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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
  • The Creative Commons Rights Expression Language (CC REL) lets you describe copyright licenses in RDF @en
  • A metadata vocabulary for describing comic books and comic book collections. @en
  • The DNB RDF Vocabulary (dnb:) is a collection of classes, properties and datatypes used within the DNB's linked data service.It complements the GND Ontology (gndo:) which is specifically geared towards authority data from the Integrated Authority File (GND), whereas this vocabulary is more general-purpose. @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 EUropean Research Information Ontology (EURIO) conceptualises, formally encodes and makes available in an open, structured and machine-readable format data about resarch projects funded by the EU's framework programmes for research and innovation. @en
  • An ontology and vocabulary used for exposing IEEE LOM, a metadata standard for educational contents, as Linked Data. It is intended as a bridge for linkage of educational metadata into Linked Open Data (LOD). In this ontology, we designed a mapping of IEEE LOM elements to RDF based on Linked Data principles. @en
  • The DBpedia ontology provides the classes and properties used in the DBpedia data set. @en
  • DBpedia Data ID is an ontology with the goal of describing LOD datasets via RDF files in a uniform way. Established vocabularies like DCAT, VoID, Prov-O and SPARQL Service Description are used for maximum compatibility. @en
  • The present specification is based on the document \"Ontology:EKC 2022\", originally led by Hyeon Kim in the Center for Digital Humanities at the Academy of Korean Studies. @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
  • This ontology offers OWL-Lite definition for object list. It is a restricted version of OWL-S ObjectList @en
  • This is a registration of classes and properties from International Standard Bibliographic Description (ISBD), consolidated edition, published by De Gruyter Saur in July 2011 (ISBN 978-3-11-026379-4). @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