W3C

SKOS Simple Knowledge Organization System
Reference

Editors' Draft 1 October 2008 $Revision: 1.86 $

This version:
http://www.w3.org/2006/07/SWD/SKOS/reference/20081001/
$Id: Overview.html,v 1.86 2009/03/14 18:28:36 ajm65 Exp $
Latest version:
http://www.w3.org/TR/skos-reference
Previous versions:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/WD-skos-reference-20080829/
http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/WD-skos-reference-20080609/
http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/WD-skos-reference-20080125/
Editors:
Alistair Miles, STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory / University of Oxford
Sean Bechhofer, University of Manchester

Abstract

This document defines the Simple Knowledge Organization System (SKOS), a common data model for sharing and linking knowledge organization systems via the Web.

Many knowledge organization systems, such as thesauri, taxonomies, classification schemes and subject heading systems, share a similar structure, and are used in similar applications. SKOS captures much of this similarity and makes it explicit, to enable data and technology sharing across diverse applications.

The SKOS data model provides a standard, low-cost migration path for porting existing knowledge organization systems to the Semantic Web. SKOS also provides a light weight, intuitive language for developing and sharing new knowledge organization systems. It may be used on its own, or in combination with formal knowledge representation languages such as the Web Ontology language (OWL).

This document is the normative specification of the Simple Knowledge Organization System. It is intended for readers who are involved in the design and implementation of information systems, and who already have a good understanding of Semantic Web technology, especially RDF and OWL.

For an informative guide to using SKOS, see the SKOS Primer.

Synopsis

Using SKOS, concepts can be identified using URIs, labeled with lexical strings in one or more natural languages, assigned notations (lexical codes), documented with various types of note, linked to other concepts and organized into informal hierarchies and association networks, aggregated into concept schemes, grouped into labeled and/or ordered collections, and mapped to concepts in other schemes.

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Status of This Document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at http://www.w3.org/TR/.

This document is an editor's draft produced by the Semantic Web Deployment Working Group for internal review purposes only. It has no formal status whatsoever within any W3C process.

Changes

Changes Since 29 August 2008 Last Call Working Draft:

Changes Since 9 June 2008 Working Draft:

Changes since 25 January 2008 Working Draft:


Table of Contents

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1. Introduction

1.1. Background and Motivation

The Simple Knowledge Organization System is a data sharing standard, bridging several different fields of knowledge, technology and practice.

In the library and information sciences, a long and distinguished heritage is devoted to developing tools for organizing large collections of objects such as books or museum artifacts. These tools are known generally as "knowledge organization systems" (KOS) or sometimes "controlled structured vocabularies". Several similar yet distinct traditions have emerged over time, each supported by a community of practice and set of agreed standards. Different families of knowledge organization systems, including "thesauri", "classification schemes", "subject heading systems", and "taxonomies" are widely recognized and applied in both modern and traditional information systems. In practice it can be hard to draw an absolute distinction between "thesauri" and "classification schemes" or "taxonomies", although some properties can be used to broadly characterize these different families (see e.g. [BS8723-3]). The important point for SKOS is that, in addition to their unique features, each of these families shares much in common, and can often be used in similar ways. However, there is currently no widely deployed standard for representing these knowledge organization systems as data and exchanging them between computer systems.

The W3C's Semantic Web Activity [SW] has stimulated a new field of integrative research and technology development, at the boundaries between database systems, formal logic and the World Wide Web. This work has led to the development of foundational standards for the Semantic Web. The Resource Description Framework (RDF) provides a common data abstraction and syntax for the Web [RDF-PRIMER]. The RDF Vocabulary Description language (RDFS) and the Web Ontology language (OWL) together provide a common data modeling (schema) language for data in the Web [RDFS] [OWL-GUIDE]. The SPARQL Query Language and Protocol provide a standard means for interacting with data in the Web [SPARQL].

These technologies are being applied across diverse applications, because many applications require a common framework for publishing, sharing, exchanging and integrating ("joining up") data from different sources. This ability to "join up" data from different sources is motivating many projects, as different communities seek to exploit the hidden value in linking data previously spread across isolated sources.

One facet of the Semantic Web vision is the hope of better organizing the vast amounts of unstructured (i.e. human-readable) information in the Web, providing new routes to discovering and sharing that information. RDFS and OWL are formally defined knowledge representation languages, providing ways of expressing meaning that are amenable to computation; meaning that complements and gives structure to information already present in the Web [RDF-PRIMER] [OWL-GUIDE]. They go a long way towards supporting that vision, but the story doesn't end there. To actually apply these technologies over large bodies of information requires the construction of detailed "maps" of particular domains of knowledge, in addition to the accurate description (i.e. annotation or cataloging) of information resources on a large scale, much of which cannot be done automatically. The accumulated experience and best practices in the library and information sciences regarding the organization of information and knowledge is obviously complementary and applicable to this vision, as are the many existing knowledge organization systems already developed and in use, such as the Library of Congress Subject Headings [LCSH] or the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization's AGROVOC Thesaurus [AGROVOC].

The Simple Knowledge Organization System therefore aims to provide a bridge between different communities of practice within the library and information sciences involved in the design and application of knowledge organization systems. In addition, SKOS aims to provide a bridge between these communities and the Semantic Web, by transferring existing models of knowledge organization to the Semantic Web technology context, and by providing a low-cost migration path for porting existing knowledge organization systems to RDF.

Looking to the future, SKOS occupies a position between the exploitation and analysis of unstructured information, the informal and socially-mediated organization of information on a large scale, and the formal representation of knowledge. It is hoped that, by making the accumulated experience and wisdom of knowledge organization in the library and information sciences accessible, applicable within and transferable to the technological context of the Semantic Web, in a way that is complementary to existing Semantic Web technology (and in particular formal systems of knowledge representation such as OWL), SKOS will enable many new and valuable applications, and will also lead to new integrative lines of research and development in both technology and practice.

1.2. SKOS Overview

The Simple Knowledge Organization System is a common data model for knowledge organization systems such as thesauri, classification schemes, subject heading systems and taxonomies. Using SKOS, a knowledge organization system can be expressed as machine-readable data. It can then be exchanged between computer applications and published in a machine-readable format in the Web.

The SKOS data model is formally defined in this specification as an OWL Full ontology [OWL-SEMANTICS]. SKOS data are expressed as RDF triples [RDF-CONCEPTS], and may be encoded using any concrete RDF syntax (such as RDF/XML [RDF-XML] or Turtle [TURTLE]). For more on the relationships between SKOS, RDF and OWL, see the next sub-section below.

The SKOS data model views a knowledge organization system as a concept scheme comprising a set of concepts. These SKOS concept schemes and SKOS concepts are identified by URIs, enabling anyone to refer to them unambiguously from any context, and making them a part of the World Wide Web. See Section 3. The skos:Concept Class for more on identifying and describing SKOS concepts, and Section 4. Concept Schemes for more on concept schemes.

