News Release

BioMed Central bolsters radiology image collection

Business Announcement

BMC (BioMed Central)

BioMed Central has partnered with the American Roentgen Ray Society to add more journals and images to GoldMiner™, the ARRS radiology search engine.

BioMed Central, the open access publisher of peer-reviewed biomedical research has contributed over 170 journals, adding over 4,200 images to the GoldMiner™ collection. The collection now numbers over 170,000 images and over 225 journals.

“GoldMiner™ speeds your search for radiology images by quickly matching search criteria with peer-reviewed content available on the Web,” said Charles E. Kahn, Jr., MD, a creator of GoldMiner™. “By limiting results to images from respected, peer-reviewed journals, you won’t spend a lot of time sifting through thousands of unrelated images or images from unknown sources. You can save more time by filtering by imaging modality, patient age and gender,” said Dr. Kahn.

"BioMed Central is very happy to be partnering with the ARRS to expand their radiology image search tool with the indexing of thousands of openly licensed images from our journals,” said Matthew Cockerill, publisher of BioMed Central. “We are always keen to encourage creative use of the open access articles which we publish and GoldMiner™ is a great example of this,” he said.

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Notes to Editors:

1. BioMed Central (http://www.biomedcentral.com/) is an independent online publishing house committed to providing immediate access without charge to the peer-reviewed biological and medical research it publishes. This commitment is based on the view that open access to research is essential to the rapid and efficient communication of science.

2. The American Roentgen Ray Society (ARRS) was founded in 1900 and is the oldest radiology society in the United States. Its monthly journal, the American Journal of Roentgenology, began publication in 1906. Radiologists from all over the world attend the ARRS Annual Meeting to take part in instructional courses, scientific paper presentations, symposia, new issues forums and scientific and commercial exhibits related to the field of radiology. The Society is named after the first Nobel Laureate in Physics, Wilhelm Röentgen, who discovered the X-ray in 1895.

3. The GoldMiner™ search engine is designed by and for radiologists. It understands medical vocabulary, and uses sophisticated tools from the National Library of Medicine to recognize synonyms and abbreviations of radiological terms.

To access GoldMiner™ please go to http://goldminer.arrs.org/.


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