RAiDers of the Lost Ark: using the Research Activity Identifier to complete the research graph - THETA 2025

Product Manager (persistent Identifier Services), Australian Research Data Commons

Presentation Summary

Persistent identifiers (PIDs), such as DOI and ORCID, are widely used to unambiguously refer to entities in the research ecosystem, such as publications, grants, datasets, researchers and other contributors, and organisations. PIDs enable qualified references between these entities. These qualified references build a picture of global research called the research or PID graph. This graph can be used by research organisations to automate the collection of information about research.

Until now, the existence of the fundamental unit of research - the project - could only be inferred from grants and publications. RAiD (Research Activity Identifier; ISO 23527:2022) is the missing link in the PID graph and was developed by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) to uniquely and unambiguously identify projects. RAiD provides a more complete picture of global research.

This lightning talk will introduce the problem RAiD was engineered to solve, discuss how RAiD fits into the PID graph, and show how research organisations in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand can access the ARDC RAiD Service.

 

Meet the Speaker

Matthias Liffers

Product Manager (persistent Identifier Services), Australian Research Data Commons

Matthias Liffers has worked at the intersection of information management and information technology for nearly two decades. As Product Manager Persistent Identifier Services at the ARDC, he works with Australian research organisations to make sense of their place in the global research ecosystem.

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RAiDers of the Lost Ark: using the Research Activity Identifier to complete the research graph - THETA 2025

View this presentation by Matthias Liffers from Australian Research Data Commons.

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THETA 2025

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