SKOS concepts can be labeled with any number of lexical (UNICODE) strings, such as "romantic love" or "れんあい", in any given natural language, such as English or Japanese (written here in hiragana). One of these labels in any given language can be indicated as the "preferred" label for that language, and the others as "alternate" labels. Labels may also be "hidden", which is useful e.g. where a knowledge organization system is being queried via a text index. See Section 5. Lexical Labels for more on the SKOS lexical labeling properties.

SKOS concepts can be assigned one or more notations, which are lexical codes used to uniquely identify the concept within the scope of a given concept scheme. While URIs are the preferred means of identifying SKOS concepts within computer systems, notations provide a bridge to other systems of identification already in use such as classification codes used in library catalogs. See Section 6. Notations for more on notations.

SKOS concepts can be documented with notes of various types. The SKOS data model provides a basic set of documentation properties, supporting scope notes, definitions and editorial notes, among others. This set is not meant to be exhaustive, but rather to provide a framework that can be extended by third parties to provide support for more specific types of note. See Section 7. Documentation Properties for more on notes.

SKOS concepts can be linked to other SKOS concepts via semantic relation properties. The SKOS data model provides support for hierarchical and associative links between SKOS concepts. Again, as with any part of the SKOS data model, these can be extended by third parties to provide support for more specific needs. See Section 8. Semantic Relations for more on linking SKOS concepts.

SKOS concepts can be grouped into collections, which can be labeled and/or ordered. This feature of the SKOS data model is intended to provide support for node labels within thesauri, and for situations where the ordering of a set of concepts is meaningful or provides some useful information. See Section 9. Concept Collections for more on collections.

SKOS concepts can be mapped to other SKOS concepts in different concept schemes. The SKOS data model provides support for four basic types of mapping link: hierarchical, associative, close equivalent and exact equivalent. See Section 10. Mapping Properties for more on mapping.

Finally, an optional extension to SKOS is defined in Appendix A. SKOS eXtension for Labels (XL). XL provides more support for identifying, describing and linking lexical entities.

1.3. SKOS, RDF and OWL

The "elements" of the SKOS data model are classes and properties, and the structure and integrity of the data model is defined by the logical characteristics of, and interdependencies between, those classes and properties. This is perhaps one of the most powerful and yet potentially confusing aspects of SKOS, because SKOS can, in more advanced applications, also be used side-by-side with OWL to express and exchange knowledge about a domain. However, SKOS is not a formal knowledge representation language.

To understand this distinction, consider that the "knowledge" made explicit in a formal ontology is expressed as sets of axioms and facts. A thesaurus or classification scheme is of a completely different nature, and does not assert any axioms or facts. Rather, a thesaurus or classification scheme identifies and describes, through natural language and other informal means, a set of distinct "ideas" or "meanings", which are sometimes conveniently referred to as "concepts". These "concepts" may also be arranged and organized into various structures, most commonly hierarchies and association networks. These structures, however, do not have any formal semantics, and cannot be reliably interpreted as either formal axioms or facts about the world. Indeed they were never intended to be so, for they serve only to provide a convenient and intuitive "map" of some subject domain, which can then be used as an aid to organizing and finding objects, such as documents, which are relevant to that domain.

To make the "knowledge" embedded in a thesaurus or classification scheme explicit in any formal sense requires that the thesaurus or classification scheme be re-engineered as a formal ontology. In other words, some person has to do the work of transforming the structure and intellectual content of a thesaurus or classification scheme into a set of formal axioms and facts. This work of transformation is both intellectually demanding and time consuming, and therefore costly. Much can be gained from using thesauri etc. "as-is", as informal, convenient structures for navigation within a subject domain. Using them "as-is" does not require any re-engineering, and is therefore much less costly. In addition, some KOS are, by design, not intended to represent a logical view of their domain. Converting such KOS to a formal logic-based representation may, in practice, involve changes which result in a representation that no longer meets the originally intended purpose.

OWL does, however, provide a powerful data modeling language. We can, therefore, use OWL to construct a data model for representing thesauri or classification schemes "as-is". This is exactly what SKOS does. Taking this approach, the "concepts" of a thesaurus or classification scheme are modeled as individuals in the SKOS data model, and the informal descriptions about and links between those "concepts" as given by the thesaurus or classification scheme are modeled as facts about those individuals, never as class or property axioms. Note that these "facts" are facts about the thesaurus or classification scheme itself, such as "concept X has preferred label 'Y' and is part of thesaurus Z"; these are not facts about the way the world is arranged within a particular subject domain, as might be expressed in a formal ontology.

SKOS data are then expressed as RDF triples. For example, the RDF graph below (in [TURTLE] as discussed in Section 1.7.3) expresses some facts about a thesaurus.

<A> rdf:type skos:Concept ;
  skos:prefLabel "love"@en ;
  skos:altLabel "adoration"@en ;
  skos:broader <B> ;
  skos:inScheme <S> .

<B> rdf:type skos:Concept ;
  skos:prefLabel "emotion"@en ;
  skos:altLabel "feeling"@en ;
  skos:topConceptOf <S> .

<S> rdf:type skos:ConceptScheme ;
  dct:title "My First Thesaurus" ;
  skos:hasTopConcept <B> .

This point is vital to understanding the formal definition of the SKOS data model and how it may be implemented in software systems. This point is also vital to more advanced applications of SKOS, especially where SKOS and OWL are used in combination as part of a hybrid formal/semi-formal design.

From a user's point of view, however, the distinction between a formal knowledge representation system and an informal or semi-formal knowledge organization system may naturally become blurred. In other words, it may not be relevant to a user that <A> and <B> in the graph below are individuals (instances of skos:Concept), and <C> and <D> are classes (instances of owl:Class) .

<A> rdf:type skos:Concept ;
  skos:prefLabel "love"@en ;
  skos:broader <B> .

<B> rdf:type skos:Concept ;
  skos:prefLabel "emotion"@en .

<C> rdf:type owl:Class ;
  rdfs:label "mammals"@en ;
  rdfs:subClassOf <D> .

<D> rdf:type owl:Class ;
  rdfs:label "animals"@en .

An information system that has any awareness of the SKOS data model will, however, need to appreciate the distinction.

RDF schemas for SKOS and the SKOS eXtension for Labels (XL) are described in Appendix C. SKOS Data Model as RDF Triples. Note that, as there are constraints that cannot be completely captured in the schema, the RDF/XML document provides a normative subset of this specification.

1.4. Consistency and Integrity

Under the RDF and OWL Full semantics, the formal meaning (interpretation) of an RDF graph is a truth value [RDF-SEMANTICS] [OWL-SEMANTICS]. I.e. an RDF graph is interpreted as either true or false.

In general, an RDF graph is said to be inconsistent if it cannot possibly be true. In other words, an RDF graph is inconsistent if it contains a contradiction.

Using the RDF and RDFS vocabularies alone, it is virtually impossible to make a contradictory statement. When the OWL vocabulary is used as well, there are many ways to state a contradiction. For example, consider the RDF graph below.

<Dog> rdf:type owl:Class .
<Cat> rdf:type owl:Class .
<Dog> owl:disjointWith <Cat> .
<dogcat> rdf:type <Dog> , <Cat> .

