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  • This ontology defines classes and properties for describing participants, infrastructure, data and services of the International Data Spaces (formerly known as Industrial Data Space). @en
  • OWL ontology for the IFC conceptual data schema and exchange file format for Building Information Model (BIM) data @en
  • Information about authentication providers which might be identity providers or other services such as ones providing JSON Web Tokens. @en
  • The NORIA-O project is a data model for IT networks, events and operations information. The ontology is developed using web technologies (e.g. RDF, OWL, SKOS) and is intended as a structure for realizing an IT Service Management (ITSM) Knowledge Graph (KG) for Anomaly Detection (AD) and Risk Management applications. The model has been developed in collaboration with operational teams, and in connection with third parties linked vocabularies. Alignment with third parties vocabularies is implemented on a per class or per property basis when relevant (e.g. with `rdfs:subClassOf`, `owl:equivalentClass`). Directions for direct instanciation of these vocabularies are provided for cases where implementing a class/property alignment is redundant. Alignment holds for the following vocabulary releases: - [BBO](https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02365012/) 1.0.0 - [BOT](https://w3id.org/bot/) 0.3.2 - [DevOps-Infra](https://oeg-upm.github.io/devops-infra/) 1.0.0 - [FOLIO](https://github.com/IBCNServices/Folio-Ontology) 1.0.0 - [ORG](https://www.w3.org/TR/vocab-org/) 0.8 - [PEP](https://w3id.org/pep/) 1.1 - [SEAS](https://w3id.org/seas/) 1.1 - [SLOGERT](https://sepses.ifs.tuwien.ac.at/ns/log/index-en.html) 1.1.0 - [UCO](https://github.com/ucoProject/uco) Release-0.8.0 @en
  • The aim of the Occupant Feedback Ontology is to semantically describe passive and active occupant feedback and to enable integration of this feedback with linked building data. @en
  • This ontology provides the terms necessary to describe the status of traffic lights. @en
  • The Ontology for Property Management (OPM) extends the concepts introduced in the Smart Energy Aware Systems (SEAS) Evaluations ontology. @en
  • This ontology describes the components, failures, sensors, and events related to offshore wind platforms. @en
  • This ontology defines a vocabulary for describing provenance traces of carbon emission calculations by capturing the quantifiable measurements of carbon emission sources used by some activities (e.g., electricity used by a machinery to produce a product, petrol used to make a car journey, etc.) and emission conversion factors used to estimate the carbon emissions produced by these. In addition, the ontology provides the ability to capture various data transformations that occurred before energy estimates may be used with relevant conversion factors. For example, sensors may provide raw readings about a water flow of an irrigation rig in an agri-food operation which is then used as a proxy to estimate the total volume of fertilisers used. @en
  • The process execution ontology is a proposal for a simple extension of both the [W3C Semantic Sensor Network](https://www.w3.org/TR/vocab-ssn/) and the [Semantic Actuator Network](https://www.irit.fr/recherches/MELODI/ontologies/SAN.owl) ontology cores. @en
  • An ontology to model accountability of AI systems which use machine learning. @en
  • An ontology for describing programming language-specific runners, processors and pipelines in RDF-based data processing frameworks. @en
  • ## RDF Presentation and RDF Presentation Negotiation An RDF graph can be presented in several ways, using different media types. Examples of RDF media types include `application/rdf+xml`, `text/turtle`, `application/json+ld`. Today, most of the content consumed/produced/published, on the Web is not presented in RDF. In the Web of Things, HTTP servers and clients would rather exchange lightweight documents, potentially binary. Currently, most existing RDF Presentations generically apply to any RDF graph, at the cost of being heavy text-based documents. Yet, lightweight HTTP servers/clients could be better satisfied with consuming/producing/publishing lightweight documents, may its structure be application-specific. @en
  • The REACT ontology aims to represent all the necessary knowledge to support the achievement of island energy independence through renewable energy generation and storage, a demand response platform, and promoting user engagement in a local energy community. The REACT ontology has been developed as part of the REACT project which has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement no. 824395. @en
  • An ontology to model accountability of generic systems. @en