127
results
  • M3 lite taxonomy is designed for the FIESTA-IOT H2020 EU project. We refactor, clean and simplify the M3 ontology designed by Eurecom (Amelie Gyrard). M3 ontology lite is currently aligned with the quantity taxonomy used by several testbeds: SmartSantander (Spain), University of Surrey (United Kingdom), KETI (Korea) and Com4Innov (France). @en
  • OLiA Annotation Model for Uby Parts of Speech (Gurevych et al, 2012) extracted from the Uby DTD (http://purl.org/olia/ubyCat.owl, version of Nov 21th, 2012). References Iryna Gurevych, Judith Eckle-Kohler, Silvana Hartmann, Michael Matuschek, Christian M. Meyer and Christian Wirth, 2012, Uby - A Large-Scale Unified Lexical-Semantic Resource, Proceedings of the 13th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (EACL 2012), Avignon, France. The DTD is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0) license which is available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ You are free to share (copy, distribute and transmit) the work, to develop your own extensions (adapt, remix) of the work, and to make commercial use of the work. @en
  • The TSN-Change ontology aims at describing changes that occured from one version of a Territorial Statistical Nomenclature (TSN) (i.e., partition of the territory) and its subsequent (e.g., change in territorial units boundaries to reflect an administrative reorganisation). @en
  • This RDF ontology allows describing any Territorial Statistical Nomenclature (TSN) (i.e., partition of the territory) used as a support to socio-economic data (statistical data that describe territory in terms of population, unemployement rate, transport access, etc.). @en
  • A micro-ontology that defines a set of typical document-related services such as provided by libraries, museums and archives. @en
  • A micro-ontology that defines the general concept of a service. @en
  • An ontology to describe associations between things. Although this ontology was designed with music similarity in mind, it can readily be applied to other domains. @en
  • The Ordered List Ontology Specification provides basic concepts and properties for describing ordered lists as semantic graphs. @en
  • The Information Service Ontology specification provides basic concepts and properties for describing different information services, e.g. Wikipedia, MusicBrainz, Freebase @en
  • Provides basic concepts and properties for describing specific association statements to something, e.g. an occasion, a genre or a mood ... @en
  • An event-based RDF ontology for typical status in fulfillment of a service @en
  • This ontology provides the terminologies used for positioning systems. @en
  • Relationships without range and domains meant to be reused in different contexts @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
  • 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