The graph states that <Dog> and <Cat> are both classes, and that they are disjoint, i.e. that they do not have any members in common. This is contradicted by the statement that <dogcat> has type both <Dog> and <Cat>. There is no OWL Full interpretation which can satisfy this graph, and therefore this graph is not OWL Full consistent.

When OWL Full is used as a knowledge representation language, the notion of inconsistency is useful because it reveals contradictions within the axioms and facts that are asserted in an ontology. By resolving these inconsistencies we learn more about a domain of knowledge, and come to a better model of that domain from which interesting and valid inferences can be drawn.

When OWL Full is used as a data modeling (i.e. schema) language, the notion of inconsistency is again useful, but in a different way. Here we are not concerned with the logical consistency of human knowledge itself. We are simply interested in formally defining a data model, so that we can establish with certainty whether or not some given data conform to or "fit" with the given data model. If the data are inconsistent with respect to the data model, then the data does not "fit".

Here, we are not concerned with whether or not some given data have any correspondence with the "real world", i.e. whether they are true or false in any absolute sense. We are simply interested in whether or not the data fit the data model, because interoperability within a given class of applications depends on data conforming to a common data model.

Another way to express this view is via the notion of integrity. Integrity conditions are statements within the formal definition of a data model, which are used to establish whether or not given data are consistent with respect to the data model.

For example, the statement that <Dog> and <Cat> are disjoint classes can be viewed as an integrity condition on a data model. Given this condition, the data below are then not (OWL Full) consistent.

<dogcat> rdf:type <Dog> , <Cat> .

The definition of the SKOS data model given in this document contains a limited number of statements that are intended as integrity conditions. These integrity conditions are included to promote interoperability, by defining the circumstances under which data are not consistent with respect to the SKOS data model. Tools can then be implemented which "check" whether some or all of these integrity conditions are met for given data, and therefore whether the data "fit" the SKOS data model.

These integrity conditions are part of the formal definition of the classes and properties of the SKOS data model, however they are presented separately from other parts of the formal definition because they serve a different purpose. Integrity conditions serve primarily to establish whether given data are consistent with the SKOS data model. All other statements within the definition of the SKOS data model serve only to support logical inferences (see also the next sub-section).

Integrity conditions are defined for the SKOS data model in a way that is independent of strategies for their implementation, in so far as that is possible. This is because there are several different ways in which a procedure to find inconsistencies with the SKOS data model could be implemented. For example, inconsistencies could be found using an OWL reasoner. Alternatively, some inconsistencies could be found by searching for specific patterns within the data, or by a hybrid strategy (draw inferences using an RDFS or OWL reasoner, then search for patterns in the inferred graph).

The integrity conditions on the SKOS data model are fewer than might be expected, especially for those used to working within the "closed world" of database systems. See also the next sub-section, and the notes in sections 3-10 below.

1.5. Inference, Dependency and the Open-World Assumption

This document defines the SKOS data model as an OWL Full ontology. There are other, alternate ways in which the SKOS data model could have been defined, for example as an entity-relationship model, or a UML class model. Although OWL Full as a data modeling language appears intuitively similar in many ways to these other modeling approaches, there is an important fundamental distinction.

RDF and OWL Full are designed for systems in which data may be widely distributed (e.g. the Web). As such a system becomes larger, it becomes both impractical and virtually impossible to "know" where all of the data in the system are located. Therefore, one cannot generally assume that data obtained from such a system are "complete". I.e. if some data appear to be "missing", one has to assume, in general, that the data might exist somewhere else in the system. This assumption, roughly speaking, is known as the "open world" assumption [OWL-GUIDE].

This means in practice that, for a data model defined as an OWL Full ontology, some definitions can have a counter-intuitive meaning. No conclusions can be drawn from "missing" data, and removing something will never make the remaining data inconsistent.

For example, in Section 8 below, the property skos:semanticRelation is defined to have domain and range skos:Concept. These domain and range definitions give license to inferences. Consider the graph below.

<A> skos:semanticRelation <B>.

In this case, the graph above (RDFS and OWL Full) entails the following graph.

<A> rdf:type skos:Concept .
<B> rdf:type skos:Concept .

Thus, we do not need to explicitly state here that <A> and <B> are instances of skos:Concept.

In the SKOS data model, most statements of definition are not integrity conditions, but are statements of logical dependency between different elements of the data model, which under the open-world assumption give license to a number of simple inferences. For example, in section 7 below, skos:broader and skos:narrower are defined as inverse properties. This statement means that

<A> skos:narrower <B> .

entails

<B> skos:broader <A> .

Both of these two graphs are, by themselves, consistent with the SKOS data model.

Knowledge organization systems such as thesauri and classification schemes are applied in a wide range of situations, and an individual knowledge organization system can be used in many different information systems. By defining the SKOS data model as an OWL Full ontology, the Semantic Web can then be used as a medium for publishing, exchanging, sharing and "joining up" data involving these knowledge organization systems. For this reason, for the expressiveness of OWL Full as a data modeling language, and for the possibility of using thesauri, classification schemes etc. side-by-side with formal ontologies, OWL Full has been used to define the SKOS data model. The "open world" assumption is therefore a fundamental premise of the SKOS data model, and should be borne in mind when reading this document.

See also [RDF-PRIMER] and [OWL-GUIDE].

1.6. Design Rationale

As discussed above, the notion of a Knowledge Organization System encompasses a wide range of artifacts. There is thus a danger of overcommitment in the SKOS schema, which could preclude the use of SKOS for a particular application. In order to alleviate this, in situations where there is doubt about the inclusion of a formal constraint (for example, see discussion about skos:hasTopConcept), the constraint has not been stated formally. In such cases, usage conventions may be suggested, or specializations of the SKOS vocabulary may be used in order to enforce constraints (see the SKOS Primer).

1.7. How to Read this Document

This document formally defines the Simple Knowledge Organization System data model as an OWL Full ontology. The "elements" of the SKOS data model are OWL classes and properties, and a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) is provided for each of these classes and properties so that they may be used unambiguously in the Web. This set of URIs comprises the SKOS vocabulary.

The complete SKOS vocabulary is given in section 2 below. Sections 3 to 10 then formally define the SKOS data model. The definition of the data model is broken down into a number of sections purely for convenience. Each of these sections 3 to 10 follows a common layout:

  • Preamble — the main ideas covered in the section are introduced informally.
  • Vocabulary — URIs from the SKOS vocabulary which are defined in the section are given.
  • Class & Property Definitions — the logical characteristics and interdependencies between the classes and properties denoted by those URIs are formally defined.
  • Integrity Conditions — if there are any integrity conditions, those are given.
  • Examples — some canonical examples are given, both of data which are consistent with the SKOS data model, and (where appropriate) of data which are not consistent with the SKOS data model.
  • Notes — any further notes and discussion are presented.

1.7.1. Formal Definitions

Most of the class and property definitions and integrity conditions stated in this document could be stated as RDF triples, using the RDF, RDFS and OWL vocabularies. However, a small number cannot, either because of limitations in the expressiveness of OWL Full or lack of standard URI for some class. To improve the overall readability of this document, rather than mix RDF triples and other notations, the formal definitions and integrity conditions are stated throughout using prose.

The style of this prose generally follows the style used in [RDFS], and should be clear to a reader with a working knowledge of RDF and OWL.

