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Compound bilingual journal titles may be fine #871
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I also note the journal used as an example doesn't seem to fully follow the Guide's recommendations. More specifically, the journal title entered in OJS for the French locale is in French-only, but the journal title entered in English is in compound bilingual form: Savoie, D. J. (2010). New Brunswick: Let’s Not Waste a Crisis. Revue d’études Sur Le Nouveau-Brunswick, 1. Savoie, D. J. (2010). New Brunswick: Let’s Not Waste a Crisis. Journal of New Brunswick Studies / Revue d’études Sur Le Nouveau-Brunswick, 1. https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/JNBS/article/view/18191 |
I'll answer these in reverse order. Number 2, I know that this journal doesn't follow these rules. I host it at my institution and I also wrote this portion of the guide. I needed screenshots, and made them aspirational.
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It's true that this is common and that a lot of journals very much want to assert their identity in this way. The issue is in the consistency of the metadata they present broadly. Canadian Psychology is a great example because it's indexed variably across a number of platforms with different names. For one, it's ISSN is only registered against the English name. You can see that here: https://portal.issn.org/api/search?search[]=MUST=allissnbis=%220708-5591%22&search_id=14724982 The ISSN is hugely important to the name of a journal. If the journal insisted on this bilingual title generally and its ISSN was registered that way, I'd say this was fine. There's a registered "parallel title", instead. Secondly, if I look this journal up in a variety of indexes and my own ILS, I don't get a consistent title. Sometimes I get both... but here are the titles I pull:
Crossref themselves wouldn't vet against two languages in a title field. There's no review of submitted metadata. Any journal that puts both languages in the journal name field in OJS and deposits with Crossref would show the same. And Crossref does not currently have full multilingual metadata support (although they're working on it, based on JATs implementation of repeatable fields with language attributes). The real recommendation here is to be as consistent as possible. Especially against ISSN.
I don't disagree with this! Abstract, in particular, we see a lot of. A note to @kaitlinnewson that adding these other examples to the doc would be welcome.
We recognize a lot of non-ideal behaviours in metadata because they're so frequent. And it's not surprising. But some citations for this journal will say Canadian Psychology, and some will have both languages, depending on where the user read that content. And the issue is that it may seem to some like they are talking about two different journals, not one journal that sometimes has both names in a single title field. But! The beauty of recommendations is that they are ignorable. The committee did our best to promote metadata that would be consistently presented and legible downstream to better identify materials clearly across platforms. But, we also know that it's a tall order and one that isn't always supported (like how Crossref doesn't currently have a secondary language title field). |
Thanks for your comments, @AhemNason. I'm wrangling with my own bilingual journal titles, reason why I'm seeking guidance. If you search for the online ISSN instead of the printed ISSN, then both titles are recognized for that journal:
I expected the third variant, Canadian Psychology/Psychologie canadienne, to be registered explicitly as well, but it isn't. Maybe the ISSN register limits parallel titles to only one? The long compound bilingual form does appear as the preferred form in the CrossRef Title List, along with a minor variation using hyphen instead of slash: I totally agree with the recommendation to be as consistent as possible. My impression this is super important for CrossRef and all downstream indexing. Here's a related comment in the CrossRef forum:
So, I'm starting to suspect the recommendation for bilingual journals should actually be to keep the journal title fixed, to either language or to the compound bilingual form. If we're going to shoehorn mulitlingual content into a monolingual indexing infrastructure, then journal titles should not change when the content language changes, does it make sense? I.e., except for the journal title, every piece of multilingual metadata (abstracts, article titles, etc.) would still be stored in their own locales (internationalized and localized fields). I'm seeking confirmation from CrossRef about this interpretation, see more details in their forum. PS: proudly ex-UNB here: https://unbscholar.lib.unb.ca/islandora/object/unbscholar%3A8512 |
CrossRef folks seem to have confirmed the above interpretation:
Maybe this recommendation could be included in the OJS documentation and guides? |
I think this issue could be moved into discussions, similar to #7569 |
Hi. I wanted to share a comment about the guide on Better Practices in Journal Metadata, section Combining Multilingual Metadata in a Single Field, which says:
I wanted to suggest using the article title or abstract instead of journal title to exemplify the problems of combining multilingual metadata in a single field. First, because it's a much more frequent issue, as it affects every individual article.
The second and more important reason is because some journals seem to genuinely prefer a compound bilingual title. For example, the Canadian Psychology/Psychologie canadienne appears literally as such in the journal full-title field of the article metadata deposited in CrossRef, for example:
The practice seems recognized, for example, in the APA Style blog:
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