradition in the past few years. Looking back to the achievements has … Continue reading Looking back to look ahead: OpenCitations’ achievements in 2023

OpenCitations blog

A revolution in #OpenCitations: forget the multiple indexes, the new ingestion workflow is designed to produce just two comprehensive collections: the OpenCitations Index, now containing almost 2 BILLION unique citations, and OpenCitations Meta, for the open bibliographical metadata.

👉Learn more about the new process and its benefits on #OpenCitationsBlog: https://opencitations.hypotheses.org/3499

@openaire_eu @graspos_project @scossfunding @crossref @europepmc_news @datacite

#OpenScience #COCI

A new revolutionary workflow for a unified collection of citations: say hello to the OpenCitations Index

Blog post by Ivan Heibi (University of Bologna), Arianna Moretti (University of Bologna) and Chiara Di Giambattista (University of Bologna). In the past five years, the OpenCitations data has been enriched with numerous new indexes of open citation data from different sources. However, the quantity and diversification of the ingested information have raised several issues, … Continue reading A new revolutionary workflow for a unified collection of citations: say hello to the OpenCitations Index

OpenCitations blog

📰The #OpenCitationsBlog posts are now featured with #DOIs on @admin the archive for science blogs recently launched by @mfenner. Learn more at: https://opencitations.hypotheses.org/3436

👉Thanks to a #Mastodon instance at Rogue Scholar Social, the OpenCitations blog has now its own Mastodon feed, where you can keep yourself updated about our last posts, by finding summaries and the related DOIs linking to the full post – Follow us at @opencitations

The OpenCitations blog posts are now archived on Rogue Scholar with DOIs

Last April, Martin Fenner launched Rogue Scholar, an archive of science blogs aiming to index full-text of blog posts, establish a full-text search, and register DOIs and metadata for all posts.

OpenCitations blog
#OpenCitationsBlog is now published in the #Hypotheses Blogs Catalogue! Hypotheses is part of #OpenEdition portal, and OpenCitations blog will be now added to catalogues specialised in #humanities such as #Isidore. Find the record here: https://www.openedition.org/42941
OpenCitations Blog

Bibliographic citations are central to academia, knitting together independent works of scholarship into a global endeavour and providing authors with a mechanism for assigning credit to other r...

We are delighted to announce that the French National Fund for Open Science has renewed its commitment to sustaining the activities of four #SCOSS-selected infrastructures, including #OpenCitations. Thank you #FNSO for contributing to supporting our development! Learn more on #OpenCitationsBlog:

https://opencitations.hypotheses.org/3389

The French National Fund for Open Science renews its support to OpenCitations

We are delighted to announce that the French National Fund for Open Science (FNSO) has renewed its commitment to sustaining the activities of four SCOSS-selected infrastructures, including OpenCitations.  The four supported infrastructures (OpenCitations, the DOAB, LA Referencia and ROR) “were evaluated by the jury composed by SCOSS, then according to the exemplary criteria of the Committee for the … Continue reading The French National Fund for Open Science renews its support to OpenCitations

OpenCitations blog