So, for example, "ex:Person is an instance of owl:Class" means

ex:Person rdf:type owl:Class .

"ex:hasParent and ex:hasMother are each instances of owl:ObjectProperty" means

ex:hasParent rdf:type owl:ObjectProperty .
ex:hasMother rdf:type owl:ObjectProperty .

"ex:hasMother is a sub-property of ex:hasParent" means

ex:hasMother rdfs:subPropertyOf ex:hasParent .

"the rdfs:range of ex:hasParent is the class ex:Person" means

ex:hasParent rdfs:range ex:Person .

etc.

Where some formal aspects of the SKOS data model cannot be stated as RDF triples using either RDF, RDFS or OWL vocabularies, it should be clear to a reader with a basic understanding of the RDF and OWL semantics how these statements might be translated into formal conditions on the interpretation of an RDF vocabulary.

For example, from Section 5, "A resource has no more than one value of skos:prefLabel per language tag" means for any resource x, no two members of the set { y | <x,y> is in IEXT(I(skos:prefLabel)) } share the same language tag (where I and IEXT are functions as defined in [RDF-SEMANTICS]).

1.7.2. URI Abbreviations

Full URIs are cited in the text of this document in monospace font, enclosed by angle brackets. For example, <http://example.org/ns/example>. Relative URIs are cited in the same way, and are relative to the base URI <http://example.org/ns/>. For example, <example> and <http://example.org/ns/example> are the same URI.

URIs are also cited in the text of this document in an abbreviated form. Abbreviated URIs are cited in monospace font without angle brackets, and should be expanded using the table of abbreviations below.

Table 1. URI Abbreviations
URI Abbreviation
http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core# skos:
http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns# rdf:
http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema# rdfs:
http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl# owl:

So, for example, skos:Concept is an abbreviation of <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#Concept>.

1.7.3. Examples

Examples of RDF graphs are given using the Terse RDF Triple language (Turtle) [TURTLE]. All examples assume that they are preceded by the following prefix and URI base directives:

@prefix rdf: <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#> .
@prefix rdfs: <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#> .
@prefix owl: <http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#> .
@prefix skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> .
@base <http://example.org/ns/> .

Therefore, the example given below

Example 1
<MyConcept> rdf:type skos:Concept .

is equivalent to the following Turtle document

@prefix rdf: <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#> .
@prefix rdfs: <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#> .
@prefix owl: <http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#> .
@prefix skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> .
@base <http://example.org/ns/> . <MyConcept> rdf:type skos:Concept .

which is equivalent to the following RDF/XML document [RDF-XML]

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rdf:RDF 
   xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"
xmlns:rdfs="http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#"
xmlns:skos="http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#"
xmlns:owl="http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#"
xml:base="http://example.org/ns/"> <skos:Concept rdf:about="MyConcept"/> </rdf:RDF>

which is equivalent to the following N-TRIPLES document [NTRIPLES]

<http://example.org/ns/MyConcept> <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type> <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#Concept> .

Note the use in Turtle of the ";" and "," characters to abbreviate multiple triples with the same subject or predicate. Some examples also make use of the Turtle syntax "(...)", representing an RDF Collection.

1.8. Conformance

This specification does not define a formal notion of conformance.

However, an RDF graph will be inconsistent with the SKOS data model if that graph and the SKOS data model (as defined formally below) taken together lead to a logical contradiction.

Where URIs are used to identify resources of type skos:Concept, skos:ConceptScheme, skos:Collection or skosxl:Label, this specification does not require specific behavior when dereferencing those URIs via the Web [WEBARCH]. It is, however, strongly recommended that publishers of SKOS data follow the guidelines given in [COOLURIS] and [RECIPES].


2. SKOS Namespace and Vocabulary

The SKOS namespace URI is:

  • http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#

The SKOS vocabulary is a set of URIs, given in the left-hand column in the table below.

Table 1. SKOS Vocabulary
URI Definition
skos:Concept Section 3. The skos:Concept Class
skos:ConceptScheme Section 4. Concept Schemes
skos:inScheme Section 4. Concept Schemes
skos:hasTopConcept Section 4. Concept Schemes
skos:topConceptOf Section 4. Concept Schemes
skos:altLabel Section 5. Lexical Labels
skos:hiddenLabel Section 5. Lexical Labels
skos:prefLabel Section 5. Lexical Labels
skos:notation Section 6. Notations
skos:changeNote Section 7. Documentation Properties
skos:definition Section 7. Documentation Properties
skos:editorialNote Section 7. Documentation Properties
skos:example Section 7. Documentation Properties
skos:historyNote Section 7. Documentation Properties
skos:note Section 7. Documentation Properties
skos:scopeNote Section 7. Documentation Properties
skos:broader Section 8. Semantic Relations
skos:broaderTransitive Section 8. Semantic Relations
skos:narrower Section 8. Semantic Relations
skos:narrowerTransitive Section 8. Semantic Relations
skos:related Section 8. Semantic Relations
skos:semanticRelation Section 8. Semantic Relations
skos:Collection Section 9. Concept Collections
skos:OrderedCollection Section 9. Concept Collections
skos:member Section 9. Concept Collections
skos:memberList Section 9. Concept Collections
skos:broadMatch Section 10. Mapping Properties
skos:closeMatch Section 10. Mapping Properties
skos:exactMatch Section 10. Mapping Properties
skos:mappingRelation Section 10. Mapping Properties
skos:narrowMatch Section 10. Mapping Properties
skos:relatedMatch Section 10. Mapping Properties

All URIs in the SKOS vocabulary are constructed by appending a local name (e.g. "prefLabel") to the SKOS namespace URI.

See also the SKOS overview in Appendix B and the quick access panel.


3. The skos:Concept Class

3.1. Preamble

The class skos:Concept is the class of SKOS concepts.

A SKOS concept can be viewed as an idea or notion; a unit of thought. However, what constitutes a "unit of thought" is subjective, and this definition is meant to be suggestive, rather than restrictive.

The notion of a SKOS concept is useful when describing the conceptual or intellectual structure of a knowledge organization system, and when referring to specific ideas or meanings established within a KOS.

Note that, because SKOS is designed to be a vehicle for representing semi-formal KOS, such as thesauri and classification schemes, a certain amount of flexibility has been built in to the formal definition of this class.

See the SKOS Primer for more examples of identifying and describing SKOS concepts.

3.2. Vocabulary

skos:Concept

3.3. Class & Property Definitions

S1 skos:Concept is an instance of owl:Class.

3.4. Examples

The graph below states that <MyConcept> is a SKOS concept (i.e. an instance of skos:Concept).

Example 2 (consistent)
<MyConcept> rdf:type skos:Concept .

3.5. Notes

3.5.1. SKOS Concepts, OWL Classes and OWL Properties

Other than the assertion that skos:Concept is an instance of owl:Class, this specification does not make any additional statement about the formal relationship between the class of SKOS concepts and the class of OWL classes. The decision not to make any such statement has been made to allow applications the freedom to explore different design patterns for working with SKOS in combination with OWL.

For example, in the graph below, <MyConcept> is an instance of skos:Concept and an instance of owl:Class.

