% IMPORTANT: The following is UTF-8 encoded. This means that in the presence
% of non-ASCII characters, it will not work with BibTeX 0.99 or older.
% Instead, you should use an up-to-date BibTeX implementation like “bibtex8” or
% “biber”.
@INPROCEEDINGS{Schweighofer:611558,
author = {Schweighofer, Bianca and Deinzer, Gernot and Sippl, Colin
and Weisheit, Silke and Bartlewski, Julia and Broschinski,
Christoph and Pieper, Dirk and Stein, Lisa-Marie and Wagner,
Alexander},
title = {{E}nhancing {C}ost {T}ransparency: {T}he {R}ole of
{P}ersistent {I}dentifiers in the open{C}ost {M}etadata
{S}chema},
reportid = {PUBDB-2024-04976},
year = {2024},
abstract = {The openCost project is creating a technical infrastructure
that allows us to comprehensively record all publication
costs and subsequently make them freely accessible by means
of standardized interfaces. The aim is to enable cost
transparency not only at institutional and national level,
but also to facilitate international comparisons.The project
focuses on the development of a standardized metadata schema
to record, retrieve, and map all publication costs of a
scientific institution in a structured form. This includes
publication costs such as APCs, but also additional costs
like page and color charges, processing fees, as well as
costs for transformative agreements. We are proposing the
established OAI-PMH interface for an automatic exchange of
this data. Via OAI-PMH, service providers (e.g., aggregators
and research funders) can harvest their publication outputs
directly from the institution. We are also working on
expanding the Electronic Journals Library (EZB) to include
special functions for displaying publication costs and their
assumption in order to facilitate access to cost-relevant
information. In addition, we want to provide a function that
enables institutions to record institution-specific
agreements such as memberships in the EZB administration.The
openCost metadata schema already comprehensively covers a
wide range of publication costs leveraging Persistent
Identifiers (PIDs) such as DOI, ROR and ESAC, as will be
demonstrated in the session. It is designed as a minimalist
yet comprehensive data exchange format that ensures seamless
integration with other formats. PIDs improve the efficiency
of data exchange processes and are therefore central to the
openCost schema. The use of established PIDs ensures clear
referencing and interoperability of cost-related data, while
promoting accessibility.},
month = {Jun},
date = {2024-06-11},
organization = {PID fest Conference on Persistent
Identifiers, Prague (Czech Republic),
11 Jun 2024 - 13 Jun 2024},
cin = {L},
cid = {I:(DE-H253)L-20120731},
pnm = {899 - ohne Topic (POF4-899) / DFG project 457354095 -
openCost: automatisierte, standardisierte Lieferung und
offene Bereitstellung von Publikationskosten und
Verlagsvereinbarungen (457354095)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-899 / G:(GEPRIS)457354095},
experiment = {EXP:(DE-MLZ)NOSPEC-20140101},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)24},
doi = {10.3204/PUBDB-2024-04976},
url = {https://bib-pubdb1.desy.de/record/611558},
}