IOP Journals - Adding Value with Links
We believe that open linking between information resources should be a key
feature of online data services. That's why we make it easy for you to set up
links directly to IOP Journals from your Web site, database or OPAC. IOP
Journal abstracts are freely available to all, so anyone can access the
bibliographic citation and abstract of any article available in our Electronic
Journals service.
We also offer a wide range of links from references cited in IOP articles to
original full text articles, preprints, abstracts and document delivery
services. IOP is a key member of the publishers' CrossRef initiative that
promotes cross-publisher linking at the article level.
Linking in to IOP Journals
You can link to any level of the IOP Electronic Journals service - to a
journal, volume, issue or even a specific article.
STACKSTM
Our STACKS link management system and hyperlink
protocol, launched in 1999, allows librarians, publishers, database services
and online gateways to integrate links to IOP Journals into their services.
You can create your own links to IOP Journals using the
STACKS hyperlink protocol. A simple, consistent URL
syntax enables you to link to a journal, volume, issue or article, or to the
latest issue or next accelerated issue of any IOP Journal.
If you wish to receive regular updates of links to IOP Journals, you may
subscribe to the STACKS alerting service. As new
articles are published, data will be sent to you automatically by e-mail. To
subscribe please contact Judith Barnsby at
judith.barnsby@iop.org.
Open Archives Initiative
The key standard of the Open Archives
Initiative (OAI) mandates that content providers make metadata available
for harvesting in a common format (Dublin Core). Our Electronic Journals
service is compliant with the OAI technical framework, and metadata and
abstracts are available for harvesting. IOP data is currently available in
version 1.1 and 2.0 of the OAI Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH).
As IOP abstracts are freely available, harvested metadata can be hosted
locally in an OPAC or similar service. Please contact
custserv@iop.org if you interested in
harvesting our OAI metadata.
OpenURL
The OpenURL standard is being
widely adopted by libraries to permit context-sensitive linking and resolve the
"appropriate copy" problem. IOP supports OpenURL and is pleased to
work with consortia and academic sites, as well as organizations such as Ex
Libris and Serials Solutions, in the implementation of various OpenURL
initiatives.
To activate SFX or a similar OpenURL link resolver at the IOP Electronic
Journals service, please contact
custserv@iop.org.
Linking out to other online services
Our Electronic Journals feature extensive linking to other online services. We
developed HyperCite® linking technology to enable users to link to
abstracts, preprints or the full text of many articles listed on our reference
pages.
Reference linking
We have established links to a wide variety of services, so that subscribers
to our Electronic Journals may view an abstract or a preprint of an article
cited in the reference list of one of our online articles, or access the full
text of the original article at the publisher's Web site (subject to
subscription status).
Links to full text articles are shown where possible. Major publishers with
whom we have linking agreements include the American Institute of Physics,
American Physical Society (APS), SIAM and Springer-Verlag. Links to many other
publishers' online content are facilitated through
CrossRef, for example Elsevier, John
Wiley and IEEE.
We also offer links to preprints held at arXiv.org and SPIRES. Abstracts are
also available from the Inspec® database, or via services such as ChemPort
and MathSciNet.
Forward citing
A useful feature of the IOP Electronic Journals service is the ability to track
articles through subsequent articles that cite them. This is known as forward
citing.
We provide forward citing links where the citing articles are found within our
own online service, in journals published by APS, or in NASA's Astrophysics Data System.
The "Articles Citing this Article" page displays
a list of these articles that cite the currently viewed article amongst their
references.
Future developments will extend the forward citing facility to include citing
information from other CrossRef publishers.
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