Example 3 (consistent)
<MyConcept> rdf:type skos:Concept , owl:Class .

This example is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Similarly, this specification does not make any statement about the formal relationship between the class of SKOS concepts and the class of OWL properties.

For example, in the graph below, <MyConcept> is an instance of skos:Concept and an instance of owl:ObjectProperty.

Example 4 (consistent)
<MyConcept> rdf:type skos:Concept , owl:ObjectProperty .

This example is consistent with the SKOS data model.


4. Concept Schemes

4.1. Preamble

A SKOS concept scheme can be viewed as an aggregation of one or more SKOS concepts. Semantic relationships (links) between those concepts may also be viewed as part of a concept scheme. This definition is, however, meant to be suggestive rather than restrictive, and there is some flexibility in the formal data model stated below.

The notion of a concept scheme is useful when dealing with data from an unknown source, and when dealing with data that describes two or more different knowledge organization systems.

See the SKOS Primer for more examples of identifying and describing concept schemes.

4.2. Vocabulary

skos:ConceptScheme
skos:inScheme
skos:hasTopConcept
skos:topConceptOf

4.3. Class & Property Definitions

S2 skos:ConceptScheme is an instance of owl:Class.
S3 skos:inScheme, skos:hasTopConcept and skos:topConceptOf are each instances of owl:ObjectProperty.
S4 The rdfs:range of skos:inScheme is the class skos:ConceptScheme.
S5 The rdfs:domain of skos:hasTopConcept is the class skos:ConceptScheme.
S6 The rdfs:range of skos:hasTopConcept is the class skos:Concept.
S7 skos:topConceptOf is a sub-property of skos:inScheme.
S8 skos:topConceptOf is owl:inverseOf the property skos:hasTopConcept.

4.4. Integrity Conditions

S9 skos:ConceptScheme is disjoint with skos:Concept.

4.5. Examples

The graph below describes a concept scheme with two SKOS concepts, one of which is a top-level concept in that scheme.

Example 5 (consistent)
<MyScheme> rdf:type skos:ConceptScheme ;
  skos:hasTopConcept <MyConcept> .

<MyConcept> skos:topConceptOf <MyScheme> .

<AnotherConcept> skos:inScheme <MyScheme> .

4.6. Notes

4.6.1. Closed vs. Open Systems

The notion of an individual SKOS concept scheme corresponds roughly to the notion of an individual thesaurus, classification scheme, subject heading system or other knowledge organization system.

However, in most current information systems, a thesaurus or classification scheme is treated as a closed system — conceptual units defined within that system cannot take part in other systems (although they can be mapped to units in other systems).

Although SKOS does take a similar approach, there are no conditions preventing a SKOS concept from taking part in zero, one, or more than one concept scheme.

So, for example, in the graph below the SKOS concept <MyConcept> takes part in two different concept schemes — this is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 6 (consistent)
<MyScheme> rdf:type skos:ConceptScheme .

<AnotherScheme> rdf:type skos:ConceptScheme ;
  owl:differentFrom <MyScheme> .

<MyConcept> skos:inScheme <MyScheme> , <AnotherScheme> .

This flexibility is desirable because it allows, for example, new concept schemes to be described by linking two or more existing concept schemes together.

Also, note that there is no way to close the boundary of a concept scheme. So, while it is possible using skos:inScheme to say that SKOS concepts X, Y and Z take part in concept scheme A, there is no way to say that only X, Y and Z take part in A.

Therefore, while SKOS can be used to describe a concept scheme, SKOS does not provide any mechanism to completely define a concept scheme.

4.6.2. SKOS Concept Schemes and OWL Ontologies

This specification does not make any statement about the formal relationship between the class of SKOS concept schemes and the class of OWL ontologies. The decision not to make any such statement has been made to allow different design patterns to be explored for using SKOS in combination with OWL [OWL-GUIDE].

For example, in the graph below, <MyScheme> is both a SKOS concept scheme and an OWL ontology. This is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 7 (consistent)
<MyScheme> rdf:type skos:ConceptScheme , owl:Ontology .

<MyConcept> skos:inScheme <MyScheme> .

4.6.3. Top Concepts and Semantic Relations

The property skos:hasTopConcept is, by convention, used to link a concept scheme to the SKOS concept(s) which are topmost in the hierarchical relations for that scheme. However, there are no integrity conditions enforcing this convention. Therefore, the graph below, whilst not strictly adhering to the usage convention for skos:hasTopConcept, is nevertheless consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 8 (consistent)
<MyScheme> skos:hasTopConcept <MyConcept> .
<MyConcept> skos:broader <AnotherConcept> .
<AnotherConcept> skos:inScheme <MyScheme> .

An application may reject such data but is not required to.

4.6.4. Scheme Containment and Semantic Relations

A link between two SKOS concepts does not entail containment within the same concept scheme. This is illustrated in the example below.

Example 9 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:narrower <B> .
<A> skos:inScheme <MyScheme> .

does not entail

<B> skos:inScheme <MyScheme> .

See also Section 8 below.

4.6.5. Domain of skos:inScheme

Note that no domain is stated for the property skos:inScheme. I.e. the domain is effectively the class of all resources (rdfs:Resource). The decision not to state any domain has been made to provide some flexibility, enabling extensions to SKOS to define new classes of resource but still use skos:inScheme to link them to a skos:ConceptScheme. See also example 82 below.


5. Lexical Labels

5.1. Preamble

A lexical label is a string of UNICODE characters, such as "romantic love" or "れんあい", in a given natural language, such as English or Japanese (written here in hiragana).

The Simple Knowledge Organization System provides some basic vocabulary for associating lexical labels with resources of any type. In particular, SKOS enables a distinction to be made between the "preferred", "alternate" and "hidden" lexical labels for any given resource.

The "preferred" and "alternate" labels are useful when generating or creating human-readable representations of a knowledge organization system. These labels provide the strongest clues as to the meaning of a SKOS concept.

The "hidden" labels are useful when a user is interacting with a knowledge organization system via a text-based search function. The user may, for example, enter mis-spelled words when trying to find a relevant concept. If the mis-spelled query can be matched against a "hidden" label, the user will be able to find the relevant concept, but the "hidden" label won't otherwise be visible to the user (so further mistakes aren't encouraged).

Formally, a lexical label is an RDF plain literal [RDF-CONCEPTS]. An RDF plain literal is composed of a lexical form, which is a string of UNICODE characters, and an optional language tag, which is a string of characters conforming to the syntax defined by [BCP47].

See the SKOS Primer for more examples of labeling SKOS concepts. Note especially that the examples below serve only to illustrate general features of the SKOS data model, and do not necessarily indicate best practice for the provision of labels with different language tags. The SKOS Reference aims to establish a data model that is applicable across a range of situations, which may then be refined and/or constrained by usage conventions for more specific situations. Application- and language-specific usage conventions with respect to labels and language tags are out of scope for the SKOS Reference.

5.2. Vocabulary

skos:prefLabel
skos:altLabel
skos:hiddenLabel

5.3. Class & Property Definitions

S10 skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel are each instances of owl:AnnotationProperty.
S11 skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel are each sub-properties of rdfs:label.
S12 The rdfs:range of each of skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel is the class of RDF plain literals.

