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  • The Battery Testing Ontology (BTO) is an application-level ontology belonging to EMMO's ecosystem, meant to model battery testing methodologies and techniques, like the partial discharge test. BTO is connected and aligned with a number of EMMO-based ontologies, including CHAMEO, Battery Domain Ontology and Electrochemistry. @en
  • An ontology to capture the staggering diversity of polymeric materials and their applications. @en
  • The MarketPlace Agent and Expert Ontology (MAEO) is an ontology for modeling experts, expertise, and more broadly, knowledge providers and knowledge seekers for the subject areas of Materials Modeling. MAEO is an EMMO-compliant application ontology, and has been loosely aligned with a number of existing ontologies, including Friend-Of-A-Friend (FOAF) and five recently-developed EMMO-based domain ontologies for the classification of materials, models, manufacturing processes, characterization methods and software products related to Materials Modeling. @en
  • The Internet of Construction Ontology (IoC) construction process ontology is intended to represent a comprehensive solution of how processes in the construction industry can be modelled. Due to the iterative nature of creating an ontology, the construction process ontology presented here can at best be considered a working state at the time of publication. Our approach emphasizes the simplest and most comprehensive mapping possible, which is only extended based on insights from practical use when otherwise compelling limitations in usability and applicability arise. Thus, the extension and refinement of the developed construction process ontology strongly depends on the integration of further areas of the construction value chain and the connection of further domain ontologies. @en
  • This ontology, called VIR, is an extension of CIDOC-CRM created to sustain propositions on the nature of visual elements and permit these descriptions to be published on the Web. With the term visual element, we refer to those signs identified in the visual space as distinct and documentable units, and subject to an analytical interpretation. The scope of this ontology is to s to provide a framework to support the identification, annotation and interconnections between diverse visual elements and presents and assist their documentation and retrieval. Specifically, the model aims to clarify the identity and the relation of these visual signs, providing the necessary classes to characterise their constituent elements, reference, symbolic content and source of interpretation. VIR expands on key entities and properties from CIDOC-CRM, introducing new classes and relationships responding to the visual and art historical community, specifically building up on the iconographical tradition. The result is a model which differentiates between interpretation and element identified, providing a clear distinction between denotation and signification of an element. As a consequence of such distinction, the ontology allows for the definition of diverse denotative criteria for the same representation, which could change based on traditions and perspective. Visual objects can be, in fact, polysemic and ambiguous, and it is not so easy to pin down a denotative or connotative meaning because they are very much context-dependent. @en
  • The Places Ontology is a simple lightweight ontology for describing places of geographic interest. @en
  • This ontology aims at providing a simple vocabulary for describing programmes. It covers brands, series (seasons), episodes, broadcast events, broadcast services, etc. @en
  • Vocabulary to describe fridges and freezers @en
  • This ontology provides the terminologies used for positioning systems. @en
  • The Media Value Chain Ontology (MVCO) is an ontology for formalizing the representation of the Media Value Chain. It couples naturally with the MPEG-21 multimedia framework, and its standardization as Part 19 of this ISO/IEC standard is underway (at the editing time of this document). @en
  • The COO provides a vocabulary for exposing available configuration options for car models. It allows indicating choices that can be made as well as compatibility, dependency, and inclusion information. The ontology imports and extends the GoodRelations ontology for e-commerce @en
  • This vocabulary is used to describe the physical location of public places. @en
  • Creative Workshop Management Ontology (CWMO) - an ontology designed to describe the creative workshop domain, to permit reasoning on creative method and to describe resources gathered inside Creative Support System. The primary goal of the ontology is to cover all knowledge about creative workshop and creative method necessary for Creative support system. The second goal is to provide interoperability between distributed Creative Support System. @en
  • One key use case for this ontology is to facilitate the matching of needs and innovations. @en