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  • This ontology extends the SAREF ontology for the building domain by defining building devices and how they are located in a building. This extension is based on the ISO 16739:2013 Industry Foundation Classes (IFC) standard for data sharing in the construction and facility management industries. The descriptions of the classes and properties extracted from IFC have been taken from the IFC documentation. @en
  • This ontology defines a vocabulary for describing cyber physical systems for monitoring purpose. It contains two main concepts: CPSWatch#MonitoredSystem that is a top level description of a System that is modeled and CPSWatch#MonitoringSensor that is a top level description of a sensor used to monitor the CPSWatch#MonitoredSystem. @en
  • The Internet of Things taxonomy is extended with semantic ontologies for IoT layers, containing classes, properties, individuals, and rules specific to IoT technologies, tools, and applications @en
  • The BCI ontology specifies a foundational metadata model set for real-world multimodal Brain Computing Interface (BCI) data capture activities. The ontology defines a minimalist and simple abstract metadata foundational model for real-world BCI applications that monitors human activity in any scenario. BCI multimodal domain applications are encouraged to extend and use this ontology in their implementations. @en
  • Ontology that defines the conceptual model for the Pilot 5 - Smart Building use case @en
  • domOS Common Ontology (dCO) represents a common information model to share a unified understanding for humans and machines and to ensure semantic interoperability in a heterogeneous IoT infrastructure. This ontology allows the decoupling of the infrastructure from the software services and applications. @en
  • Digital Twin ontology used to define Digital Twins and Semantic Digital Twins and aggregations by dimensions using Web of Things. @en
  • This ontology describes wildlife observations generated by sensors. @en
  • The Geometry Metadata Ontology contains terminology to Coordinate Systems (CS), length units and other metadata (file size, software of origin, etc.). GOM is designed to be at least compatible with OMG (Ontology for Managing Geometry) and FOG (File Ontology for Geometry formats), and their related graph patterns. In addition, GOM provides terminology for some experimental data structures to manage (marked as vs:term_status = unstable): * transformed geometry (e.g. a prototype door geometry that is reused for all doors of this type). This is closely related to the transformation of Coordinate Systems @en
  • The Heat Pump Ontology (HPOnt) aims to formalize and represent all the relevant information of Heat Pumps. The HPOnt has been developed as part of the REACT project which has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement no. 824395. @en
  • This ontology defines a vocabulary for describing carbon emission conversion factors (CF). These are values typically used to calculate carbon emissions where the CF multiplies a quantified estimate of the energy (e.g., kWh of electricity, litters of fuel, etc.) used by a particular activity. @en
  • A simple ontology which implements the Parameter Usage Vocabulary semantic model, as described at https://github.com/nvs-vocabs/P01 @en
  • PROV extension for linking Plans and parts of plans to their respective executions. @en
  • The File Ontology for Geometry formats (FOG) describes meaningful relations towards geometry snippets in RDF literals, geometry files on relative or absolute URLs and ontology-based geometry descriptions. The defined properties in this ontology are related towards each other and additional metadata is provided, such as file extension and related specifications/sources (incl. entries in dbpedia and Wikidata). The initial version of the ontology (v0.0.1) was documented in: Bonduel, Mathias, Wagner, Anna, Pauwels, Pieter, Vergauwen, Maarten, & Klein, Ralf (2019). Including Widespread Geometry Formats in Semantic Graphs Using RDF Literals. In Proceedings of the European Conference on Computing in Construction (EC3 2019). Chania, Greece. @en