Summer final paper
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Knowledge#cite_note-about-okf-1
CORE (Connecting Repositories) is a Knowledge Media Institute (KMi)
project, at The Open University, United Kingdom. The aim of the project is to promote open
access to scholarly outputs, by aggregating (is anyone of these?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggregation) the content of open access repositories.
The project fully supports the taxpayer's entitlement to the research they have funded and
its goal is to promote the wide dissemination of the open access content by working with
digital libraries and institutional repositories, and
applying efficiently advanced technologies.
Searching CORE
CORE has a rich collection of harvested outputs that dates back to February 2012. These outputs not only
are free of cost to access and download, but they also have limited re-use restrictions, [[Gratis versus
libre|libre]] open access. One can search the CORE content by using keywords, authors' names, or names
of institutions and organisations. The collection of the harvested outputs is available either by
looking at the latest additions or by
browing the collection at the date of harvesting. The CORE search
engine is one of the top 10 search engines[1] for open access research, widening access to academic
is the second most useful database of searching electronic [Thesis|thesis] and dissertations (ETDs)
Applications
CORE has designed four applications:
The CORE Portal searches the scientific outputs aggregated from the open
access institutional repositories.
The free of cost CORE Mobile application provides easy search
and download of the CORE content when using a smart phone or tablet and is available for both Android
and iOS operating systems.
The CORE Plugin can link the institutioal repository with the
CORE service and it will recommend semantically related resources.
The CORE API offers an easy and efficient way to connect an
institutional repository with the CORE service to allow the harvesting of metadata and full-text
content.