Software citation principles

Software is a critical part of modern research and yet there is little support across the scholarly ecosystem for its acknowledgement and citation. Inspired by the activities of the FORCE11 working group focused on data citation, this document summarizes the recommendations of the FORCE11 Software Citation Working Group and its activities between June 2015 and April 2016. Based on a review of existing community practices, the goal of the working group was to produce a consolidated set of citation principles that may encourage broad adoption of a consistent policy for software citation across disciplines and venues. Our work is presented here as a set of software citation principles, a discussion of the motivations for developing the principles, reviews of existing community practice, and a discussion of the requirements these principles would place upon different stakeholders. Working examples and possible technical solutions for how these principles can be implemented will be discussed in a separate paper.

PeerJ Computer Science
Software citation principles

Software is a critical part of modern research and yet there is little support across the scholarly ecosystem for its acknowledgement and citation. Inspired by the activities of the FORCE11 working group focused on data citation, this document summarizes the recommendations of the FORCE11 Software Citation Working Group and its activities between June 2015 and April 2016. Based on a review of existing community practices, the goal of the working group was to produce a consolidated set of citation principles that may encourage broad adoption of a consistent policy for software citation across disciplines and venues. Our work is presented here as a set of software citation principles, a discussion of the motivations for developing the principles, reviews of existing community practice, and a discussion of the requirements these principles would place upon different stakeholders. Working examples and possible technical solutions for how these principles can be implemented will be discussed in a separate paper.

PeerJ Computer Science
Information and institutional change: The case of digital libraries
(2003) : Agre, Philip
url: https://pages.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/agre/change.html
#__printed #digital_libraries #institutional_change
#my_bibtex
Information and Institutional Change

An Extended Analysis of the Persistence of Persistent Identifiers of the Scholarly Web
(2021) : Martin Klein and Lyudmila Balakireva
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00799-021-00315-w
#DOI #best_practices #citation_analysis #digital_libraries #scholarsh
#my_bibtex