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  • A vocabulary & data model for describing RDF changes and revisions. It defines the Commit & Revision classes together with their expected properties. @en
  • The Crime Event Model is an ontology for the representation of crime events extracted from local newspapers. It could be employed for Crime Analysis purposes: extracting crime information from newspapers and enriching them with proper machine-readable semantics is a critical task to help law enforcement agencies at preventing crime, supporting criminal investigations and evaluating the action of law enforcement agencies themselves. The model is based on the fundamental 5W1H journalistic questions, that are Who?, What?, When?, Where?, Why? and How?. Another important requirement was the attempt to exploit existing knowledge graphs and ontologies such as the Simple Event Model (SEM) Ontology and the Schema.org data model for interoperability and interconnection. @en
  • The ontology 'dtype' provides a specification of simple data types such as enumerations. These are needed in support of the conversion of XML Schemas and UML Models to OWL. Codelists are also defined in 'dtype'. @en
  • The Data Knowledge Vocabulary allows for a comprehensive description of data assets and enterprise data management. It covers a business data dictionary, data quality management, data governance, the technical infrastructure and many other aspects of enterprise data management. The vocabulary represents a linked data implementation of the Data Knowledge Model which resulted from extensive applied research. @en
  • The Open NEE Configuration Model defines a Linked Data-based model for describing a configuration supported by a Named Entity Extraction (NEE) service. It is based on the model proposed in "Configuring Named Entity Extraction through Real-Time Exploitation of Linked Data" (http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=2611040.2611085) for configuring such services, and allows a NEE service to describe and publish as Linked Data its entity mining capabilities, but also to be dynamically configured. @en
  • CiteDCAT-AP is an extension of the DCAT application profile for data portals in Europe (DCAT-AP) for describing resources documented by using the DataCite metadata schema - the de facto standard for data citation, and used across scientific disciplines. Its basic use case is to make research data searchable on general data portals, thereby bridging the gap between scientific and public sector information. For this purpose, CiteDCAT-AP provides an RDF vocabulary and the corresponding RDF syntax binding for the metadata elements defined in DataCite. @en
  • This document is a vocabulary to describe compound measures, i.e. measures with several metric or item that are organized with serveral dimensions. The description of such a measure relies on a Tree-Structure of Requirement (TSoR): a set of requirements structured hierarchicaly with analysis element. A TSoR represents the main measure. Several information may be added to explicitely indicate how the overall score on the measure should be calculated based on the hierarchy, relative importance of the node of the hierarchy and an aggregation function. The measure can be described completely and unambiguously from the organisation to the requirements and the implementation. @en
  • An ontology for describing changes between OWL ontology versions @en
  • The scope of the DIO is the domain of design intent or design rationale that needs to be documented while undertaking the design of any artifact @en
  • OPMW is a OPMV profile to model the executions and definitions of scientific workflows. @en
  • Vocabulary for describing ETL and data transformation activities. @en
  • A vocabulary that allows for coarse-grained descriptions of the data-source dynamics as well as the discovery of change notification mechanism(s). @en
  • A vocabulary for representing statistical data on the Web. Note :The SCOVO vocabulary is deprecated. We strongly advise to use the Data Cube Vocabulary instead. @en
  • Vocabulary to describe the response to a incident by emergency services. This is NOT intended to describe the incident itself, it describes the response @en