Can I use ISSN instead of DOI APA?

Can I use ISSN instead of DOI APA?

The ISSN Standard, ISO 3297:2007, provides internationally accepted recommendations to use ISSN as suffix for title-level DOIs: “To construct a DOI suffix using an ISSN, precede the ISSN (including the hyphen) with the lowercase letters “issn” and a period”. ISSNs help to identify serial publications, which are those that are published regularly in sequence, such as magazines, journals, newspapers, and databases. They don’t identify content or certify its validity. Although ISSNs do not identify the journal owner, if a journal name changes, a new ISSN is necessary. Unlike ISBN and ISSN, which identify content at the book or journal level, a DOI may identify an individual chapter or article. There is no charge for the assignment of the ISSN, or for the use of an ISSN once assigned.

Can I use ISSN instead of DOI?

It is strongly recommended that publishers use the ISSN number as part of the title-level DOI they use to offer a persistent and resolvable link to their journal. A DOI is the identifier of an entity—physical, digital or abstract. Answer. Most citation styles recommend including a DOI (digital object identifier) number, if available, instead of a URL as DOI numbers can be easily used to find a source by typing them into a search engine like Google. Some articles may not have a DOI. For example, articles published outside of the sciences tend not to have DOIs. An article may also not have a DOI if it was published before DOIs existed (though some older articles will have had DOIs added!). It is not unknown for two journals to have the same name, or almost the same name, which is a tactic used by some predatory journals to try and trick researchers into submitting their journal. However, two journals cannot have the same ISSN; each one will be different. If there is no DOI in a database (or other) record for a journal article, and http://search.crossref.org also fails to turn up a DOI, then go to the main page of that journal on the publisher website, copy the URL for that main page, and paste that URL following Retrieved from in place of the DOI as the final element …

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