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  • DOI/PMID (for identifying the article you are interested in learning about)

  • Library ID (for identifying for which library the links are intended)

  • API Key (unique to the library ID)

  • (optional) an “include” statement which allows you to receive journal-level information as well

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In return, you get:

  • Links to the PDF (fullTextFile) and Article Link (contentLocation) if availablebestIntegratorLink for a simple point of interaction defining the best way to get to content for that particular organization.

  • OA Status - for defining if the article is OpenAccess. You might use this to display some sort of “open access” icon in your interface, for example.

  • Article in context link (browzineWebLink) if you would like to provide a link to see the article in its originally published context within the BrowZine interface (all LibKey subscribers have access to BrowZine web as well which is needed for this link to appear/work).

  • Detailed breakdown of all available links (with the “best” one already pre-calculated in the aforementioned “bestIntegratorLink” value)

  • (If using the optional include) Information about the journal including a link to the journal in BrowZine and link to the cover image asset for inclusion in your interface as well as the SJR value of the journal.

Examples

Tip

If you haven’t done so already, contact support@thirdiron.com to confirm your Library_ID and API_KEY which you need to try the following examples.

To setup a query, using your API Key use this kind of structure for DOIs:

https://public-api.thirdiron.com/public/v1/libraries/{Library_ID}/articles/doi/{DOI}?access_token={API_KEY}

… and this kind of structure for PMIDs:

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The User Experience

So what happens when a user clicks a LibKey.io link that the API returns for “Download PDF” or “Article Link?” These are the content links designed to get the user directly to the content in an authorized way via their institution. While all LibKey links have a similar syntax they wind up forwarding to completely different URL’s based on the outcome of the LibKey link calculations. The most common user workflow however looks like this:

Click the LibKey Link → Organization’s SSO → Content

Thus if an organization’s SSO already has an activate session LibKey links have the potential (when they indicated “Download PDF” to be literally “one click to content!”

Examples

Tip

If you haven’t done so already, contact support@thirdiron.com to confirm your Library_ID and API_KEY which you need to try the following examples.

To setup a query, using your API Key use this kind of structure for DOIs:

https://public-api.thirdiron.com/public/v1/libraries/{Library_ID}/articles/pmiddoi/{PMIDDOI}?access_token={API_KEY}

These queries will … and this kind of structure for PMIDs:

https://public-api.thirdiron.com/public/v1/libraries/{Library_ID}/articles/pmid/{PMID}?access_token={API_KEY}

These queries will yield similar JSON results like this using this open access example which you can use, substituting your own API Key:

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Code Block
{
  "data": {
    "id": 573087326558922648,
    "type": "articles",
    "title": "ReducingGenotyping Booleanby networks with backward equivalencesequencing for estimating relative abundances of diatom taxa in mock communities",
    "date": "2023-0502-2306",
    "authors": "ArgyrisÇiftçi, Ozan; Wagemaker, GeorgiosCornelis A. M.; Lluch LafuenteMertens, AlbertoAdrienne; Tribastonevan Bodegom, MircoPeter; TschaikowskiPirovano, MaxWalter; VandinGravendeel, AndreaBarbara",
    "inPress": false,
    "abandoned": false,
    "doi": "10.1186/s12859s12862-023-0532602104-92",
    "ILLURLlinkResolverOpenUrl": "httpshttp://illiadum9mh3ku7s.mst.edu/illiad/illiad.dll/OpenURLsearch.serialssolutions.com/?genre=article&aulast=Argyris%C3%87ift%C3%A7i&issn=14712730-21057182&isbn=&title=BMC%20BioinformaticsBMC%20Ecology%20and%20Evolution&atitle=Reducing%20Boolean%20networks%20with%20backward%20equivalenceGenotyping%20by%20sequencing%20for%20estimating%20relative%20abundances%20of%20diatom%20taxa%20in%20mock%20communities&volume=2423&part=&issue=S11&spage=2124&epage=&date=20231201",
    "pmid": "37221494",
    "openAccess": true,
    "unpaywallUsable": true,
    "fullTextFile": "https://libkey.io/libraries/222/articles/573087326/full-text-file?utm_source=api_29",
    "contentLocation": "https://libkey.io/libraries/222/articles/573087326/content-location?utm_source=api_29",
    "availableThroughBrowzine": true,
    "startPage": "212",
    "endPage": "",
    "browzineWebLink": "https://browzine.com/libraries/222/journals/74/issues/520079562?showArticleInContext=doi:10.1186%2Fs12859-023-05326-9&utm_source=api_29",
    "relationships": {
      "issue": {
        "links": {
          "related": "/public/v1/libraries/222/issues/520079562"
        }
      },
      "journal": {
        "links": {
          "related": "/public/v1/libraries/222/journals/74"
        }
      }
    },
    "abstract": "Boolean Networks (BNs) are a popular dynamical model in biology where the state of each component is represented by a variable taking binary values that express, for instance, activation/deactivation or high/low concentrations. Unfortunately, these models suffer from the state space explosion, i.e., there are exponentially many states in the number of BN variables, which hampers their analysis.\nWe present Boolean Backward Equivalence (BBE), a novel reduction technique for BNs which collapses system variables that, if initialized with same value, maintain matching values in all states. A large-scale validation on 86 models from two online model repositories reveals that BBE is effective, since it is able to reduce more than 90% of the models. Furthermore, on such models we also show that BBE brings notable analysis speed-ups, both in terms of state space generation and steady-state analysis. In several cases, BBE allowed the analysis of models that were originally intractable due to the complexity. On two selected case studies, we show how one can tune the reduction power of BBE using model-specific information to preserve all dynamics of interest, and selectively exclude behavior that does not have biological relevance.\nBBE complements existing reduction methods, preserving properties that other reduction methods fail to reproduce, and vice versa. BBE drops all and only the dynamics, including attractors, originating from states where BBE-equivalent variables have been initialized with different activation values The remaining part of the dynamics is preserved exactly, including the length of the preserved attractors, and their reachability from given initial conditions, without adding any spurious behaviours. Given that BBE is a model-to-model reduction technique, it can be combined with further reduction methods for BNs."
  }
}

