I too have encountered issues with OpenAlex' indexing of some of the content disseminated by Érudit, specifically concerning author affiliations. For context, Érudit is a Canadian platform for mostly diamond OA journals in the social sciences and humanities,
including about 350 scholarly journals and 170 000 articles.
The issue applies to the new version of OpenAlex, but it may have been present as well in previous versions. The errors detected are not related to a bad usage of Crossref fields; it is OpenAlex's parser that is poorly fit
for our data. Specifically, OpenAlex appears to look for footnotes on the article's front page to retrieve author affiliations, which may be valid in many cases, but not at Érudit and as we have a standard format for
the cover page, this error tends to arrive very frequently. I would not be surprised many other publishers or platforms appear to be affected similarly.
I calculated the proportion of article-author combinations on Érudit that have incorrect affiliation identification in OpenAlex (which I was able to validate since we have retroactively recovered this information for the years 2015-2024). As a percentage, for
all article-author combinations in OpenAlex:
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61% had no errors in the identified affiliation(s);
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13% had at least one error in the affiliations (in other words, OpenAlex returns several affiliations, at least one of which is correct);
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26% had no correct affiliations.
We are currently exploring ways to get the corrected metadata into OpenAlex. Ideally, we would send standardized affiliation metadata to Crossref.
Simon van Bellen