Citing, Open Access Publishing, Affliation and ORCID (OLD)
What is EndNote? - EndNote - LibGuides at VU Amsterdam
Employees of Amsterdam UMC can buy EndNote at SurfSpot at a discount. To access the store from home use your Amsterdam UMC credentials or access the store in CDW and select the AMC or VUmc instance.
All Amsterdam UMC researchers are urged to use the correct affiliation when submitting scientific publications:
Affiliated to the University of Amsterdam (UvA):
Amsterdam UMC location University of Amsterdam, Department(s), Meibergdreef 9, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Affiliated to Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU):
Amsterdam UMC location Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Department(s), De Boelelaan 1117, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Research institute:
name of research institute, program(s), Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Professor T.G. van Leeuwen1,2,3,
- Amsterdam UMC location University of Amsterdam, Biomedical Engineering and Physics, Meibergdreef 9, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
- Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Heart Failure and Arrhythmias, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
- Cancer Center Amsterdam, Imaging and Biomarkers, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Professor J. van der Velden1,2,
- Amsterdam UMC location Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Physiology, De Boelelaan 1117, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
- Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Heart Failure and Arrhythmias, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Amsterdam UMC policy is to publish Open Access, preferably Gold OA in the publishers journals. Open Access (OA), which refers to free, unrestricted online access to scientific articles and books.
There are two main routes to OA publishing; directly, via the golden route, or indirectly, via the green route.
Amsterdam UMC researchers can publish OA via the golden route free of charge in more than 10.000 journals, check our options
If Gold OA is impossible, you can use the green route by archiving a version of the manuscript in a repository, usually after an embargo period.
Gold OA at BMJ is now also available at Amsterdam UMC. Corresponding authors affiliated with Amsterdam UMC are eligible to publish their research (with fees covered by agreement) within BMJ’s fully open access journals.
For questions or support contact the OA team.
ORCID stands for Open Researcher and Contributer iD: A persistent digital identifier for anyone working in academia.
ORCID is a unique personal number that allows researchers to easily and automatically connect their research information across a wide range of online databases. ORCID connects you to your research activities throughout your career. It is free, open, mobile, and community-driven. Signing up for an ORCID takes just a few minutes and ensures that your professional profile and your research activities across multiple online repositories are unambiguous, persistent, portable, up-to-date, and discoverable.
ORCID is not yet another research profile system or bibliographical database (such as Web of Science, Scopus, Google Scholar, Academia.edu, ResearchGate, etc.). Instead, having and using an ORCID it allows you to automatically synchronize the research profiles that you already have, allowing you to spend your time doing research, instead of administrating it.
- Eliminate any ambiguity regarding your name and its variations across academic bibliographies and repositories.
- Saves time:an ORCID synchronizes your profiles across the web and simplifies publishing and funding applications.
- An ORCID remain with you throughout changes in your career stage
- Improves the discoverability and accuracy of (academic)output.
- Influences and improves university rankings.
Do you not have an ORCID yet?
Register for one by following the instructions in the Manual Register ORCID and how to connect with SCOPUS)
Do you already have an ORCID?
Check whether your work is visible on your ORCID profile. If your work is not visible, connect your ORCID to your Scopus AuthorIDs. See the manual on how you can check and connect your ORCID
Get recognised, Get connected: Get started
Regardless of your discipline or career stage, it is critical for your reputation and career thatfellow researchers, academic institutions, funders and publishers are able to quickly and unambiguously identify you and attribute all your work – and only your work - to you.