The disambiguation of people names in biological collections

wikidata 2024-07-19

Summary:

Scientific collections have been built by people. For hundreds of years, people have collected, studied, identified, preserved, documented and curated collection specimens. Understanding who those people are is of interest to historians, but much more can be made of these data by other stakeholders once they have been linked to the people's identities and their biographies. Knowing who people are helps us attribute work correctly, validate data and understand the scientific contribution of...

Link:

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36761559/?utm_source=Other&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=pubmed-2&utm_content=1VSjW0JqT_vVo4exSnaEa8DS8viTn4bOW9m_0JY8UcVGX5Esjj&fc=20220129234853&ff=20240719190507&v=2.18.0.post9+e462414

From feeds:

📚BioDBS Bibliography » wikidata

Tags:

Authors:

Quentin Groom, Christian Bräuchler, Robert W N Cubey, Mathias Dillen, Pieter Huybrechts, Nicole Kearney, Niels Klazenga, Siobhan Leachman, Deborah L Paul, Heather Rogers, Joaquim Santos, David Peter Shorthouse, Alison Vaughan, Sabine von Mering, Elspeth M Haston

Date tagged:

07/19/2024, 19:05

Date published:

02/10/2023, 06:00