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Update 'datacite.yml'

David Ottenheimer 3 年之前
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共有 1 個文件被更改,包括 9 次插入9 次删除
  1. 9 9
      datacite.yml

+ 9 - 9
datacite.yml

@@ -7,12 +7,12 @@
 # if possible, including the prefix to indicate its type.
 authors:
   -
-    firstname: "David"
+    firstname: "David J"
     lastname: "Ottenheimer"
     affiliation: "Johns Hopkins University"
     id: "ORCID:0000-0003-4882-1898"
   -
-    firstname: "Bilal"
+    firstname: "Bilal A"
     lastname: "Bari"
     affiliation: "Johns Hopkins University"
     id: "ORCID:0000-0002-8381-3802"
@@ -22,25 +22,25 @@ authors:
     affiliation: "Johns Hopkins University"
     id: "ORCID:0000-0001-5174-9060"
    -
-    firstname: "Kurt"
+    firstname: "Kurt M."
     lastname: "Fraser"
     affiliation: "Johns Hopkins University"
     id: "ORCID:0000-0002-2988-7683"
    -
-    firstname: "Tabitha"
+    firstname: "Tabitha H."
     lastname: "Kim"
     affiliation: "Johns Hopkins University"
    -
-    firstname: "Jocelyn"
+    firstname: "Jocelyn M."
     lastname: "Richard"
     affiliation: "University of Minnesota"
     id: "ORCID:0000-0001-5750-0418"
    -
-    firstname: "Jeremiah"
+    firstname: "Jeremiah Y."
     lastname: "Cohen"
     affiliation: "Johns Hopkins University"
    -
-    firstname: "Patricia"
+    firstname: "Patricia H."
     lastname: "Janak"
     affiliation: "Johns Hopkins University"
     id: "ORCID:0000-0002-3333-9049"
@@ -50,8 +50,8 @@ title: "Analysis of a reward prediction error signal in ventral pallidum"
 
 # Additional information about the resource, e.g., a brief abstract.
 description: |
-  This data and code accompanies our manuscript "A quantitative reward prediction error in 
-  ventral pallidum" which will be published in Nature Neuroscience and an earlier version
+  This data and code accompanies our manuscript "A quantitative reward prediction error in ventral pallidum"
+  which will be published in Nature Neuroscience and an earlier version
   of which is available on bioRxiv. It contains single unit, extracellular electrophysiological
   data from nucleus accumbens and ventral pallidum in rats performing reward-seeking tasks for
   sucrose, maltodextrin, and water. The analysis here focuses on the outcome-evoked signaling