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  • The ISA Programme Location Core Vocabulary provides a minimum set of classes and properties for describing any place in terms of its name, address or geometry. The vocabulary is specifically designed to aid the publication of data that is interoperable with EU INSPIRE Directive. @en
  • The Open Digital Rights Language (ODRL) provides flexible and interoperable mechanisms to support transparent and innovative use of digital content in publishing, distribution, and consumption of of digital media across all sectors and communities. The ODRL Policy model is broad enough to support traditional rights expressions for commercial transaction, open access expressions for publicly distributed content, and privacy expressions for social media. @en
  • RADion, and the higher level vocabularies that build upon it, are intended as a model that facilitates federation and co-operation. It is not the primary intention that repository owners redesign or convert their current systems and data to conform to RADion, but rather that it acts as a common layer among repositories that want to exchange data. @en
  • ISTEX is a platform that aims to provide the entire French higher education and research community with an online access to retrospective collections of scientific literature in all disciplines. This unparalleled reservoir of multidisciplinary resources is complemented by a significant number of value-added services that can be used to optimise operations through content discovery and interactive valuation tools. @en
  • Defines temporal / spatial concepts and general-purpose datastructures @en
  • The GLACIATION platform develops a novel Distributed Knowledge Graph (DKG) that stretches across the edge-core-cloud architecture to reduce energy consumption, improving data processing and optimizing data movement operations. Towards this aim, the platform needs to consume the data and metadata that are fed into the DKG. The metadata can affect and inform the decision-making processes in the GLACIATION architecture and introduces the GLACIATION Metadata Reference Model that will be used for modelling the metadata in the DKG. The GLACIATION Reference Metadata Model makes data ingestion and processing interoperable inside the GLACIATION platform. Linked Data allows for a high level of flexibility and to tackle the variety and merging issues that emerge in heterogenous environments, especially due to the wide range of sensors and other data sources that the platform may integrate. The GLACIATION Reference Metadata Model is tailored to fit the specific purposes of the GLACIATION platform, while the GLACIATION use cases define the scope of the model for better interoperability. There are common metadata challenges for all use cases. This stems from the use of the Kubernetes orchestration system as a basis for the GLACIATION platform. In addition, common to the platform is the ingestion of data from other sources into the DKG that can then be used to affect processing decisions. There are direct data flows from sensors within the system, but also data and metadata from sources external to the system. This allows the system to react e.g. to environmental situations like weather or temperature, but also to requirements concerning security or privacy. Exemplary uses and specializations of the reference model to the GLACIATION use cases are also provided. The GLACIATION Metadata Reference Model can be used for scheduling and performing tasks. The model can be considered as a general conceptualization of a tasks scheduling problem that considers various measuring indicators over the deployed resources. It captures the assignment of time-constrained tasks to time constrained and energy consuming resources, that can satisfy various hard and soft constraints, even compositions of such constraints. The tasks can be monitored through various measuring resources using a variety of single or aggregated, predicted or real measurements. The model is generic, by being both domain and application independent, describing the scheduling tasks, without providing specific solutions on how they can be solved. It can be easily adjusted to each of the current three GLACIATION use cases, covering also the Kubernetes orchestration and its Telemetry System deployed by the project. The proposed model makes it feasible to answer the competency queries defined by each of the Glaciation's use case. @en
  • This vocabulary defines a number of concepts peculiar to content strategy which are not accounted for by other vocabularies. @en
  • The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is comprised of several articles, each with points that refer to specific concepts. The general convention of referring to these points and concepts is to quote the specific article or point using a human-readable reference. This ontology provides a way to refer to the points within the GDPR using the EurLex ontology published by the European Publication Office. It also defines the concepts defined, mentioned, and requried by the GDPR using the Simple Knowledge Organization System (SKOS) ontology. @en
  • The notion of territory plays a major role in human and social sciences. In an historical context, most approaches are irrelevant as they rely on geometric data, which is not available. In order to represent historical territories,we conceived the HHT ontology (Hierarchical Historical Territory) to represent hierarchical historical territorial divisions, without having to know their geometry. This approach relies on a notion of building blocks to replace polygonal geometry @en
  • Metadata vocabularies are used in various domains of study. It provides an in-depth description of the resources. In this work, we develop Algorithm Metadata Vocabulary (AMV), a vocabulary for capturing and storing the metadata about the algorithms (a procedure or a set of rules that is followed step-by-step to solve a problem, especially by a computer). The snag faced by the researchers in the current time is the failure of getting relevant results when searching for algorithms in any search engine. AMV is represented as a semantic model and produced OWL file, which can be directly used by anyone interested to create and publish algorithm metadata as a knowledge graph, or to provide metadata service through SPARQL endpoint. To design the vocabulary, we propose a well-defined methodology, which considers real issues faced by the algorithm users and the practitioners. The evaluation shows a promising result. @en
  • The module Location models information related to the localization and georeferencing of a cultural property. In this module are used as template the following Ontology Design Patterns: - http://www.ontologydesignpatterns.org/cp/owl/collectionentity.owl - http://www.ontologydesignpatterns.org/cp/owl/classification.owl - http://www.ontologydesignpatterns.org/cp/owl/place.owl - http://www.ontologydesignpatterns.org/cp/owl/timeindexedsituation.owl - http://www.ontologydesignpatterns.org/cp/owl/situation.owl @en
  • This specification describes MOD, a metadata vocabulary to describe and publish ontologies @en
  • The purpose of VAEM is to provide, by import, a foundation for commonly needed resources when building an ontology. @en
  • MADS/RDF (Metadata Authority Description Schema in RDF) is a knowledge organization system (KOS) designed for use with controlled values for names (personal, corporate, geographic, etc.), thesauri, taxonomies, subject heading systems, and other controlled value lists @en
  • This ontology contains geographic feature classes and associated properties including classes and properties for describing the spatial location of the geographic feature. The classes and properties have been defined based on an ESRI dataset. @en