Definitely an incentive to use those doi, prc, & pmid parameters in the {{cite
web}} template!
Yours,
Peaceray
On Thu, Feb 5, 2015 at 2:31 PM, Aaron Halfaker <aaron.halfaker(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Dario and I just released our first static dump of
identifiers. Right
now, it only includes PubMed identifiers, but I'm running an extraction
right now to add DOIs. It turns out that they are non-trivial to extract
with regexes[1] alone, so I wrote an island parser to extract them from
wikimarkup[2] that seems to perform very well.
Halfaker, Aaron; Taraborelli, Dario (2015): Scholarly article citations in
Wikipedia. figshare.
http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.1299540
Retrieved 22:25, Feb 05, 2015 (GMT)
1.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/27910/finding-a-doi-in-a-document-or-page
2.
https://github.com/halfak/Extract-scholarly-article-citations-from-Wikipedi…
-Aaron
On Thu, Feb 5, 2015 at 4:13 PM, Jake Orlowitz <jorlowitz(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks, saw that! Really neat. We're
working on it with Analytics :)
On 2/5/15, Pine W <wiki.pine(a)gmail.com> wrote:
FYI:
http://www.altmetric.com/blog/new-source-alert-wikipedia/
Pine
*This is an Encyclopedia* <https://www.wikipedia.org/>
*One gateway to the wide garden of knowledge, where lies The deep rock
of
our past, in which we must delve The well of our
future,The clear water
we
must leave untainted for those who come after
us,The fertile earth, in
which truth may grow in bright places, tended by many hands,And the
broad
fall of sunshine, warming our first steps toward
knowing how much we do
not
know.*
*—Catherine Munro*
--
Jake Orlowitz
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