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  • 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
  • An ontology to address the Research Management of the CRUE's Spanish University System (Sistema Universitario Español) by applying an encompassing model not only capable of addressing the universities of the CRUE but also more belonging to the European Union. @en
  • The AKT Reference Ontology has been designed to support the AKT-2 demonstrator ("AKTive Portal"), and subsequent activities @en
  • Provides basic concepts and properties for describing specific association statements to something, e.g. an occasion, a genre or a mood ... @en
  • The Ordered List Ontology Specification provides basic concepts and properties for describing ordered lists as semantic graphs. @en
  • An ontology to describe associations between things. Although this ontology was designed with music similarity in mind, it can readily be applied to other domains. @en
  • Vocabulary to describe fridges and freezers @en
  • Relationships without range and domains meant to be reused in different contexts @en
  • The Collections Ontology (CO) defines unordered collections (Set and Bag) and ordered collections (or List). This ontology has been inspired by the work "Putting OWL in Order: Patterns for Sequences in OWL" by Drummond et al. (OWL-ED 2006). @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 ontology is being developed by CSIRO under the eReefs project for describing data provider nodes, web services available and datasets that are hosted by them. This ontology features a module for describing Datasets. It does not however describe geospatial, temporal, organisational or domain concepts as these are intended to be included from other ontologies via the imports statement. Other modules complementary to the DPN ontology are http://purl.org/dpn/dataset and http://purl.org/dpn/services. This version aligns DCAT and DC terms and imports DPN services. @en
  • One key use case for this ontology is to facilitate the matching of needs and innovations. @en
  • OLiA Annotation Model for Uby Parts of Speech (Gurevych et al, 2012) extracted from the Uby DTD (http://purl.org/olia/ubyCat.owl, version of Nov 21th, 2012). References Iryna Gurevych, Judith Eckle-Kohler, Silvana Hartmann, Michael Matuschek, Christian M. Meyer and Christian Wirth, 2012, Uby - A Large-Scale Unified Lexical-Semantic Resource, Proceedings of the 13th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (EACL 2012), Avignon, France. The DTD is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0) license which is available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ You are free to share (copy, distribute and transmit) the work, to develop your own extensions (adapt, remix) of the work, and to make commercial use of the work. @en
  • Our goal is to significantly improve the data mobility between all stakeholders by providing a standardized vocabulary using Semantic Web technologies and ontologies. For the open vocabulary covering various mobility aspects we use RDF (Resource Description Framework) - a recommended specification of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and the so-called lingua franca for the integration of data and web. We invite everyone who is interested to join our MobiVoc initiative and to participate in the development of the Open Mobility Vocabulary. @en