DOI
stands for Digital Object Identifier
(
D
igital
O
bject
I
dentifier
)
,
and is the unique identifier for objects on the internet. It can be used to create persistent link and to cite articles.
Using DOI as a persistent link
To create a persistent link, add「http://dx.doi.org/」
「
http://dx.doi.org/
」
before a DOI.
For instance, if the DOI of an article is
10.5297/ser.1201.002
, you can link persistently to the article by entering the following link in your browser:
http://dx.doi.org/
10.5297/ser.1201.002
。
The DOI link will always direct you to the most updated article page no matter how the publisher changes the document's position, avoiding errors when engaging in important research.
Cite a document with DOI
When citing references, you should also cite the DOI if the article has one. If your citation guideline does not include DOIs, you may cite the DOI link.
DOIs allow accurate citations, improve academic contents connections, and allow users to gain better experience across different platforms. Currently, there are more than 70 million DOIs registered for academic contents. If you want to understand more about DOI, please visit airiti DOI Registration ( doi.airiti.com ) 。


- 1. C.-P. Lee and Y.-B. Tsai. A Study of Recurrence Models of Earthquakes in Taiwan. Terrestrial, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences 2005; 16 (1):251-271.
連結: - 3. L. Huang, M. Kulldorff and D. Gregorio. A Spatial Scan Statistic for Survival Data. Biometrics 2007; 63:109-118.
連結: - 5. M. Kulldorff and N. Nagarwalla. Spatial disease clusters: Detection and inference. Statistics in Medicine 1995; 14:799-810.
連結: - 6. V. Bhatt and N. Tiwari. A Spatial scan statistic for survival data based on Weibull distribution. Statistics in Medicine 2013;33:1867-1876.
連結: - 2. D. Gregorio, H. Samociuk, L. DeChello and H. Swede. Effects of study area size on geographic characterizations of health events: Prostate cancer incidence in Southern New England, USA, 1994–1998. Int J Health Geogr 2006; 5:8.