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  • This document gives URIs to all terms used within Datex II. the Datex standard was developed for information exchange between traffic management centres, traffic information centres and service providers in Europe @en
  • The Data Value Vocabulary (DaVe) is an extensible core vocabulary that allows user to use custom data value dimensions and metrics to characterise data value in a specific context. This flexibility allows for the comprehensive modelling of data value. As a data value model, DaVe allows users to monitor data value as it occurs within a data exploitation or value creation process (data value chain) @en
  • The ontology, presented here in a beta version, is based on the analysis of the documentation and descriptive requirements of the Intesa Sanpaolo Historical Archive and is intended to describe the content of historical banking documents and of some of the activities carried out by the bank, particularly in relation to third parties (loans, charity donations, seizures and confiscations, etc.), which involve the initiation of processes or the production of documents. The focal point of the descriptive model is the bank - an entity that initiates different types of processes, whose common feature is that they are structured into various stages/events - and the relationship between the documentation produced and the information it contains. In fact, this ontology is based on information collected from archived documents which describe various processes and activities carried out by banking institutions: the starting point for its construction were the inventories and databases of documentation stored in the Historical Archive which was produced by the various banks that over time were merged into Intesa Sanpaolo. The ontology was created to provide a sufficiently abstract representation and model for describing the processes of various banking activities from which the documentation was produced - from a company's request for financing and its outcome, to the preparation of seizure, confiscation and asset restitution filings, to charitable contributions, just to mention a few examples - reusing models that were already well established and widely used. The structure of the proposed ontology is in fact intended to adapt to the various activities, described in the archive files that a banking institution performs in relation to third parties. The proposed ontology is therefore not an ontology on banking activity in general, but on the relationship between this activity and the documents that are produced. Moreover, its objective is not to describe the documents in the strict sense of the term, for which reference is made to OAD ontology. The purpose of this project is to lay the initial, and fundamental, building blocks for describing the complexity, variety, and breadth of the domain of archiving bank records and the data they contain. Despite having data from different banks relating to different activities and having already made arrangements for the integration of third-party datasets and ontologies, before completing the project we will have to wait for the processing of representations based on other types of documents and banking institutions, including non-Italian ones. @en
  • An ontology for the Drug Bureau of Macedonia (DBM). @en
  • Primitive ontology for database to Semantic Web mapping which subsumes classes that represent mappings to explicit OWL constructs, such as OWL class, object property, data property, etc. Classes in this ontology are populated by individuals representing components of the database schema being mapped. @en
  • The DBpedia ontology provides the classes and properties used in the DBpedia data set. @en
  • An extension of DOAP for the description of bugs @en
  • An abstract model for Dublin Core metadata @en
  • DCAT is an RDF vocabulary designed to facilitate interoperability between data catalogs published on the Web @en
  • The Dublin Core Metadata Element Set is a vocabulary of fifteen properties for use in resource description. The name "Dublin" is due to its origin at a 1995 invitational workshop in Dublin, Ohio; "core" because its elements are broad and generic, usable for describing a wide range of resources. @en
  • The DataCite Ontology is an ontology written in OWL 2 DL to enable certain metadata properties of the DataCite Metadata Specification version 2.0 (http://datacite.org/schema/DataCite-MetadataKernel_v2.0.pdf) to be described in RDF. @en
  • RDF Schema declaration for Japan NDL Metadata Terms @en
  • domOS Common Ontology (dCO) represents a common information model to share a unified understanding for humans and machines and to ensure semantic interoperability in a heterogeneous IoT infrastructure. This ontology allows the decoupling of the infrastructure from the software services and applications. @en
  • an up-to-date specification of all metadata terms maintained by the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, including properties, vocabulary encoding schemes, syntax encoding schemes, and classes. @en
  • The DCMI Type Vocabulary provides a general, cross-domain list of approved terms that may be used as values for the Resource Type element to identify the genre of a resource. @en