The eml-party module describes a responsible party
and is typically used to name the creator of a
resource or metadata document. A responsible party may be
an individual person, an organization or a named position within
an organization. The eml-party module contains detailed contact
information. It is used throughout the other EML modules where
detailed contact information is needed.
The eml-party module, like other modules, may be
"referenced" via the <references> tag. This allows
a party to be described once, and then used as a reference in
other locations within the EML document via its ID.
Element Definitions:
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individualName
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
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The individualName
field contains subfields so that a person's name can be broken
down into parts.
Note that the the content model for the containing type
allows a sequence of choices for the first
element(s): <individualName>, <organizationName> and/or <positionName>.
This means that a parent element (e.g., creator) may use combinations of the 3 sub-elements
to make up a single logical party. For example, a creator with only
the individualName of 'Joe Smith' is NOT the same as a
creator with the individualName of 'Joe Smith' and the
organizationName of 'NSF'. To include both a positionName and
an organizationName as children of a <contact> implies that anyone
currently occupying that positionName at that organizationName
is an appropriate contact.
The positionName should not be
used in conjunction with individualName unless only that specific
individual at that position would be considered appropriate for that
designation.
Example(s):
Because this is an 'elementOnly' field, please
look at the examples for the subfields 'givenName' and
'surName'.
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organizationName
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
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The responsible party field contains the full
name of the organization that is associated with the resource.
This field is intended to describe which institution or overall
organization is associated with the resource being described.
Note that the the content model for the containing type
allows a sequence of choices for the first
element(s): <individualName>, <organizationName> and/or <positionName>.
This means that a parent element (e.g., creator) may use combinations of the 3 sub-elements
to make up a single logical party. For example, a creator with only
the individualName of 'Joe Smith' is NOT the same as a
creator with the individualName of 'Joe Smith' and the
organizationName of 'NSF'. To include both a positionName and
an organizationName as children of a <contact> implies that anyone
currently occupying that positionName at that organizationName
is an appropriate contact.
The positionName should not be
used in conjunction with individualName unless only that specific
individual at that position would be considered appropriate for that
designation.
Example(s):
National Center for Ecological Analysis and
Synthesis
|
positionName
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
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This field is intended to be used instead of a
particular person or full organization name. If the associated
person who holds the role changes frequently, then Position
Name would be used for consistency.
Note that the the content model for the containing type
allows a sequence of choices for the first
element(s): <individualName>, <organizationName> and/or <positionName>.
This means that a parent element (e.g., creator) may use combinations of the 3 sub-elements
to make up a single logical party. For example, a creator with only
the individualName of 'Joe Smith' is NOT the same as a
creator with the individualName of 'Joe Smith' and the
organizationName of 'NSF'. To include both a positionName and
an organizationName as children of a <contact> implies that anyone
currently occupying that positionName at that organizationName
is an appropriate contact.
The positionName should not be
used in conjunction with individualName unless only that specific
individual at that position would be considered appropriate for that
designation.
Example(s):
Niwot Ridge Data Manager
|
address
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The address field is a container for multiple
subfields that describe the physical or electronic address of the
responsible party for a resource.
Example(s):
Please see the subfield examples.
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phone
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
Attributes: | Use: | Default Value: |
phonetype | optional | voice |
|
The phone field describes information about the
responsible party's telephone, be it a voice phone, fax, or
TTD/TTY type telephone. This field contains an attribute used to
identify the type.
Example(s):
805-555-2500
|
electronicMailAddress
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The electronic mail address is the email address
for the party. It is intended to be an Internet SMTP email
address, which should consist of a username followed by the @
symbol, followed by the email server domain name address. Other
address types are allowable.
Example(s):
my-email@mydomain.edu
|
onlineUrl
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
A link to associated online information, usually
a web site. When the party represents an organization, this is
the URL to a website or other online information about the
organization. If the party is an individual, it might be their
personal web site or other related online information about the
party.
Example(s):
http://www.yourdomain.edu/~doe
|
userId
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
Attributes: | Use: | Default Value: |
directory | required |
|
An identifier that links this party to a
directory of personnel. Although specific contact information
for a party might change, the underlying correspondence to a
real individual does not. This identifier provides a pointer
within a personnel directory that may contain further, and possibly
more current, information about the party.
Example(s):
uid=jtown,o=NCEAS,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org
|
salutation
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The salutation field is used in addressing an
individual with a particular title, such as Dr., Ms., Mrs., Mr.,
etc.
Example(s):
Dr.
|
givenName
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The given name field can be used for first name of
the individual associated with the resource, or for any other names
that are not intended to be alphabetized, (as appropriate). Note that
while it is possible to include all given names in one field (as in the
example below), it may be not be good practice to do so. For example, if an
XSL transformation stylesheet were to abbreviate the content of a
givenName to just the first initial, a givenName element that contained
more than one name would not be transformed correctly.
Example(s):
Juan Luis Jane
|
surName
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The surname field is used for the last name of the
individual associated with the resource. This is typically the family name
of an individual, for example, the name by which s/he is referred to in citations.