5.4. Integrity Conditions

S13 skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel are pairwise disjoint properties.
S14 A resource has no more than one value of skos:prefLabel per language tag.

5.5. Examples

The following graph is consistent, and illustrates the provision of lexical labels in two different languages (French and English).

Example 10 (consistent)
<MyResource>
  skos:prefLabel "animals"@en ;
  skos:altLabel "fauna"@en ;
  skos:hiddenLabel "aminals"@en ;
  skos:prefLabel "animaux"@fr ;
  skos:altLabel "faune"@fr .

The following graph is consistent and illustrates the provision of lexical labels in four different variations (Japanese written with kanji, the hiragana script, the katakana script or with latin characters (rōmaji)).

Example 11 (consistent)
<AnotherResource>
  skos:prefLabel "東"@ja-Hani ;
  skos:prefLabel "ひがし"@ja-Hira ;
  skos:altLabel "あずま"@ja-Hira ;
  skos:prefLabel "ヒガシ"@ja-Kana ;
  skos:altLabel "アズマ"@ja-Kana ;
  skos:prefLabel "higashi"@ja-Latn ;
  skos:altLabel "azuma"@ja-Latn .

The following graph is not consistent with the SKOS data model, because two different preferred lexical labels have been given with the same language tag.

Example 12 (not consistent)
<Love> skos:prefLabel "love"@en ; skos:prefLabel "adoration"@en .

The following graph is not consistent with the SKOS data model, because there is a "clash" between the preferred and alternate lexical labels.

Example 13 (not consistent)
<Love> skos:prefLabel "love"@en ; skos:altLabel "love"@en .

The following graph is not consistent with the SKOS data model, because there is a "clash" between alternate and hidden lexical labels.

Example 14 (not consistent)
<Love> skos:altLabel "love"@en ; skos:hiddenLabel "love"@en .

The following graph is not consistent with the SKOS data model, because there is a "clash" between preferred and hidden lexical labels.

Example 15 (not consistent)
<Love> skos:prefLabel "love"@en ; skos:hiddenLabel "love"@en .

5.6. Notes

5.6.1. Domain of SKOS Lexical Labeling Properties

Note that no domain is stated for skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel. Thus, the effective domain of these properties is the class of all resources (rdfs:Resource).

Therefore, using the properties skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel to label any type of resource is consistent with the SKOS data model.

For example, in the graph below, skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel have been used to label a resource of type owl:Class — this is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 16 (consistent)
<MyClass> rdf:type owl:Class ;
  skos:prefLabel "animals"@en ;
  skos:altLabel "fauna"@en ;
  skos:hiddenLabel "aminals"@en ;
  skos:prefLabel "animaux"@fr ;
  skos:altLabel "faune"@fr .

5.6.2. Range of SKOS Lexical Labeling Properties

Note that the range of skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel is the class of RDF plain literals [RDF-CONCEPTS].

By convention, RDF plain literals are always used in the object position of a triple, where the predicate is one of skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel or skos:hiddenLabel. If a graph does not follow this usage convention an application may reject such data but is not required to. See also the note below.

5.6.3. Defining Label Relations

Some applications require additional functionality relating to labels, for example allowing the description of those labels or the definition of additional relations between the labels (such as acronyms). This can be achieved through the identification of labels using URIs. The SKOS eXtension for Labels defined in Appendix A provides support for this.

5.6.4. Alternates Without Preferred

In the graph below, a resource has two alternate lexical labels, but no preferred lexical label. This is consistent with the SKOS data model, and there are no additional entailments which follow from the data model. However, note that many applications will require a preferred lexical label in order to generate an optimum human-readable display.

Example 17 (consistent)
<Love> skos:altLabel "adoration"@en , "desire"@en .

5.6.5. Labeling and Language Tags

[BCP47] defines tags for identifying languages. Note that "en", "en-GB", "en-US" are three different language tags, used with English, British English and US English respectively. Similarly "ja", "ja-Hani", "ja-Hira", "ja-Kana" and "ja-Latn" are five different language tags used with Japanese, Japanese written with kanji, the hiragana script, the katakana script or with latin characters (rōmaji) respectively.

The graph below is consistent with the SKOS data model, because "en", "en-US" and "en-GB" are different language tags.

Example 18 (consistent)
<Colour> skos:prefLabel "color"@en , "color"@en-US , "colour"@en-GB .

In the graph below, there is no "clash" between the lexical labeling properties, again because "en" and "en-GB" are different language tags, and therefore the graph is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 19 (consistent)
<Love> skos:prefLabel "love"@en ; skos:altLabel "love"@en-GB .

Note however that, as stated above in section 5.1, these examples serve only to illustrate general features of the SKOS data model, and do not necessarily indicate best practice for the provision of labels with different language tags. Application- and language-specific usage conventions with respect to labels and language tags are out of scope for the SKOS Reference.

It is suggested that applications match requests for labels in a given language to labels with related language tags that are provided by a SKOS concept scheme, e.g. by implementing the "lookup" algorithm defined by [BCP 47]. Applications that perform matching in this way do not require labels to be provided in all possible language variations (of which there could be many), and are compatible with SKOS concept schemes that provide only those labels whose lexical forms are distinct for a given language or collection of languages.


6. Notations

6.1. Preamble

A notation is a string of characters such as "T58.5" or "303.4833" used to uniquely identify a concept within the scope of a given concept scheme.

A notation is different from a lexical label in that a notation is not normally recognizable as a word or sequence of words in any natural language.

This section defines the skos:notation property. This property is used to assign a notation as a typed literal [RDF-CONCEPTS].

6.2. Vocabulary

skos:notation

6.3. Class & Property Definitions

S15 skos:notation is an instance of owl:DatatypeProperty.

6.4. Examples

The example below illustrates a resource <http://example.com/ns/MyConcept> with a notation whose lexical form is the UNICODE string "303.4833" and whose datatype is denoted by the URI <http://example.com/ns/MyNotationDatatype>.

Example 20 (consistent)
<MyConcept> skos:notation "303.4833"^^<MyNotationDatatype> .

6.5. Notes

6.5.1. Notations, Typed Literals and Datatypes

A typed literal is a UNICODE string combined with a datatype URI [RDF-CONCEPTS].

Typed literals are commonly used to denote values such as integers, floating point numbers and dates, and there are a number of datatypes pre-defined by the XML Schema specification [XML-SCHEMA] such as xs:integer, xs:float and xs:date.

For other situations, new datatypes can be defined, and these are commonly called "user-defined datatypes" [SWBP-DATATYPES].

By convention, the property skos:notation is only used with a typed literal in the object position of the triple, where the datatype URI denotes a user-defined datatype corresponding to a particular system of notations or classification codes.

For many situations it may be sufficient to simply coin a datatype URI for a particular notation system, and define the datatype informally via a document that describes how the notations are constructed and/or which lexical forms are allowed. Note, however, that it is also possible to define at least the lexical space of a datatype more formally via the XML Schema language, see [SWBP-DATATYPES] section 2. Users should be aware that tools may vary in their support of datatypes. However, as discussed in [OWL-REFERENCE] section 6.3, tools should at least treat lexically identical literals as equal.

