DiagnosticImaging Members: Login | Register
Diagnostic Imaging Recommended Medical Sites Medline Drugs

Powered by SearchMedica

 
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Conference Reports
  • Case Studies
  • Jobs
  • Product Directory
  • Voice Recognition
  • Low Dose
  • RSNA 2011
  • PET-MR

Home » Daily News

Diagnostic Imaging.
 

USC wins $22.2 million grant for national informatics clearinghouse

By From the University of Southern of California news service | January 26, 2009

The University of Southern California will be the new central clearinghouse for an ambitious ongoing national project to collect and integrate a wide range of biomedical data to make them more accessible to physicians and researchers.

The National Center for Research Resources, a component institute of the National Institutes of Health, has awarded USC a major grant to support the Biomedical Informatics Research Network Coordinating Center (BIRNCC) at USC.

Carl Kesselman, Ph.D., a professor of systems engineering at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering Epstein Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering and the USC Information Sciences Institute, will lead the five-year $22.2 million task to revamp and update a critical element of an evolving NIH effort to improve access to the exploding volumes of biomedical research information.

BIRNCC brings together a network of researchers developing bioinformatics tools for the broader scientific community. USC is the lead partner on the project, which includes collaborations with the University of California, Los Angeles, UC Irvine, the University of Chicago, and Massachusetts General Hospital.

The Biomedical Informatics Research Network (BIRN) is part of NIH's National Center for Research Resources. BIRN collects biomedical imaging data from institutions all over the country, currently with a heavy emphasis on neuroscience. The BIRNCC has the task of facilitating collaboration and data sharing among the research centers.

BIRNCC will help ensure that important innovations reach society. As it stands, medical researchers develop many discoveries and therapies that never connect with people because of the overwhelming quantity of data that geneticists and others produce. BIRNCC will create a nationwide computer network that facilitates collaborative biomedical research.

NCRR's Biomedical Informatics Research Network helps connect scientists nationwide to share data and refine analytic tools that can be used for multisite data integration, according to Michael T. Marron, Ph.D., director of the NCRR Division of Biomedical Technology, in a release.

"Without a sophisticated bioinformatics capability -- which only top engineers can provide -- we cannot hope to translate the basic science into drugs and treatments that will improve the quality of life," Kesselman said. "BIRNCC can accelerate the rate of discoveries for many areas of biomedical research."

For more information from the Diagnostic Imaging and SearchMedica archives:

Imaging informatics offers key to reshaping radiology's future

SIIM vets discuss issues facing imaging informatics

Debate portends radiology's shift from clinical to informatics-based diagnostic imaging

 

Join the Conversation

Want to join the conversation? Just sign in or register today to become part of our growing, online community.






TopicIndex

 

ACOs
Cardiac
Case Studies
Colonography
CT
Digital X-ray
Direct Radiography
Elastography
Low-Dose Modalities
Meaningful Use
Molecular Imaging
MRI
 

 

Nuclear
PACS
PET/CT
PET/MR
Practice Management
RIS
Teleradiology
Ultrasound Imaging
Vendors
Voice Recognition
Women's Imaging
All Topics
 


SponsoredResources


OptumInsight
Acadiana Computer Systems, Inc. gains a 100% ROI on their radiology billing


Key Equipment Finance
Michiana Hematology Oncology Success Story


Barco
Multi-modality breast imaging using RapidFrame™ technology


Siemens
3D Ultrasound of the Breast


Ziosoft, Inc.
PhyZiodynamic Solutions: Applying Supercomputing to Patient Care


Siemens
Easy Guide to Low Dose


Medrad
Improving Clinical Outcomes and Workflow
Toshiba America Medical Systems
Minimizing dose, sedation in pediatric CT

 

View All

 


  • On This Site
  • Most Emailed
  • On This Topic

MostPopular

  • Whole-breast ultrasound brings significant screening benefits

    JAN 15 2010 DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING ASIA PACIFIC READ >>

  • CNN Investigation Targets Radiology Board Exam Cheating

    JAN 13 2012 READ >>

  • As teleradiology evolves, it changes dramatically, plays growing role in practice

    DEC 15 2010 DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING READ >>

  • Delayed side effects persist in IV iodinated contrast media

    MAY 28 2009 DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING EUROPE READ >>

  • Bilateral Pulmonary Embolism

    DEC 13 2011 READ >>

MostPopular

  • CNN Investigation Targets Radiology Board Exam Cheating

    JAN 13 2012 READ >>

  • Telemammography Taking Hold

    JAN 24 2012 READ >>

  • Riverain’s Chest X-Ray Comparison Tool Gets FDA Nod

    JAN 11 2012 READ >>

  • Taking Medical Image Sharing to the Cloud

    JAN 19 2012 READ >>

  • Delayed side effects persist in IV iodinated contrast media

    MAY 28 2009DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING EUROPE READ >>

MostPopular

  • CNN Investigation Targets Radiology Board Exam Cheating

    JAN 13 2012 READ >>

  • Columbus Radiology Launches Imaging Ordering App

    JAN 19 2012 READ >>

  • Radiology Comic: MRI de Cabeza

    JAN 4 2012 READ >>

  • CNN Look at Radiology Exam "Cheating" Misses the Mark

    JAN 24 2012 READ >>

  • On Cherry-Picking the Easy Radiology Reads, Part 2

    DEC 31 2011 READ >>



CancerNetwork | CME LLC | ConsultantLive | Diagnostic Imaging | Musculoskeletal Network | OBGYN.net | PediatricsConsultantLive |
Physicians Practice | Psychiatric Times | SearchMedica | Medical Resources

© 1996 - 2012 UBM Medica LLC, a UBM company
Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Advertising Information - Editorial Policy Statement - UBM Medica Network Privacy Policy