. . "$Date: 2007/06/29 15:25:11 $" . "\n\t\tThis ontology deals with the notion of reified events---\n\t\tevents seen as first-class objects. It only defines one\n\t\tconcept: Event, which may have agents (actively\n\t\tparticipating), factors (passively participating), products,\n\t\tand a location in space and time. \n\n\t\tRegarding the ontological status of event tokens, they are seen\n\t\tas the way cognitive agents classify space/time regions\n\t" . "The Event ontology" . . "The Event ontology" . . "Revision: 1.01" . . . "\n\t\tAn arbitrary classification of a space/time region, by a \n\t\tcognitive agent. An event may have actively participating agents,\n\t\tpassive factors, products, and a location in space/time.\n\t\t" . "Event" . "stable" . . "\n\t\tEverything used as a factor in an event\n\t\t" . "Factor" . . _:genid1 . _:genid1 . _:genid1 . _:genid1 . "stable" . . "\n\t\tEverything produced by an event\n\t\t" . "Product" . _:genid2 . _:genid2 . _:genid2 . _:genid2 . "stable" . . "\n\t\tRelates an event to an active agent (a person, a computer, ... :-) )\n\t\t" . . "agent" . . . . "stable" . . "stable" . . "\n\t\tRelates an event to a passive factor (a tool, an instrument, an abstract cause...)\n\t\t" . . "factor" . . . "stable" . . "stable" . . "deprecated" . . "deprecated" . . "deprecated" . . "deprecated" . . "deprecated" . . "agent in" . . "deprecated" . . "factor of" . . "deprecated" . . "\n\t\tRelates an event to a factor which can be described as a literal. This property\n\t\tshould not be used as-is, but should be subsumed by other, more specific, properties\n\t\t(like an hypothetic :weatherCelsius, linking an event to a temperature).\n\t\t" . . "literal factor" . . "stable" . . "\n\t\tRelates an event to a spatial object.\n\t\t" . . "place" . . "stable" . . "produced in" . . "deprecated" . . "stable" . . "\n\t\tRelates an event to something produced during the event---a sound, a pie, whatever...\n\t\t" . . "product" . . . "stable" . . "\n\t\tThis property provides a way to split a complex event (for example, a performance involving several \n\t\tmusicians) into simpler ones (one event per musician).\n\t\t" . . "sub-event" . . . "stable" . . "\n\t\tRelates an event to a time object, classifying a time region (either instantaneous or having an extent).\n\t\tBy using the Timeline ontology here, you can define event happening on a recorded track or on any \n\t\tmedia with a temporal extent.\n\t\t" . . "time" . . "stable" . . . . . . . . .