|
The Serial Item and Contribution Identifier (SICI) is a code (ANSI/NISO standard Z39.56) used to uniquely identify specific volumes, articles or other identifiable parts of a periodical. It is “intended primarily for use by those members of the bibliographic community involved in the use or management of serial titles and their contributions”.
DescriptionIt is an extension of the International Standard Serial Number, which identifies an entire periodical (similar to the way an ISBN number identifies a specific book). The ISSN applies to the entire publication, however, including every volume ever printed, so this more specific identifier was developed by the Serials Industry Systems Advisory Committee (SISAC) to allow references to specific parts of a journal. The variable-length code is compatible with other identifiers, such as DOI, PII, and URN.[1][2] It is free of charge. The SICI is a recognized international standard and is in wide use by publishers and the bibliographic community, primarily as an aid to finding existing articles or issues.[3] JSTOR adopted SICIs in 2001 as the primary article identifier, due to their persistence and applicability to the many types of journal content found in JSTOR's archive.[4][5] DetailsThe SICI code is composed of three segments, intended to be both human-readable and easy for machines to parse automatically. The following example SICI is explained below[6]:
Item segment
Contribution segment
Control segment
Examples
INFOTo use as an info URI, the SICI is percent-encoded and prefixed.
URNTo use in a URN, the SICI is percent-encoded and prefixed.[7] For example, to create a URN for a specific article “From text to hypertext by indexing” in the journal ACM Transactions on Information Systems:
This could then be used to refer to the article inside an HTML citation (in the <blockquote cite="urn:sici:1046-8188(199501)13:1%3C69:FTTHBI%3E2.0.TX;2-4"> <p>A model is presented for converting a collection of documents to hypertext by means of indexing. The documents are assumed to be semistructured, i.e., their text is a hierarchy of parts, and some of the parts consist of natural language. The model is intended as a framework for specifying hypertextual reading capabilities for specific application areas and for developing new automated tools for the conversion of semistructured text to hypertext.</p> </blockquote> An internet draft proposal to officially register the SICI namespace for URNs with IANA was made in 2002, but is currently dormant.[9][10] DOISICI codes can be used as the item ID in a DOI identifier.[11] In the following example, the number 10.1002 is the DOI's publisher ID, a slash acts as a separator, and the rest, which is publisher-specific, is the SICI code:
See also
References
External links
|
This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
Mercedes Car
This site monitored by SitePinger.net