6.5.2. Multiple Notations

There are no constraints on the cardinality of the skos:notation property. A concept may have zero, 1 or more notations.

Where a concept has more than 1 notation, these may be from the same or different notation systems. In the case where notations are from different systems, different datatypes may be used to indicate this. It is not common practice to assign more than one notation from the same notation system (i.e. with the same datatype URI).

6.5.3. Unique Notations in Concept Schemes

By convention, no two concepts in the same concept scheme are given the same notation. If they were, it would not be possible to use the notation to uniquely refer to a concept (i.e. the notation would become ambiguous).

6.5.4. Notations and Preferred Labels

There are no constraints on the combined use of skos:notation and skos:prefLabel. In the example below, the same string is given both as the lexical form of a notation and as a the lexical form of a preferred label.

Example 21 (consistent)
<Potassium>
  skos:prefLabel "K"@en ;
  skos:notation "K"^^<ChemicalSymbolNotation> .

Typed literals consist of a string of characters and a datatype URI. By convention, skos:notation is only used with typed literals in the object position of the triple.

Plain literals consist of a string of characters and a language tag. By convention, skos:prefLabel (and skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel) are only used with plain literals in the object position of the triple.

There is no such thing as an RDF literal with both a language tag and a datatype URI. I.e. a typed literal does not have a language tag, and a plain literal does not have a datatype URI.

Usually a notation system does not have any correspondence with a natural language — it is language-independent (and hence typed literals are an appropriate representation). However, in some cases a system of notation might be associated with a particular language and/or script. One possible strategy in this situation is to use the private use language sub-tags [BCP47] with skos:prefLabel, as illustrated in the example below — this is consistent with the SKOS data model. An alternative strategy is to define one or more sub-properties of skos:prefLabel and/or skos:altLabel.

Example 22 (consistent)
<Potassium>
  skos:prefLabel "Potassium"@en ;
  skos:prefLabel "K"@en-x-chemicalsymbol ;
  skos:notation "K"^^<ChemicalSymbolNotation> .

6.5.5. Domain of skos:notation

Note that no domain is stated for skos:notation. Thus, the effective domain is the class of all resources (rdfs:Resource). Therefore, using skos:notation with any type of resource is consistent with the SKOS data model.


7. Documentation Properties (Note Properties)

7.1. Preamble

Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information. For example, it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information.

There are seven properties in SKOS for associating notes with concepts, defined formally in this section. For more information on the recommended usage of each of the SKOS documentation properties, see the SKOS Primer.

These seven properties are not intended to cover every situation, but rather to be useful in some of the most common situations, and to provide a set of extension points for defining more specific types of note. For more information on recommended best practice for extending SKOS, see the SKOS Primer.

Three different usage patterns are recommended in the SKOS Primer for the SKOS documentation properties — "documentation as an RDF literal", "documentation as a related resource description" and "documentation as a document reference". The data model defined in this section is intended to accommodate all three design patterns.

7.2. Vocabulary

skos:note
skos:changeNote
skos:definition
skos:editorialNote
skos:example
skos:historyNote
skos:scopeNote

7.3. Class & Property Definitions

S16 skos:note, skos:changeNote, skos:definition, skos:editorialNote, skos:example, skos:historyNote and skos:scopeNote are each instances of owl:AnnotationProperty.
S17 skos:changeNote, skos:definition, skos:editorialNote, skos:example, skos:historyNote and skos:scopeNote are each sub-properties of skos:note.

7.4. Examples

The graph below gives an example of the "documentation as an RDF literal" pattern.

Example 23 (consistent)
<MyResource> skos:note "this is a note"@en .

The graph below gives an example of the "documentation as a document reference" pattern.

Example 24 (consistent)
<MyResource> skos:note <MyNote> .

7.5. Notes

7.5.1. Domain of the SKOS Documentation Properties

Note that no domain is stated for the SKOS documentation properties. Thus, the effective domain for these properties is the class of all resources (rdfs:Resource). Therefore, using the SKOS documentation properties to provide information on any type of resource is consistent with the SKOS data model.

For example, in the graph below, skos:definition has been used to provide a plain text definition for a resource of type owl:Class — this is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 25 (consistent)
<Protein> rdf:type owl:Class ;
  skos:definition """A physical entity consisting of a sequence of amino-acids; a protein monomer; a single polypeptide chain. An example is the EGFR protein."""@en .

7.5.2. Range of the SKOS Documentation Properties

Note that no range is stated for the SKOS documentation properties, and thus the range of these properties is effectively the class of all resources (rdfs:Resource). Under the RDF and OWL Full semantics, everything is a resource, including RDF plain literals.


8. Semantic Relations

8.1. Preamble

SKOS semantic relations are links between SKOS concepts, where the link is inherent in the meaning of the linked concepts.

The Simple Knowledge Organization System distinguishes between two basic categories of semantic relation: hierarchical and associative. A hierarchical link between two concepts indicates that one is in some way more general ("broader") than the other ("narrower"). An associative link between two concepts indicates that the two are inherently "related", but that one is not in any way more general than the other.

The properties skos:broader and skos:narrower are used to assert a direct hierarchical link between two SKOS concepts. A triple <A> skos:broader <B> asserts that <B>, the object of the triple, is a broader concept than <A>, the subject of the triple. Similarly, a triple <C> skos:narrower <D> asserts that <D>, the object of the triple, is a narrower concept than <C>, the subject of the triple.

By convention, skos:broader and skos:narrower are only used to assert a direct (i.e. immediate) hierarchical link between two SKOS concepts. This provides applications with a convenient and reliable way to access the direct broader and narrower links for any given concept. Note that, to support this usage convention, the properties skos:broader and skos:narrower are not declared as transitive properties.

Some applications need to make use of both direct and indirect hierarchical links between concepts, for instance to improve search recall through query expansion. For this purpose, the properties skos:broaderTransitive and skos:narrowerTransitive are provided. A triple <A> skos:broaderTransitive <B> represents a direct or indirect hierarchical link, where <B> is a broader "ancestor" of <A>. Similarly a triple <C> skos:narrowerTransitive <D> represents a direct or indirect hierarchical link, where <D> is a narrower "descendant" of <C>.

By convention, the properties skos:broaderTransitive and skos:narrowerTransitive are not used to make assertions. Rather, these properties are used to infer the transitive closure of the hierarchical links, which can then be used to access direct or indirect hierarchical links between concepts.

The property skos:related is used to assert an associative link between two SKOS concepts.

For more examples of stating hierarchical and associative links, see the SKOS Primer.

