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  • A vocabulary for the Social and Solidarity Economy (SSE). This vocabulary is designed to be used in combination with the metadata schemes/vocabularies/ontologies: dcterms, good relations, foaf, vcard, organization and schema.org - this is defined in the Dublin Core Application Profile of the SSE. Developed by the ESSGlobal group of the Intercontinental Network for Promoting the Social and Solidarity Economy (RIPESS) Organisation. @en
  • This is the Hydrogen Ontology (HOLY). HOLY is a domain ontology for describing the complex structure of hydrogen-based markets. HOLY contributes to the systemic modeling of the hydrogen domain with a focus on its value chain. Hence, it provides a foundation for retrieval, storage, and delivery of market insights. @en
  • This vocabulary extends the data cube vocabulary to support publication of statistical data in RDF, using an information model based on SDMX @en
  • Defines subclasses and instances of codes used in SDMX, such as currencies, decimals, frequencies ... @en
  • Defines dimensions for the statistical "cubes" defined by SDMX @en
  • A Vocabulary for Incorporating Predictive Models into the Linked Data Web @en
  • Vocabulary for describing issues (or problems) and corresponding symptoms and solutions to a broad variety of contexts. It is intended to provide a generic, reusable core ontology that can be extended or specialized for use in domain-specific situations, aimed at supporting linked data publishing. The solutions are represented by procedures, which are possible workflows for solving corresponding issues. @en
  • This vocabulary allows multi-dimensional data, such as statistics, to be published in RDF. @en
  • Wf-invoc is a simple profile of the P-plan ontology to describe how workflow steps are invoked within a workflow execution. @en
  • Ontology for describing Workflow Motifs. Workflow Motifs outline the kinds of data-intensive activities that are observed in workflows (data-operation motifs) and the different manners in which activities are implemented within workflows (workflow-oriented motifs). @en
  • The Ontology for Provenance and Plans (P-Plan) is an extension of the PROV-O ontology [PROV-O] created to represent the plans that guided the execution of scientific processes. P-Plan describes how the plans are composed and their correspondence to provenance records that describe the execution itself. @en
  • The Counter Ontology specification provides basic concepts and properties for describing a general counter concept and some important sub counters @en
  • The RECO ontology defines the vocabulary for representing preferences-as-constraints and preferences-as-ratings as RDF graphs. This lightweight vocabulary provides domain-independent means to describe user profiles in a coherent and context-aware way. RECO has been designed as an extension of both Friend-Of-A-Friend (FOAF) and Who Am I! (WAI) ontologies. @en
  • This vocabulary provides supplementary terms for organisations wishing to publish open data about themselves. @en
  • This version of the OSLO Exchange Standard provides a minimum set of classes and properties for describing a natural person, i.e. the individual as opposed to any role they may play in society or the relationships they have to other people, organisations and property; all of which contribute significantly to the broader concept of identity. The vocabulary is closely integrated with the Person, Organisation and Location Vocabularies published by the W3C in the Gov Linked Data Project. The OSLO specification is the result of a public-private partnership initiated by V-ICT-OR, the Flemish Organization for ICT in Local Government. @en