59
results
  • 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
  • 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 defines the most abstract concepts and properties that are needed to semantically manage resource within federated infrastructures @en
  • This ontology provides the terms necessary to describe the status of traffic lights. @en
  • The Ontology of units of Measure (OM) 2.0 models concepts and relations important to scientific research. It has a strong focus on units, quantities, measurements, and dimensions. @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
  • This ontology provides the terminologies used for positioning systems. @en
  • The eccenca Publish-Subscribe Vocabulary defines concepts and relations to create statements about publishers, subscribers and their subscriptions in a Publish-Subscribe environment based on the PubSubHubbub Core 0.4 specification. @en
  • This ontology represent context which may be interesting in providing recommendations to users. @en
  • This is the extension of SAREF for the EEBus and Energy@Home project. The documentation of SAREF4EE is available at http://ontology.tno.nl/SAREF4EE_Documentation_v0.1.pdf. SAREF4EE represents 1) The configuration information exchanged in the use case 'Remote Network Management' according to the EEBus Technical Report, Protocol Specification- Remote Network Management, version 1.0.0.2, 2015-09-19; 2) The scheduling information about power sequences exchanged in the use cases Appliance scheduling through CEM and remote start' and 'Automatic cycle rescheduling', according to the message structures described in General Message Structures, version 0.1.1, 2015-10-07; 3) The monitor and control information exchanged in the use case 'Communicate appliance status and info on manually planned cycles', according to the monitoring and control part of the Energy@Home Data Model, version 1.0; and 4) the event-based data exchanged in the use case 'Demand Response', according to General Message Structures, version 0.1.1, 2015-10-07. @en
  • The Smart Appliances REFerence (SAREF) ontology is a shared model of consensus that facilitates the matching of existing assets (standards/protocols/datamodels/etc.) in the smart appliances domain. The SAREF ontology provides building blocks that allow separation and recombination of different parts of the ontology depending on specific needs. @en
  • Smart Building Evacuation Ontology (SBEO) is an ontology that couples the information about any building with its occupants such that it can be used in many useful ways. For example, indoor localization of people, detection of any hazard, a recommendation of normal routes such as shopping or stadium seating routes, or safe and feasible emergency evacuation routes or both of them all together. The core SBEO covers the concepts related to the geometry of building, devices and components of the building, route graphs correspondent to the building topology, users' characteristics and preferences, situational awareness of both building (hazard detection, status of routes in terms of availability and occupancy) and users (tracking, management of groups, status in terms of fitness), and emergency evacuation. @en
  • The Seas Trading Ontology defines concepts and relations to describe ownership, trading, bilateral contracts and market licenses: - players own systems and trade commodities, which have a price; - bilateral electricity contracts are connections between electricity traders at which they exchange electricity; - electricity markets are connections between electricity traders at which they exchange electricity, using a market license; - electricity markets can be cleared, and balanced; - evaluations can have a traded volume validity context @en
  • A micro-ontology that defines the general concept of a service. @en