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{{Definition | {{Definition | ||
|Content Ontology Design Patterns (CPs) | |Content Ontology Design Patterns (CPs) | ||
− | |CPs are distinguished networked ontologies and have their own namespace. CPs cover a specific set of competency questions (requirements), which | + | |CPs are distinguished networked ontologies and have their own namespace. |
− | represent the problem they provide a solution for. | + | CPs cover a specific set of competency questions (requirements), which represent the problem they provide a solution for. |
− | CPs show certain characteristics, i.e. they are: computational, small, autonomous, hierarchical, cognitively relevant, | + | CPs show certain characteristics, i.e. they are: computational, small, autonomous, hierarchical, cognitively relevant, linguistically relevant, and best practices. |
− | linguistically relevant, and best practices. See [[Odp:EvaluationPrinciples| evaluation principles]] for more details. | + | See [[Odp:EvaluationPrinciples| evaluation principles]] for more details. |
}} | }} | ||
CPs cover a specific set of competency questions (requirements), which represent the problem they provide a solution for. CPs show certain characteristics, i.e. they are: computational, small, autonomous, hierarchical, cognitively relevant, linguistically relevant, and best practices. See evaluation principles for more details.
They show the following characteristics:
References:
See also
This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.