Is your work in the Arts & Humanities or Social Sciences? 

ORCID has just made it possible to identify additional types of work in your ORCID record that may be of interest:

ORCID now supports new work types that allow users to correctly identify outputs common to the arts and humanities.
  1. Design: Plans, drawing or set of drawings showing how something e.g. building, product is to be made and how it will work and look.
  2. Image: A visual representation other than text, a still image.
  3. Moving image: A moving display, either generated dynamically by a computer program or formed from a series of pre-recorded still images imparting an impression of motion when shown in succession.
  4. Sound: A resource primarily intended to be heard. Examples include a music playback file format, an audio compact disc, and recorded speech or sounds.
  5. Musical composition: Musical composition can refer to an original piece of music, the structure of a musical piece, or the process of creating a new piece of music.
  6. Blog post: A piece of writing or other item of content published on a blog.
  7. Conference presentation: A set of slides containing text, tables or figures, designed to communicate ideas or research results, for projection and viewing by an audience at a conference, symposium, seminar, lecture, workshop or other gatherings.
  8. Conference proceedings: Conference proceedings is the official record of a conference meeting. It is a collection of documents which corresponds to the presentations given at the conference. It may include additional content.
  9. Clinical study: A work that reports on the results of a research study to evaluate interventions or exposures on biomedical or health-related outcomes. The two main types of clinical studies are interventional studies (clinical trials) and observational studies. While most clinical studies concern humans, this publication type may be used for clinical veterinary articles meeting the requisites for humans.
  10. Learning object: Teaching material. A resource requiring interaction from the user to be understood, executed, or experienced. Examples include forms on Web pages, applets, multimedia learning objects, chat services, or virtual reality environments.
  11. Cartographic Material: Any material representing the whole or part of the earth or any celestial body at any scale. Cartographic materials include two- and three-dimensional maps and plans (including maps of imaginary places); aeronautical, navigational, and celestial charts; atlases; globes; block diagrams; sections; aerial photographs with a cartographic purpose; bird’s-eye views (map views), etc
  12. Transcription: A written record of words spoken in court proceedings or in a speech, interview, broadcast, or sound recording.
  13. Public Speech: (new work type; not mapped to COAR.) An oral presentation of information to the public. Including talks, interviews and podcasts.

For more, see: 

ORCID and Humanities: Celebrating the New Year with New Work Types. https://info.orcid.org/new-work-types/