01713nas a2200313 4500008004100000245006300041210005800104260001200162490000700174520076200181653002100943653002300964653003100987653002101018653002901039100001901068700002001087700001601107700002001123700003001143700002101173700002301194700002201217700001701239700001901256700001601275700001701291856009101308 2020 eng d00aThe Enslaved Ontology: Peoples of the Historic Slave Trade0 aEnslaved Ontology Peoples of the Historic Slave Trade c08/20200 v633 a
We present the Enslaved Ontology (V1.0) which was developed for integrating data about the historic slave trade from diverse sources in a use case driven by historians. Ontology development followed modular ontology design principles as derived from ontology design pattern application best practices and the eXtreme Design Methodology. Ontology content focuses on data about historic persons and the event records from which this data can be taken. It also incorporates provenance modeling and some temporal and spatial aspects. The ontology is available as serialized in the Web Ontology Language OWL, and carries modularization annotations using the Ontology Pattern Language (OPLa). It is available under the Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 license.
10adata integration10adigital humanities10ahistory of the slave trade10amodular ontology10aOntology Design Patterns1 aShimizu, Cogan1 aHitzler, Pascal1 aHirt, Quinn1 aRehberger, Dean1 aEstrecha, Seila, Gonzalez1 aFoley, Catherine1 aSheill, Alicia, M.1 aHawthorne, Walter1 aMixter, Jeff1 aWatrall, Ethan1 aCarty, Ryan1 aTarr, Duncan uhttps://daselab.cs.ksu.edu/publications/enslaved-ontology-peoples-historic-slave-trade01175nas a2200193 4500008004100000245009200041210006900133260001200202520048400214653001100698653002800709653002000737653002000757100002300777700002000800700002200820700001900842856012000861 2016 eng d00aA Modification to the Hazardous Situation ODP to Support Risk Assessment and Mitigation0 aModification to the Hazardous Situation ODP to Support Risk Asse c10/20163 aThe Hazardous Situation ontology design pattern models the consequences of exposure of an object to a hazard. In its current form, the ODP is well suited for representing the consequences of exposure after the fact, which is very useful for applications such as damage assessment and recovery planning. In this work, we present a modification to this pattern that enables it to additionally support proactive questions central to risk assessment and mitigation planning.
10ahazard10aOntology Design Pattern10arisk assessment10arisk mitigation1 aCheatham, Michelle1 aFerguson, Holly1 aCharles, Vardeman1 aShimizu, Cogan uhttps://daselab.cs.ksu.edu/publications/modification-hazardous-situation-odp-support-risk-assessment-and-mitigation