This page contains information for institutions (universities, research laboratories, publishers, GLAMs, etc.) who work with people who have ORCID iDs. (in the interests of conciseness, we will refer to those people as "staff", even though they may include students, commissioned writers, volunteers, and others not be directly employed by the institution).
Staff with Wikipedia articles
editIf your staff have ORCID iDs, and we have articles (or Wikidata items - or, for biological taxonomists, Wikispecies pages) about them, we want to include their ORCID iDs in our articles. You can help us to do so, in one of a number of ways:
- Ask your staff to follow our advice for individuals - please publicise that page to them
- Add them yourself, as described elsewhere
- Send us a list of their names, ORCID iDs and, if possible, the URLs or exact names of the equivalent Wikipedia articles (or Wikidata items) - article names may be disambiguated as, for example, "Bob Smith (biologist)" and "Bob Smith (chemist)". For lists of more than ten, a spreadsheets or CSV file is preferred, please. You may send the list to ORCID's Wikipedian in Residence
We also suggest that they add a link to the Wikipedia article about them, as part of their biography on their ORCID profile (example).
Staff who edit Wikipedia
editIf any of your staff edit Wikipedia, or its sister projects, we also recommend that they consider adding their ORCID iD to their user pages, following the guidance for Wikipedians.
Questions
editIf you have any questions or comments, please leave a note on the talk page (which is publicly viewable) or contact ORCID's Wikipedian in Residence.
See also
edit- How we use ORCID iDs in Wikipedia
- How individuals can add their ORCID iD to Wikipedia
- Adding an audio recording of a voice to Wikipedia - why your staff should do it, if we have an article about them, and how.
- How to report problems in an article about your institution or staff member (also for suggesting updates)