getting an output from Zotero for metadata on OJS
Hello,
I'm managing a journal on OJS. I can enter the references only as text, but balises are accepted. I would like to be able to get an output that put the references as human readable text, but with the correct meta tags for being recognized by scholar google.
How to do it?
I'm managing a journal on OJS. I can enter the references only as text, but balises are accepted. I would like to be able to get an output that put the references as human readable text, but with the correct meta tags for being recognized by scholar google.
How to do it?
We might add JSON LD in bibliographies, but not going to be super soon. Google Highwire tags are typically separate from bibliography entries, so that doesn't make a lot of sense for Zotero.
could be:
-Highwire Press tags (e.g., citation_title)
-Eprints tags (e.g., eprints.title)
-BE Press tags (e.g., bepress_citation_title)
-PRISM tags (e.g., prism.title). Use Dublin Core tags (e.g., DC.title) as a last resort
I would have like the text in the tag appears …
Edit: I'm confused by your question about Open Journal Systems. Are you trying to find a quick way to include metadata for a pdf version of a new online journal article that is published using OJS software and hosting? I don't know of any way to avoid some hand-entry of new article metadata in OJS online forms. Are you thinking of entering the metadata into Zotero and then transferring it from Zotero to OJS? Once the article is entered into OJS, the standard OJS software automatically inserts GS meta tags for essentially all relevant journal article metadata (except the abstract) and also DC tags. OJS software can be set to also add a GS tag for the article absteact. OJS automatically includes the abstract among the DC meta tags.
If what you desire is a webpage bibliography with GS/Highwire Press tags in the page header, it is possible but this isn't something that Zotero can do. [At least, not without outside help.] I don't have time right now to do the search myself but you can get ideas about how to accomplish what you want by searching the technical pages about Google Scholar. Items from my online database are indexed by GS because we added Highwire meta tags in each page's html header. Getting this done properly required a few hours of work by our web developers but the process cost wasn't terribly dear. My SafetyLit.org service also has its records available for one-click download to Zotero via unAPI. Visit the site (free and without adverts--this isn't click-bait) and view page source of any page with a bibliographic record.
On my personal webpages https://www.ansorge.website I use the Zotero API for generating my bibliography from selected collection from Zotero.
1. add metadata for the main article into the webpage - for this, you do not need to use Zotero, see the answer from DWL-SDCA For this see documentation of OJS.
2. add metadata for cited documents (references) into the webpage - for this, you can use COinS prepared by Zotero and for this, you can use the same way as I on my pages.
COinS in itself does not fit it, for, if you take your page in Zotero, it would propose to add all the references… I would need a modified Coins that use the Highwire Press tags.
I tried to modify it, but I'm not good enough to do it…
For exemple, http://www.histoire-valenciennes-cahv.fr/Memoires/index.php/Memoires/article/view/651 quotes "Beaussart, Philippe 1988 A Propos Des Origines de Valenciennes. Valentiana 2: 43–45."
Look for it in scholar… You'll see the issue!
If this is really important to do, OJS would be the right place to implement it.
I probably work as closely with the GS staff as any outsider. I can state with certainty that the items that appear in GS that are listed as citations are obtained as I stated above. I have no knowledge of how their system selects references from any articles that are included in GS -- why some are included and others are not (even within a reference list from an article selected for GS). It is common for GS to be the only web resource that lists a technical report. It is equally common for GS to include some citations from that report and not others -- whether or not any of the other references are available online. In order to meet our goal of maintaining a comprehensive index to the safety literature, I and volunteers with my service carefully examine GS entries for both full articles and citation entries by regularly performing standard structured searches. When we identify an article, thesis, or report we also examine its reference list. Often we find other useful material in that reference list -- items that are or are not included elsewhere in GS listings. It _may_ be worth noting that reference list items that were initially not included in GS usually end up being listed in GS after the item has been fully indexed with an abstract by my database service. Understand, there is essentially no by-hand editing or curating of GS listings. The selection process is all done by machine 'knowledge' and algorithms.
If your journal regularly publishes issues, given the material that exists in your OJS page headers, your contents will eventually be included GS. If you regularly include articles that have refeence lists containing both items that are already listed in GS AND items that are not I believe that your unique references to reports and theses are likely to be added to GS (that is, if you always make certain that items in your reference lists always strictly conform to a standard reference style that is machine interpretable).