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  • The DNB RDF Vocabulary (dnb:) is a collection of classes, properties and datatypes used within the DNB's linked data service.It complements the GND Ontology (gndo:) which is specifically geared towards authority data from the Integrated Authority File (GND), whereas this vocabulary is more general-purpose. @en
  • The Description of a Project (DOAP) vocabulary, described using W3C RDF Schema and the Web Ontology Language. @en
  • An ontology for describing the component parts of a bibliographic document @en
  • A micro-ontology that defines a set of typical document-related services such as provided by libraries, museums and archives. @en
  • The DogOnt ontology supports device/network independent description of houses, including both controllable and architectural elements. @en
  • The data.gov.au Dataset Ontology is an OWL ontology designed to describe the characteristics of datasets published on data.gov.au. The ontology contains elements which describe the publication, update, origin, governance, spatial and temporal coverage and other contextual information about the dataset. The ontology also covers aspects of organisational custodianship and governance. By using this ontology to describe datasets on data.gov.au publishers increase discoverability and enable the consumption of this information in other applications/systems as Linked Data. It further enables decentralised publishing of catalogs and facilitates federated dataset search across sites, e.g. in datasets that are published by the States. Other publishers of Linked Data may make assertions about data published using this ontology, e.g. they may publish information about the use of the dataset in other applications. @en
  • Ontology that defines the topology of damages in constructions. @en
  • This ontology is a reduced-in-scope version of the [W3C Decisions and Decision-Making Incubator Group](https://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/decision/)'s Decision Ontology (DO) which can be found at <https://github.com/nicholascar/decision-o>. It has been re-worked to align entirely with the W3C's [PROV ontology](https://www.w3.org/TR/prov-o/) since it is widely recognised that analysing the elements of decisions *post hoc* is an exercise in provenance. Unlike the original DO, this ontology cannot be used for *normative* scenarios: it is only capable of recording decisions that have already been made (so-called *data-driven* use in the DO). This is because PROV, to which this ontology is completely mapped, does not have a templating system which can indicate what *should* occur in future scenarios. This ontology introduces only one new element for decision modelling over that which was present in the DO: an Agent which allows agency in decision making to be recorded. @en
  • The Data Privacy Vocabulary (DPV) provides terms (classes and properties) to represent information about processing of personal data, for example - purposes, processing operations, personal data, technical and organisational measures. @en
  • This RDF document contains a library of data quality constraints represented as SPARQL query templates based on the SPARQL Inferencing Framework (SPIN). The data quality constraint templates are especially useful for the identification of data quality problems during data entry and for periodic quality checks during data usage. @en
  • The Data Quality Management Vocabulary - An Ontology for Data Requirements Management, Data Quality Monitoring, Data Quality Assessment, and Data Cleansing @en
  • The Data Quality Vocabulary (DQV) is seen as an extension to DCAT to cover the quality of the data, how frequently is it updated, whether it accepts user corrections, persistence commitments etc. When used by publishers, this vocabulary will foster trust in the data amongst developers. @en
  • Relationships without range and domains meant to be reused in different contexts @en
  • Designed with the goals to describe and encode the core dramatic qualities and to serve as a knowledge base underlying a number of applications, Drammar is a comprehensive ontology of drama, realized through a collaboration of computer scientists and drama scholars. It makes the knowledge about drama available as a vocabulary for the linked interchange of drama encodings and readily usable by automatic reasoners. By avoinding references to style and artistic qualities Drammar aims at representing the elements shared by different, cross-media manifestations of drama, the so–called intangible elements of drama as an intangible cultural heritage form. @en
  • This vocabulary is used for modelling catalogs of datasets and its relationships with the datasets @en