The AtomOWL ontology is inspired from the work done by the atom working group. This ontology is working off the rfc 4287 published among othe places at http://www.atompub.org/rfc4287.html . The AtomOWL ontology uses as much as possible the same terms as the format there to make the relation easy to understand. The AtomOWL name space is slightly different from the atom namespace [see post http://www.imc.org/atom-syntax/mail-archive/msg16476.html]. But this is a good thing as it helps distinguish the ontology from the rfc 4287 serialisation. @en
This ontology is part of the Agriculture Meteorology example showcasing the ontology developed by the W3C Semantic Sensor Networks incubator group (SSN-XG). It is published here in order to generalize the potential usage and the alignment with other standardization efforts of the SSN ontology. @en
Ontology defining generic concepts for reuse by other Global Legal Entity Identifier Foundation (GLEIF) ontologies. It defines generic classes for (legal) Entities and their relationships and statuses; and generic properties for different types of name and address. It makes use of the OMG Languages Countries and Codes (LCC) ontology (based on the ISO 3166 standard) for country and region information. @en
An OWL representation of (some of) the basic types described in ISO 19103:2005, required as primitives in other ontologies based on ISO 19100 series standards @en
The BBC ontology is used to describe BBC concepts in the store. For example, the BBC divisions (products) publishing linked data and interfacing with the triplestore, the platforms for which we produce content and the web documents that publish or are relevant to the BBC's content. @en
The generic BBC ontology for people, places,events, organisations, themes which represent things that make sense across the BBC. This model is meant to be generic enough, and allow clients (domain experts) link their own concepts @en
The provenance ontology supports data management and auditing tasks. It is used to define the different types of named graphs we used in the store (quad store) and enables their association with metadata that allow us to manage, validate and expose data to BBC services @en
The BCI ontology specifies a foundational metadata model set for real-world multimodal Brain Computing Interface (BCI) data capture activities. The ontology defines a minimalist and simple abstract metadata foundational model for real-world BCI applications that monitors human activity in any scenario. BCI multimodal domain applications are encouraged to extend and use this ontology in their implementations. @en