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  • The ECLAP vocabulary provide classes and properties for the description of multimedia content related with performing arts. @en
  • A vocabulary, or music ontology, to describe classical music and performances. Classes (categories) for musical works, events, instruments and performers, as well as related properties are defined. Make sure to distinguish musical works (e.g. Opera) from performance events (Opera_Event), or works (String_Quartette) from performer (StringQuartetEnsemble in this vocab), whose natural language terms are used interchangeblly. The present version experiments more precise model to describe a musical work, its representations (performances, scores, etc) and a musical event to present a representation (a concert). Includes 30 keys as individuals. @en
  • A pattern to represent contexts or situations, and the things that are contextualized. @en
  • A generic pattern usable for all situations that require a temporal indexing. @en
  • TISC, the Open Time and Space Core Vocabulary, is a lightweight spatiotemporal vocabulary aiming to provide spatial and temporal terms such as "happensAt", "locatedAt", "rightOf" to enable practitioners to relate their data to time and space. @en
  • The Government Core Ontology establishes a foundation for all oegov ontologies. @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
  • The SeaLiT Ontology is a formal ontology intended to facilitate the integration, mediation and interchange of heterogeneous information related to maritime history. It aims at providing the semantic definitions needed to transform disparate, localised information sources of maritime history into a coherent global resource. It also serves as a common language for domain experts and IT developers to formulate requirements and to agree on system functionalities with respect to the correct handling of historical information. The ontology uses and extends the CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model (ISO 21127:2014), in particular version 7.1.1, as a general ontology of human activity, things and events happening in space and time. @en
  • The Delivery Context Ontology models the knowledge of the environment in which devices interact with the Web or other services @en
  • The Ontology for Media Resources 1.0 describes a core vocabulary of properties and a set of mappings between different metadata formats of media resources hat describe media resources published on the Web (as opposed to local archives, museums, or other non-web related and non-shared collections of media resources). @en
  • The initiative Aragón Open Data was initiated by agreement of 17 of July of 2012 of the Government of Aragon. Under the same was ordered the start of the project to open public data and on February 6, 2013 was implemented through the Portal <a href="http://opendata.aragon.es/"> opendata.aragon.es </a>. Throughout this time there have been numerous works to achieve automation in the publication of information to ensure that third parties can reuse it in the best way. Given the volume of data that begins to exist, within the line of work of automation in information management, all those elements that help in the improvement of the <b> structuring of information </b> and the <b> standardization of the data </b> contained in the databases are beginning to have a special relevance. Based on this, within the General Directorate of Electronic Administration and Information Society, the idea arises of generating a set of technical and legal rules that allow to deepen in that standardization and that lead to think in the creation of the Interoperable Information Scheme Of Aragon (E2IA). The E2IA thus emerges as the framework in which the open data and in general the information of the Government of Aragon can begin to be automated in a much more profound way. The E2IA has to have a number of technical, organizational and legal elements that need to be developed. For this reason, the Technological Institute of Aragon (ITAINNOVA) has been entrusted with carrying out actions consisting in identifying, studying and analyzing current research trends and technological development in relation to ontologies and dictionaries of data interoperability, defining the ontological proposal, performing The necessary tests to validate the ontological proposal and generate the text and web versions of the ontology. @en
  • This ontology models personalized tourist experiences by representing cities, points of interest, events, accommodations, restaurants, transportation, and their relationships. This ontology is part of a university project. @en
  • APCO is an ontology that allows the description of public procurement terms @en
  • This ontology extends the SAREF ontology for the Smart City domain. This work has been developed in the context of the STF 534 (https://portal.etsi.org/STF/STFs/STFHomePages/STF534.aspx), which was established with the goal to create three SAREF extensions, one of them for the Smart City domain. @en
  • The Crime Event Model is an ontology for the representation of crime events extracted from local newspapers. It could be employed for Crime Analysis purposes: extracting crime information from newspapers and enriching them with proper machine-readable semantics is a critical task to help law enforcement agencies at preventing crime, supporting criminal investigations and evaluating the action of law enforcement agencies themselves. The model is based on the fundamental 5W1H journalistic questions, that are Who?, What?, When?, Where?, Why? and How?. Another important requirement was the attempt to exploit existing knowledge graphs and ontologies such as the Simple Event Model (SEM) Ontology and the Schema.org data model for interoperability and interconnection. @en