| CORE (Connecting Repositories) | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Commercial? | No |
| Type of project | Open Access, Repositories, Harvesting |
| Location | Open University |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Key people | Petr Knoth |
| Website | core |
CORE (Connecting Repositories) is a global open access indexing service developed at theKnowledge Media Institute (KMi) ofThe Open University,United Kingdom. It systematically indexes metadata and full text content frominstitutional and subject repositories, as well asopen access and hybrid journals, to provide a comprehensive access to the world’s scholarly works.
CORE’s strongly supports theopen access movement in scholarly communication by improving the discoverability, accessibility, and reuse of research outputs at scale.
The service underpins applications in a wide variety of areas including insystematic reviews, open access compliance monitoring,reproducibility of research software, training of LLMs, and analytics for funders and institutions.
As ofAugust 2025, COREindexes over 400 million scholarly resources from repositories[1]globally, a measure of its reach and comprehensiveness within the scholarly ecosystem.
This represents a growth of 47% from an earlier report in 2023.The data is made available via a range of services, which currently reachover 30 million monthly users, highlighting CORE’s role as a major hub for open scientific knowledge.
There are existing commercial academic search systems, such asGoogle Scholar, which provide search and access level services, but do not support programmable machine access to the content. This is seen with the use of anAPI or data dumps, and limits the further reuse of the open access content (e.g.,text and data mining). There are three access levels to content:[2]
The programmable machine access is the main feature that distinguishes CORE from Google Scholar and formerlyMicrosoft Academic Search.
The first version of CORE was created in 2011 byPetr Knoth with the aim to make it easier to access andtext mine very large amounts of research publications.[3] The value of the aggregation was first demonstrated by developing acontent recommendation system for research papers, following the ideas of literature-based discovery introduced byDon R. Swanson. Since its start, CORE has received financial support from a range of funders includingJisc and theEuropean Commission. CORE aggregates from across the world; in 2017, it was calculated that it reached documents from 102 countries in 52 languages.[4] It has the status of the UK's national aggregator ofopen access content, aggregatingmetadata and full-text outputs from both UK publishers' databases as well as institutional and subject repositories.[5][6]
CORE operates as a one step search tool for UK'sopen access research outputs, facilitatingdiscoverability, use and reuse. The importance of the service has been widely recognised byJisc, which suggested that CORE should preserve the required resources to sustain its operation and explore an international sustainability model.[7] CORE is now one of the Repository Shared Services projects, along withSherpa Services,[8] IRUS,[9] Jisc Publications Router[10] andOpenDOAR.
In 2018, CORE said it was the world's largest aggregator of open access research papers.[11] Based on the open access fundamental principles, as they were described in theBudapest Open Access Initiative, its open access content not only must be openly available to download and read, but it must also allow its reuse, both by humans and machines. As a result, there was a need to exploit the content reuse, which could be made possible with the implementation of a technical infrastructure. The CORE project started with the goal of connectingmetadata and full-text outputs offering, through content aggregation, value-added services, and by opening new opportunities in the research process.
As of November 2025, CORE provided access to 431 million metadata records of scholarly papers, with an estimated 323M free to read full text links and 46M full texts hosted directly by CORE.[12]
CORE makes its data available freely over the CORE API to everyone, including unauthenticated users.[13] Higher rate limits are available to academics from CORE member institutions and paying users.[14] CORE does not claim ownership of any individual metadata record or underlying work received from third-party repositories. In 2025, CORE announced that it is reviewing its data-licensing framework. Future versions of CORE will distinguish between factual metadata, which will be made openly reusable under a suitable licence, such as CC0 or ODC-0, and expressive content (e.g. abstracts or full texts), which will be made available under conditional access for lawful text- and data-mining purposes.[15]
CORE data can be accessed through anAPI or downloaded as a pre-processed and semantically enriched data dump.[16]
CORE provides searchable access to a collection of over 125 million open access harvested research outputs. All outputs can be accessed and downloaded free of cost and have limited re-use restrictions. One can search the CORE content using afaceted search. CORE also provides a cross-repository content recommendation system based on full-texts. The collection of the harvested outputs is available either by looking at the latest additions[17] or by browsing[18] the collection at the date of harvesting.The CORE search engine was selected by an author on Jisc in 2013 as one of the top 10 search engines[19] for open access research, facilitating access to academic papers.[20][21]
The availability of data aggregated and enriched by CORE provides opportunities for the development of new analytical services for research literature. These can be used, for example, to monitor growth and trends in research, validate compliance withopen access mandates and to develop new automatic metrics for evaluating research excellence.
According to theRegistry of Open Access Repositories, the number of funders increased from 22 units in 2007 to 34 in 2010 and then to 67 in 2015, while the number of institutional full-text and open access mandates picked up from 137 units in 2007 to 430 in 2015.[22]
CORE offers eight applications: