Anna Tolwinska

Anna Tolwinska

Member Experience Manager

Biography

Anna has moved on from Crossref. Anna Tolwinska was responsible for helping members understand their participation and opportunities with Crossref. She had been with Crossref for over ten years in both marketing and member outreach roles. When she wasn’t reading or answering questions about membership and metadata, Anna enjoyed going camping with her family and watching a good film.

Twitter

@atolwinska

ORCID iD

0000-0001-5088-8915

Anna Tolwinska's Latest Blog Posts

Crossref Conversations: audio blog about helping open science

Rosa Clark, Friday, Aug 20, 2021

In Community

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Crossref Conversations is an audio blog we’re trying out that will cover various topics important to our community. This conversation is between colleagues Anna Tolwinska and Rosa Morais Clark, discussing how we can make research happen faster, with fewer hurdles, and how Crossref can help. Our members have been asking us how Crossref can support open science, and we have a few insights to share. So we invite you to have a listen.

3,2,1… it’s ‘lift-off’ for Participation Reports

Metadata is at the heart of all our services. With a growing range of members participating in our community—often compiling or depositing metadata on behalf of each other—the need to educate and express obligations and best practice has increased. In addition, we’ve seen more and more researchers and tools making use of our APIs to harvest, analyze and re-purpose the metadata our members register, so we’ve been very aware of the need to be more explicit about what this metadata enables, why, how, and for whom.

Linking references is different from registering references

From time to time we get questions from members asking what the difference is between reference linking and registering references as part the Content Registration process. Here’s the distinction: Linking out to other articles from your reference lists is a key part of being a Crossref members - it’s an obligation in the membership agreement and it levels the playing field when all members link their references to one another.

How good is your metadata?

Exciting news! We are getting very close to the beta release of a new tool to publicly show metadata coverage. As members register their content with us they also add additional information which gives context for other members and for services that help e.g. discovery or analytics.

Richer metadata makes content useful. Participation reports will give—for the first time—a clear picture for anyone to see the metadata Crossref has. This is data that’s long been available via our Public REST API, now visualized.

Getting Started with Crossref DOIs, courtesy of Scholastica

Anna Tolwinska, Monday, Apr 25, 2016

In DOIsIdentifiersLinkingMetadataPersistence

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I had a great chat with Danielle Padula of Scholastica, a journals platform with an integrated peer-review process that was founded in 2011. We talked about how journals get started with Crossref, and she turned our conversation into a blog post that describes the steps to begin registering content and depositing metadata with us. Since the result is a really useful description of our new member on-boarding process, I want to share it with you here as well.

Read all of Anna Tolwinska's posts »