FHSLA is proud to present a blog post by Visible Body- Diamond Sponsor of the FHSLA annual meeting.
Calling All Librarians: A Visual and Interactive 3D Database for your Library
At Visible Body, we feel a kinship with academic librarians. Taking vast amounts of information, making sure it is accurate, organizing it in a logical, user-friendly system, and presenting it in such a way that it sparks understanding and learning—librarians do it, and we do it too!
Visible Body creates highly visual and interactive content for students and professionals who need to understand and communicate human anatomy, physiology, pathology and biology. The professionals behind Visible Body's content are part of our in-house biomedical visualization team. Everything they create is reviewed by outside panels of experts before being included in the products we provide to libraries and medical institutions around the world. Our content collection includes over 24,000 items. Here are some samples:
Our library is a collection of apps that can be accessed on whatever electronic platform our users prefer: PCs or Macs, iPhones or Android phones, tablets, or zSpace.
Web Suite is one of our most popular subscription licenses. With this package, users get access to so much content. This package includes our interactive Anatomy & Physiology content as well as all of our new Biology models. Professors and students tend to view Visible Body’s apps as companions or replacements to textbooks. Librarians often describe them as databases. In Human Anatomy Atlas, for example, a quick search for “thyroid” results in:
Health sciences, biology and medicine students and faculty are not the only users of Visible Body on campus. Visual arts students, both in 2D art (drawing, animation) and 3D art (sculpture) also use the highly accurate medical visualizations to better understand human anatomy. Jennifer Martinez Wormer is Library Director at Laguna College of Art + Design and has included Visible Body in their collection since 2012. “The impact [Visible Body] is having is helping our students develop a better understanding of human anatomy and muscular systems so that the humans they portray in their art are more realistic and believable,” she says. Check out our Visible Body Librarians page or Request a Trial. Comments are closed.
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