User:Daniel Mietchen/Talks/CoSci12/Figures/Kinds of supplementary materials

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Historic benzene formulae by Kekulé
The kind of open-access materials most widely used on Wikimedia projects is figures from scholarly articles. This extends to historic publications, e.g. the benzene formulae from Kekulé's original article that depict the molecule's two resonance structures.[1] However, chemical formulae are nowadays preferentially rendered in editable vector graphics formats like SVG.
A page from the lab notebook underlying the experiments described in Lang, G. I.; Botstein, D. (2011).
A page from the lab notebook underlying the experiments described in Lang & Botstein (2011).[2]
Different kinds of media are being posted within articles or their supplements.
MIME types of supplementary files in the Open Access Subset of PubMed Central
MIME types of supplementary files in the Open Access Subset of PubMed Central
A gecko swinging back to escape
Different kinds of files are being posted in article supplements - most common PDF, most likely to find reuse on Wikipedia are audio and video files.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Kekulé, A. (1872). "Ueber einige Condensationsproducte des Aldehyds". Annalen der Chemie und Pharmacie. 162: 77–12. doi:10.1002/jlac.18721620110. Open access icon
  2. ^ Lang, G. I.; Botstein, D. (2011). Rusche, Laura N (ed.). "A Test of the Coordinated Expression Hypothesis for the Origin and Maintenance of the GAL Cluster in Yeast". PLoS ONE. 6 (9): e25290. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0025290. PMC 3178652. PMID 21966486.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) Open access icon