How do I claim ownership of arXiv paper?
How do I claim ownership of arXiv paper?
To claim a paper If the submitter has provided you with the paper password you can use the Claim Ownership with a password form. If you do not have the paper password you can use the Request Ownership form. Note that this process involves verification by our staff and may take a couple of days.
Who owns arXiv?
Cornell University Library
arXiv/Owners
Are arXiv papers good?
Conferences have a quicker peer review cycle and are more current, but most only publish relatively short papers. arXiv is also useful for work that is in a format not suited for a conference or journal (e.g. a thesis), or for extended versions of papers that are published somewhere else.
Are arXiv papers considered published?
In many fields of mathematics and physics, almost all scientific papers are self-archived on the arXiv repository before publication in a peer-reviewed journal. …
What does it mean to be an owner of an arXiv paper?
arXiv can also record third-party paper owners, users with rights to update or replace a paper but who are not authors. All users recorded as authors are automatically paper owners too. This status is used to support third-party submission by approved conference organizers and journals.
Why do we use authority records in arXiv?
We currently use authority records to support the endorsement system , ORCID iDs, and our public arXiv author identifiers. arXiv can also record third-party paper owners, users with rights to update or replace a paper but who are not authors. All users recorded as authors are automatically paper owners too.
What do you need to know about the arXiv repository?
arXiv is an openly accessible, moderated repository for scholarly papers in specific scientific disciplines. Material submitted to arXiv is expected to be of interest, relevance, and value to those disciplines.
Why do people publish on arXiv instead of other places?
arXiv is also useful for work that is in a format not suited for a conference or journal (e.g. a thesis), or for extended versions of papers that are published somewhere else. I would caution against rules like “I should not cite materials on arXiv because they are not peer reviewed.”