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  • The CARESSES Ontology encodes guidelines defined by experts in Transcultural Nursing, with the aim of offering a specific tool for endowing social assistive robots (assisting older adults) with cultural competence. @en
  • Simple and direct pricing ontology for Cloud Computing Services. This ontology allows to define model of prices used in large cloud computing providers such as Amazon, Azure, etc., including options for regions, type of instances, prices specification, etc. @en
  • Service Level Agreement for Cloud Computing Services. This ontology allows to define model of SLA/SLO used in large cloud computing providers such as Amazon, Azure, etc., including terms, claims, credit, compensations, etc @en
  • The Cochrane Core ontology describes the entities and concepts that exist in the domain of evidence based healthcare. It is used for the construction of the Cochrane Linked Data Vocabulary containing some 400k terms including Interventions (Drugs, Procedures etc), Populations (Age, Sex, Condition), and clinical Outcomes. @en
  • The PICO ontology provides a machine accessible version of the PICO framework. It essentially provides a model for describing evidence in a consistent way. The model allows the specifying of complex populations, detailed interventions and their comparisons as well as the outcomes considered. The PICO ontology was originally designed to model the questions asked and answered in Cochrane's systematic reviews. As a leader in the field of evidence based healthcare Cochrane uses the PICO model when framing and publishing evidence based questions. The PICO model is widely adopted for describing healthcare evidence, furthermore is equally applicable in other evidence-based domains. It essentially provides a model for describing evidence in a consistent way. @en
  • The Identifier Ontology models non-RDF based Identifiers for resources. It is used to maintain a mapping between RDF resources identifiers and their equivalent IDs in an alternate, non-RDF based domain. @en
  • The DBpedia ontology provides the classes and properties used in the DBpedia data set. @en
  • An OWL representation of parts of the Geographic Metadata model described in ISO 19115:2003 with Corrigendum 2006 - LI Package @en
  • Erlangen CRM / OWL - An OWL DL 1.0 implementation of the CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model, based on: Nick Crofts, Martin Doerr, Tony Gill, Stephen Stead, Matthew Stiff (eds.): Definition of the CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model (http://cidoc-crm.org/). This implementation has been originally created by Bernhard Schiemann, Martin Oischinger and Günther Görz at the Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Department of Computer Science, Chair of Computer Science 8 (Artificial Intelligence) in cooperation with the Department of Museum Informatics of the Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nuremberg and the Department of Biodiversity Informatics of the Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig Bonn. The Erlangen CRM / OWL implementation of the CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. @en
  • R4R is a light-weight ontology for representing general relationships of resource for publication and reusing. It asserts that a certain reusing context occurred and determined by its two basic relations, namely, isPackagedWith and isCitedBy. The isPackagedWith relation declares the resource is ready to be reused by incorporating License and Provenance information. The Cites relation is an exceptional to isCitedBy which occurs only two related objects cite each other at the same time. Five resource objects including article, data, code, provenance and license are major class concepts to represent in this ontology. The namespace for all R4R terms is http://guava.iis.sinica.edu.tw/r4r/ @en
  • This vocabulary set can represent 5W1H (Who, What, When, Where, Why, How) in event (scene) descriptions. This file is also provided in Knowledge Graph Reasoning Challenge. @en
  • This ontology offers OWL-Lite definition for object list. It is a restricted version of OWL-S ObjectList @en
  • The Linked SPARQL Queries Vocabulary (LSQ(V)), defined using RDF(S) and OWL, provides a machine readable vocabulary to help describe queries in SPARQL logs and their statistics. The vocabulary builds upon the SPIN vocabulary and the Service Description vocabulary. @en
  • This ontology and the related TaxonConcept data set mints identifiers that are tied to a specific species concept which can have several names and classifications. @en
  • The EduProgression ontology formalizes the educational progressions of the French educational system, making possible to represent the existing progressions in a standard formal model, searchable and understandable by machines (OWL). @en