There is a lot of information there which you might consider utilizing and that which is covered in detail in the reference guide here but to get you started the most important elements are listed below including recommended order of usage:

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Property

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Type

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Description

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Optional

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retractionNoticeUrl

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URL

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Will appear if the article has been retracted with a link to a LibKey.io URL which provides more information about the retraction with data from Retraction Watch. This field is optional but we recommend looking for this element FIRST and displaying this URL instead of or in addition to a “fullTextFile” or “contentLocation” link so that users can be made aware of the retraction status of the article they are viewing.

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Yes

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expressionOfConcernUrl

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URL

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Will appear if the article has an Expression of Concern associated and will have a link to a http://LibKey.io URL which provides a link to the original Expression of Concern

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Yes

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fullTextFile

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URL

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On articles where LibKey is aware of a path directly to the PDF file, this property will be available. Look for this next and display it if there is no Retraction Notice available.

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Yes

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contentLocation

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URL

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On articles where LibKey is aware of a path to the web page where the article is available, this property will be available.  This can include non-publisher sources such as aggregators and repositories. Sometimes articles will have a fullTextFile AND a contentLocation and other times ONLY a contentLocation. Depending on your goals you may choose to display only one (typically prefering fullTextFile) or BOTH of these to give users options.

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Yes

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openAccess

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boolean

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True if the article is open access via the publisher and False if it is not.  LibKey.io links corresponding to this article which have an openAccess value of "True" will not include any institutional authentication. You may wish to make use of this if you want to display an “Open Access” badge or icon of some kind next to the article.

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No

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browzineWebLink

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URL

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On titles that are BrowZine enabled, this property will be present and will link to the article in the context of its issue (or articles in press list as appropriate) on browzine.com You may wish to make use of this if you want to provide an article in context experience into BrowZine. A popular integration point in all of the commercially available discovery systems (Primo, Summon, EDS, OCLC WorldCat, Discovery, TDNet Discovery, etc.)

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2023&doi=10.1186%2Fs12862-023-02104-2&sid=LibKey",
    "pmid": "36747145",
    "openAccess": true,
    "unpaywallUsable": true,
    "fullTextFile": "https://libkey.io/libraries/222/articles/558922648/full-text-file?utm_source=api_1515",
    "contentLocation": "https://libkey.io/libraries/222/articles/558922648/content-location?utm_source=api_1515",
    "availableThroughBrowzine": true,
    "startPage": "4",
    "endPage": "",
    "browzineWebLink": "https://browzine.com/libraries/222/journals/435996/issues/490378844?showArticleInContext=doi:10.1186%2Fs12862-023-02104-2&utm_source=api_1515",
    "bestIntegratorLink": {
      "bestLink": "https://libkey.io/libraries/222/articles/558922648/full-text-file?utm_source=api_1515",
      "linkType": "fullTextFile",
      "recommendedLinkText": "Download PDF"
    }
  }
}

There is a lot of information there which you might consider utilizing and that which is covered in detail in the reference guide here but to get you started we recommend that all integrators utilize the last element called “bestIntegratorLink”.

This will include the “bestLink” which is defined as the best URL to full text available for the requested Library ID. The API will automatically produce this best Link based on a cascading waterfall of options along with some “recommended” link text. You may choose to alter this text for local use.

Below is a table defining the different link types, recommended text and the order in which they are presented as the “bestLink”. (e.g. If fullTextFile is available, then this will be presented but if it is not and contentLocation is available, then contentLocation will appear as the linkType).

Priority Order Number

linkType

recommendedLinkText

retractionNoticeUrl

A notification that the article has been retracted

Retracted Article

expressionOfConcernNoticeUrl

A notification that the article has an expression of concern on it

Expression of Concern

fullTextFile

A link to the PDF file

Download PDF

contentLocation

A link to the landing page for this article

View Article

linkResolverOpenUrl

A link to the library’s Link Resolver URL for this article

Access Options

Optional Include to get Journal Information

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