The BIO schema contains terms useful for finding out more about people and their backgrounds and has some cross-over into genealogical information. The approach taken is to describe a person's life as a series of interconnected key events, around which other information can be woven. This vocabulary defines the event framework and supplies a set of core event types that cover many use cases, but it is expected that it will be extended in other vocabularies to suit their needs. The intention of this vocabulary is to describe biographical events of people and this intention carries through to the definitions of the properties and classes which are person-centric rather than neutral. For example the Employment event puts the person being employed as the principal agent in the event rather than the employer.
"Jonas Bååth kritiserar iden om postdigitalitet och att samtidskulturen vänder sig bort från digitala lösningar. Han menar istället att mediet integreras och naturliggörs."
38. H-M. Haav, An Application of Inductive Concept Analysis to Construction of Domain-specific Ontologies, In: B. Thalheim, Gunar Fiedler (Eds), Emerging Database Research in East Europe, Proceedings of the Pre-conference Workshop of VLDB 2003, Computer Science Reports, Brandenburg University of Technology at Cottbus, 2003, 14/3, pp 63-67
when you mix different metadata you loss on quality. Yes you can merge them but then you need to square the number of dictionaries respect than languages. AArrgh
This document is written for readers who want a first impression of the capabilities of OWL. It provides an introduction to OWL by informally describing the features of each of the sublanguages of OWL.
B. A, and D. Karpagam. (2011)cite arxiv:1112.2067Comment: International Journal on Cloud Computing: Services and Architecture(IJCCSA),Vol.1, No.3, November 2011.