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  • Ontology describing geographic entities as seen by the French Statistical Institute @en
  • Juso Ontology is a Web vocabulary for describing geographical addresses and features. @en
  • South Korea Extension to Juso Ontology is a Web vocabulary that extends Juso Ontology to describe geographical addresses and features in South Korea. @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
  • This ontology is a version of the ISO TC211, Group for Ontology Management (GOM)'s OWL ontology interpretation of the ISO19160-1:2015 "Addressing -- Part 1: Conceptual model" standard (see https://www.iso.org/standard/61710.html) taken from that ontology's source code, published at https://github.com/ISO-TC211/GOM/tree/master/isotc211_GOM_harmonizedOntology/19160-1/2015. @en
  • The Copyright Ontology is a contribution geared towards the development of copyright-aware Digital Rights Management (DRM) systems. @en
  • FraPPE is a vocabulary to enable Visual Analytics operations on geo-spatial time varying data. By enabling Visual Analytics instruments FraPPE ease the capture, correlation and comparison operations on geo-spatial data from different sources evolving over time @en
  • A simple vocabulary for describing the rooms in a building. @en
  • To facilitate efforts to transform the Federal Government to one that is citizen-centered, results-oriented, and market-based, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is developing the Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA), a business-based framework for Governmentwide improvement. @en
  • 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
  • A RDF Schema that defines concepts and relationships common to all Open Government Data @en
  • Vocabulary describing the administrative subdivision of Norway @en
  • This ontology, called VIR, is an extension of CIDOC-CRM created to sustain propositions on the nature of visual elements and permit these descriptions to be published on the Web. With the term visual element, we refer to those signs identified in the visual space as distinct and documentable units, and subject to an analytical interpretation. The scope of this ontology is to s to provide a framework to support the identification, annotation and interconnections between diverse visual elements and presents and assist their documentation and retrieval. Specifically, the model aims to clarify the identity and the relation of these visual signs, providing the necessary classes to characterise their constituent elements, reference, symbolic content and source of interpretation. VIR expands on key entities and properties from CIDOC-CRM, introducing new classes and relationships responding to the visual and art historical community, specifically building up on the iconographical tradition. The result is a model which differentiates between interpretation and element identified, providing a clear distinction between denotation and signification of an element. As a consequence of such distinction, the ontology allows for the definition of diverse denotative criteria for the same representation, which could change based on traditions and perspective. Visual objects can be, in fact, polysemic and ambiguous, and it is not so easy to pin down a denotative or connotative meaning because they are very much context-dependent. @en