The internet's search engine and the world's greatest research library are 
joining forces to offer researchers, students and academics desktop delivery of 
millions of full text scholarly research articles.

>From today, searches on Google Scholar (http://www.scholar.google.com) will 
>include links to the British Library's document delivery service. Search 
>results will be matched against the Library's holdings and where a match is 
>made, users will have the option to obtain articles held via the British 
>Library's online document ordering interface, British Library Direct 
>(http://direct.bl.uk)

Lynne Brindley, Chief Executive of the British Library, said: "We exist for 
everyone who wants to do research and we give priority to initiatives that make 
our collection more easily accessible."

"By partnering with Google Scholar, the British Library will enable users to 
identify and locate relevant articles more effectively than has previously been 
possible. By linking results to our pay-as-you-go service, British Library 
Direct, we'll provide a swift and easy means for them to have the items they 
require delivered straight to their desktop."

Below each successfully matched Google Scholar result, a ‘BL Direct' link will 
appear. Users that click on the link will be taken to an online ordering form 
already populated with the bibliographic details of the desired article 
enabling copyright fee-paid supply to the desktop.

Until now, online subject searches yielded many results that could not provide 
researchers with access to full text. By linking Google Scholar's search 
software with one of the world's largest document supply services, users can 
now complete the discovery-to-desktop-delivery process.

Particular subject strengths in the British Library's research collections 
include medicine, pharmacy, engineering, science, food and agriculture, 
economics, environment, law and education. Articles that are available from the 
Library can be delivered direct to users' desktops via Secure Electronic 
Delivery - in as little as two hours.

For further information, please contact Ben Sanderson at the British Library 
Press Office (telephone +44 (0)1937 546126, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]), or 
Google media contact Nathan Tyler (telephone: +1 650 253 4311, email: [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]).


Notes for Editors

1. The British Library is the national library of the United Kingdom. It 
provides world class information services to the academic, business, research 
and scientific communities and offers unparalleled access to the world's 
largest and most comprehensive research collection. The British Library's 
collections include 150 million items from every era of written human history 
beginning with Chinese oracle bones dating from 300 BC, right up to today's 
newspapers. Further information is available on the Library's website at 
www.bl.uk.

2. Google Scholar enables users to search specifically for scholarly 
literature, including peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, preprints, abstracts 
and technical reports from all broad areas of research. Researchers, students, 
librarians and academics use Google Scholar to find articles from a wide 
variety of academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories 
and universities, as well as scholarly articles available across the web.

_______________________________________________
Bib_virtual mailing list
[email protected]
https://listas.ibict.br/mailman/listinfo/bib_virtual

Responder a