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 ) 。
ACI:
Data Source: Academic Citation Index (ACI)
As Taiwan's largest Citation Index, we currently have on record all Humanities, and Sociology journals that were published in Taiwan. The number of periodicals that are published on a regular basis total around 400 different types. If periodicals that were added to the collection but then halted are counted as well, the number of periodicals total over 500 types. Every year we announce the recorded periodicals' impact factor, etc. to the public, and allow scholars utilize our materials to carry out academic research for free.
Impact Factor: The statistic indicating the average number of times a journal's articles published in the past two years have been cited in the counting year.
Formula: (Number of cites in counting year to articles published in the span of two years ) ÷ (Number of articles published in the span of two years)
Example: The impact factor in 2010 (determined in 2011)
In 2009, Journal A published 15 articles, and these 15 articles were cited 20 times in 2010.
In 2008, Journal A published 16 articles, and these 16 articles were cited 30 times in 2010.
→
→2010's Impact Factor = (20+30) ÷ (15+16) = 1.61
=(20+30)÷(15+16)≒1.61
What is "Preprint"?
In order to provide readers the forefront academic information, after articles are accepted to publish in the journal, we publish them in network before they're printed. Those "on-line first articles" are called the "preprint articles". The preprint articles do not have volume No., page No., publication date, but can be identified by the DOI number. 「 http://dx.doi.org/ 」 Link to the latest version of the article.
How to cite Preprint Articles?
Please use the online publication date and the DOI number of the preprint article to cite the literature.
Cited example (may vary with different formats you cited):
Author name. Article name. Journal name. YYYY/MM/DD online publish in advance.
doi:DOI Number
DOI:
10.29628/AEP
經濟論文 ; 47卷4期 (2019 / 12 / 01) , P533 - 546
繁體中文
法官行為 ; 量刑決定 ; 法律程序與系統 ; 法院裁判書 ; 終結案件資料 ; 大數據 ; Judge behaviors ; Sentencing decisions ; Legal procedure and system ; Court written judgement ; Closed case summaries ; Big data


- Chang, Y.-c.,Chen, K.-P.,Lin, C.-C.(2018).University of Chicago Coase-Sandor Institute for Law & Economics Research PaperUniversity of Chicago Coase-Sandor Institute for Law & Economics Research Paper,未出版
- Chang, Y.-c.,Chen, K.-P.,Lin, C.-C.(2019).NYU Law and Economics Research PaperNYU Law and Economics Research Paper,未出版
- Chen, K.-P.,Huang, K.-C.,Lin, C.-C.(2015).Party Capability versus Court Preference: Why Do the 'Haves' Come Out Ahead?-An Empirical Lesson from the Taiwan Supreme Court.Journal of Law, Economics and Organization,31(1),93-126.
- Eren, O.,Mocan, N.(2018).Emotional Judges and Unlucky Juveniles.American Econоmіс Journal: Applied Econоmics,10(3),171-205.
- Heyes, A.,Saberian, S.(2019).Temperature and Decisions: Evidence from 207,000 Court Cases.American Economic Journal: Applied Economics,11(2),238-265.