From:      Ashley Dennee <[log in to unmask]>
Date:       Wed, 6 Jun 2018 14:55:36 +0100


Good afternoon -

I wanted to share some news I thought may be of interest. The National
Information Standards Organization <https://www.niso.org/> (NISO) has
approved MECA -  the ‘Manuscript Exchange Common Approach’ - which brings
together the industry’s leading tech providers to create a standard
approach to manuscript systems.

On average, 15 million hours of researcher time is consumed each year, simply
repeating reviews
<https://www.niso.org/press-releases/2018/05/niso-launches-new-project-facilitate-manuscript-exchange-across-systems>
. *John Sack*, Founding Director of digital publishing platform *HighWire
<https://www.highwirepress.com/>*, has led the MECA initiative to improve
access and review times for researchers and publishers.

Please find a full release below, and let me know if you’d like to hear
further about MECA or John Sack.

Thanks in advance,
Ashley

//

*HighWire co-founder leads industry initiative on manuscript exchange*














*LOS GATOS, CA — June 5, 2018 — Members of the National Information
Standards Organization <https://www.niso.org/> (NISO) have approved the
‘Manuscript Exchange Common Approach’ (MECA) - a major new academic
publishing initiative co-led by HighWire <https://www.highwirepress.com/>
Founding Director John Sack. The project will see the industry’s leading
technology providers work together on a more standardized approach to the
transfer of manuscripts between and among manuscript systems, such as those
in use at publishers and preprint servers.The outdated, time-intensive way
authors currently submit and re-submit manuscripts to different publishers
is quietly a major productivity killer for researchers globally. It is
estimated that a staggering 15 million hours of researcher time is consumed
each year, simply repeating reviews
<https://www.niso.org/press-releases/2018/05/niso-launches-new-project-facilitate-manuscript-exchange-across-systems>.
But the problem, described by one expert as ‘publishing’s nasty secret
<https://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2016/11/30/institutional-conservatism-in-scholarly-communications-thoughts-from-uksgs-one-day-conference/>’,
could be solved if journals and publishers were able to transfer
manuscripts between publications using different submission-tracking
systems.Goals and collaborationThe MECA project will work towards a number
of key goals, in order to address the issue: - Vocabulary: providing a
standard nomenclature- Packaging: a simple, flexible, standard way to
assemble files- Tagging: being able to pass submission information from
system to system- Peer review: being able to pass review information from
system to system- Transfer: enabling the transfer of information from
system to system- Identity: a unique, consistent identity across systems-
Transmission: a simple, consistent way to send the information across
systemsJohn Sack, Founding Director at HighWire, has co-led the initiative
alongside other leading technology providers. He explains: “While much of
the recent industry conversation has focused on opening up easier access to
existing knowledge
<https://www.theguardian.com/higher-education-network/2018/may/21/scientists-access-journals-researcher-article>,
we still have work to do on streamlining how that insight is published in
the first place. Too much time is wasted on the manuscript transfer and
submission processes - so it’s great to be working alongside other systems
providers on a solution that will benefit everyone in the industry.”MECA in
actionMomentum has gathered pace since the project was first presented by
John at the 2017 SSP Annual Meeting, with the first use case for the
project now live.In addition to HighWire and eJP, MECA's leading
participants are Aries, Clarivate, and PLOS. The collaboration between
HighWire and eJournalPress enables MECA for a new life sciences journal so
that manuscripts and reviews could flow to - and from - other journals in a
standardized way. The implementation entered into production earlier this
year, and is now completed - meaning that manuscripts and reviews now flow
smoothly via MECA, with the only author intervention being to agree to the
transfer. This first, fully-operational implementation will now serve as
the base for documentation and elaboration through the NISO review and
approval process.You can find out more about HighWire’s manuscript
submission and tracking service, BenchPress, here
<https://www.highwirepress.com/products-services/benchpress>. Or for more
detail on HighWire’s work on the MECA initiative, you can contact the
HighWire leadership team here
<https://www.highwirepress.com/about-us/leadership-team> or visit:
http://www.manuscriptexchange.org <http://www.manuscriptexchange.org/> —
ENDS —For media enquiries, please contact:Clarity PR for
[log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]> +44 (0)20 7100 1333About
HighWireHighWire is the technology partner of choice for world-leading
commercial and scholarly publishers. With offices globally, HighWire
provides digital publishing solutions and platform expertise across all
aspects of the publishing life cycle, including content management and
hosting, e-commerce, analytics, access and identity management, manuscript
submission and tracking. HighWire also delivers strategic consulting
services for developing systems and applications and improving the customer
experience.HighWire is a CODiE award finalist for Vizors in the Best
Business Intelligence Reporting & Analytics Solution
<http://www.siia.net/codie/2018-Finalists> category.About NISONISO, based
in Baltimore, Maryland, fosters the development and maintenance of
standards that facilitate the creation, persistent management, and
effective interchange of information so that it can be trusted for use in
research and learning. To fulfill this mission, NISO engages libraries,
publishers, information aggregators, and other organizations that support
learning, research, and scholarship through the creation, organization,
management, and curation of knowledge. NISO works with intersecting
communities of interest and across the entire lifecycle of information
standards. NISO is a not-for-profit association accredited by the American
National Standards Institute (ANSI). For more information, visit the NISO
website.*

-- 

*Ashley Dennee*

*Account Executive | Clarity PR *

T: +44 (0) 20 3893 5026 *| *M: +44 (0) 7375 022 761