Example(s):
San Gil Curtis-Ainsworth Tao
|
deliveryPoint
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The delivery point field is used for the
physical address for postal communication. This field is used to
accommodate the many different international conventions that are
the equivalent to a U.S. 'street address'.
Example(s):
7209 Coast Drive, Building 44
|
city
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The city field is used for the city name of the
contact associated with a particular resource.
Example(s):
San Francisco
|
administrativeArea
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The administrative area field is the equivalent
of a 'state' in the U.S., or Province in Canada. This field is
intended to accommodate the many types of international
administrative areas.
Example(s):
Colorado
|
postalCode
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
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The postal code is equivalent to a U.S. zip
code, or the number used for routing to an international address.
The U.S. postal code should include the 5 digit code plus the 4
digit extension.
Example(s):
93106-2231
|
country
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The country field is used for the name of the
contact's country.
Example(s):
U.S.A.
|
party
| This element has no default value. |
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The responsible party contains multiple
subfields that are used to describe a person, organization, or
position within an organization.
It is intended to be used to fully document contact
information for many types of associations, such as owner, manager,
steward, curator, etc.
|
Attribute Definitions:
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phonetype
|
Type: xs:string
Use: optional
Default value: voice
|
This attribute gives the type of phone
to which this number applies. By default, this is assumed
to be of type "voice", but other possibilities include
"facsimile" and "tdd".
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directory
|
Type: xs:string
Use: required
|
This attribute names the directory system
to which this userId applies. This will generally
be a URL that shows how to look up information, for
example an LDAP url. However, it could also be a
non-parsable description of the directory system if
that is all that is available.
Example(s):
ldap:///ldap.ecoinformatics.org/dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org
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id
|
Type: res:IDType
Use: optional
|
system
|
Type: res:SystemType
Use: optional
|
scope
|
Type: res:ScopeType
Use: optional
Default value: document
|
id
|
Type: res:IDType
Use: optional
|
system
|
Type: res:SystemType
Use: optional
|
scope
|
Type: res:ScopeType
Use: optional
Default value: document
|
Complex Type Definitions:
|
ResponsibleParty
|
|
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The ResponsibleParty Type contains
elements that are used to describe the person, organization or
position within an organization that is associated in some way with the
resource. It is intended to be used to fully document contact
information for many types of associations, such as owner, manager,
steward, curator, etc.
Note that the content model for a responsible party type
allows a sequence of choices for the first
element(s): <individualName>, <organizationName> and/or <positionName>.
This means that a parent element (e.g., creator) may use combinations of the 3 sub-elements
to make up a single logical party. For example, a creator with only
the individualName of 'Joe Smith' is NOT the same as a
creator with the individualName of 'Joe Smith' and the
organizationName of 'NSF'. To include both a positionName and
an organizationName as children of a <contact> implies that anyone
currently occupying that positionName at that organizationName
is an appropriate contact.
The positionName should not be
used in conjunction with individualName unless only that specific
individual at that position would be considered appropriate for that
designation.
Example(s):
Please see the examples for the particular
subfields.
|
Person
|
|
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
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The person Type is used to enter the salutation, and
two types of name parts for an individual associated with the
resource. It uses these three subfields to help parse the person's
entire name.
The two elements, <givenName> and <surName>,
allow parsing of many types of names, even though distinct elements
do not exist for concepts like "middle name" and "compound surname".
<givenName> should be used for parts of the name that are often
shortened to a first initial, or are not used for ordering, and typically includes
first and middle names.
The <surName> field is intended to be used for the part of the name that
is generally displayed in its entirety and/or is alphabetized or otherwise ordered
when appropriate. Note that only one
<surName> is allowed, and is required, while <givenName>s are
optional and unbounded.
The arrangement and content of the sub-elements is entirely
up to the EML document's author, who presumably has first-hand knowledge of
how the names are to be constructed. For example, if element position is important
(e.g., the list of a book's authors), then
EML authors should put the creators in that order. If it is appropriate for a
resource to have its creators sorted alphabetically, then the EML author
should construct the name parts so that the<surName> field may be used for
this purpose. At this time, EML is not able to express cultural
conventions so that authors may indicate the correct order for
<givenName>s and <surName> when the whole name is expressed.
However support for international names
is under consideration for a future version of
EML, along with other internationalization features.
Example(s):
Please see the examples within each
subfield.
|
Address
|
|
Content of this field: | Description of this field: |
|
The address field is provides detailed information for
communicating with a party contact via electronic mail or postal mail,
including the physical delivery location.
Example(s):
Please see the examples for each subfield
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Simple Type Definitions:
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RoleType
|
|
The role code field provides information on how a
person or organization is related to a resource. There may be many
people associated, including an 'originator' of a dataset, an 'author',
'editor', or 'publisher' of a literature resource, or an organization
that is a 'distributor'. the full list of choices is included in the
example.
Example(s):
author, contentProvider, custodianSteward, distributor,
editor, metadataProvider, originator, pointOfContact,
principalInvestigator, processor, publisher, or user.
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Group Definitions:
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