8.2. Vocabulary

skos:semanticRelation
skos:broader
skos:narrower
skos:related
skos:broaderTransitive
skos:narrowerTransitive

8.3. Class & Property Definitions

S18 skos:semanticRelation, skos:broader, skos:narrower, skos:related, skos:broaderTransitive and skos:narrowerTransitive are each instances of owl:ObjectProperty.
S19 The rdfs:domain of skos:semanticRelation is the class skos:Concept.
S20 The rdfs:range of skos:semanticRelation is the class skos:Concept.
S21 skos:broaderTransitive, skos:narrowerTransitive and skos:related are each sub-properties of skos:semanticRelation.
S22 skos:broader is a sub-property of skos:broaderTransitive, and skos:narrower is a sub-property of skos:narrowerTransitive.
S23 skos:related is an instance of owl:SymmetricProperty.
S24 skos:broaderTransitive and skos:narrowerTransitive are each instances of owl:TransitiveProperty.
S25 skos:narrower is owl:inverseOf the property skos:broader.
S26 skos:narrowerTransitive is owl:inverseOf the property skos:broaderTransitive.

8.4. Integrity Conditions

S27 skos:related is disjoint with the property skos:broaderTransitive.

Note that because skos:related is a symmetric property, and skos:broaderTransitive and skos:narrowerTransitive are inverses, skos:related is therefore also disjoint with skos:narrowerTransitive.

8.5. Examples

The graph below asserts a direct hierarchical link between <A> and <B> (where <B> is broader than <A>), and an associative link between <A> and <C>, and is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 26 (consistent)
<A> skos:broader <B> ; skos:related <C> .

The graph below is not consistent with the SKOS data model, because there is a "clash" between associative links and hierarchical links.

Example 27 (not consistent)
<A> skos:broader <B> ; skos:related <B> .

The graph below is not consistent with the SKOS data model, again because there is a "clash" between associative links and hierarchical links.

Example 28 (not consistent)
<A> skos:broader <B> ; skos:related <C> .
<B> skos:broader <C> .

In the example above, the "clash" is not immediately obvious. The "clash" becomes apparent when inferences are drawn, based on the class and property definitions above, giving the following graph.

Example 29 (not consistent)
<A> skos:broaderTransitive <C> ; skos:related <C> .

The graph below is not consistent with the SKOS data model, again because there is a "clash" between associative links and hierarchical links, which can be inferred from the class and property definitions given above.

Example 30 (not consistent)
<A> skos:narrower <B> ; skos:related <C> .
<B> skos:narrower <C> .

8.6. Notes

8.6.1. Sub-Property Relationships

The diagram below illustrates informally the sub-property relationships between the SKOS semantic relation properties.

skos:semanticRelation
 |
 +— skos:related
 |
 +— skos:broaderTransitive
 |    |
 |    +— skos:broader
 |
 +— skos:narrowerTransitive
      |
      +— skos:narrower

8.6.2. Domain and Range of SKOS Semantic Relation Properties

Note that the domain and range of skos:semanticRelation is the class skos:Concept. Because skos:broader, skos:narrower and skos:related are each sub-properties of skos:semanticRelation, the graph in example 26 above entails that <A>, <B> and <C> are each instances of skos:Concept.

8.6.3. Symmetry of skos:related

skos:related is a symmetric property. The example below illustrates an entailment which follows from this condition.

Example 31 (entailment)
<A> skos:related <B> .

entails

<B> skos:related <A> .

Note that, although skos:related is a symmetric property, this condition does not place any restrictions on sub-properties of skos:related. I.e. sub-properties of skos:related could be symmetric, not symmetric or antisymmetric, and still be consistent with the SKOS data model.

To illustrate this point, in the example below, two new properties which are not symmetric are declared as sub-properties of skos:related. The example, which is consistent with the SKOS data model, also shows some of the entailments which follow.

Example 32 (entailment)
<cause> rdf:type owl:ObjectProperty ;
  rdfs:subPropertyOf skos:related .

<effect> rdf:type owl:ObjectProperty ;
 rdfs:subPropertyOf skos:related ;
  owl:inverseOf <cause> .

<A> <cause> <B> .

entails

<A> skos:related <B> .

<B> <effect> <A> ; skos:related <A> .

See also the SKOS Primer for best practice recommendations on extending SKOS.

8.6.4. skos:related and Transitivity

Note that skos:related is not a transitive property. Therefore, the SKOS data model does not support an entailment as illustrated in the example below.

Example 33 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:related <B> .
<B> skos:related <C> .

does not entail

<A> skos:related <C> .

8.6.5. skos:related and Reflexivity

Note that this specification does not state that skos:related is a reflexive property, neither does it state that skos:related is an irreflexive property.

Because skos:related is not defined as an irreflexive property, the graph below is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 34 (consistent)
<A> skos:related <A> .

However, for many applications that use knowledge organization systems, statements of the form X skos:related X are a potential problem. Where this is the case, an application may wish to search for such statements prior to processing SKOS data, although how an application should handle such statements is not defined in this specification and may vary between applications.

8.6.6. skos:broader and Transitivity

Note that skos:broader is not a transitive property. Similarly, skos:narrower is not a transitive property. Therefore, the SKOS data model does not support an entailment as illustrated in the example below.

Example 35 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:broader <B> .
<B> skos:broader <C> .

does not entail

<A> skos:broader <C> .

However, skos:broader is a sub-property of skos:broaderTransitive, which is a transitive property. Similarly, skos:narrower is a sub-property of skos:narrowerTransitive, which is a transitive property. Therefore the SKOS data model does support the entailments illustrated below.

Example 36 (entailment)
<A> skos:broader <B> .
<B> skos:broader <C> .

entails

<A> skos:broaderTransitive <B> .
<B> skos:broaderTransitive <C> .
<A> skos:broaderTransitive <C> .

Note especially that, by convention, skos:broader and skos:narrower are only used to assert immediate (i.e. direct) hierarchical links between two SKOS concepts. By convention, skos:broaderTransitive and skos:narrowerTransitive are not used to make assertions, but are instead used only to draw inferences.

This pattern allows the information about direct (i.e. immediate) hierarchical links to be preserved, which is necessary for many tasks (e.g. building various types of visual representation of a knowledge organization system), whilst also providing a mechanism for conveniently querying the transitive closure of those hierarchical links (which will include both direct and indirect links), which is useful in other situations (e.g. query expansion algorithms).

Note also that a sub-property of a transitive property is not necessarily transitive.

See also the note on alternate paths below.

8.6.7. skos:broader and Reflexivity

Note that this specification makes no statements regarding the reflexive characteristics of the skos:broader relationship. It does not state that skos:broader is a reflexive property, neither does it state that skos:broader is an irreflexive property. Thus for any graph and resource <A>, the triple:

Example 37 (consistent)
<A> skos:broader <A> .

may or may not be present. This conservative position allows SKOS to be used to model both KOS where the interpretation of skos:broader is reflexive (e.g. a direct translation of an inferred OWL sub-class hierarchy), or KOS where skos:broader could be considered irreflexive (as would be appropriate for most thesauri or classification schemes).

Similarly, there are no assertions made as to the reflexivity or irreflexivity of skos:narrower.

However, for many applications that use knowledge organization systems, statements of the form X skos:broader X or Y skos:narrower Y represent a potential problem. Where this is the case, an application may wish to search for such statements prior to processing SKOS data, although how an application should handle such statements is not defined in this specification and may vary between applications.

8.6.8. Cycles in the Hierarchical Relation (skos:broaderTransitive and Reflexivity)

In the graph below, a cycle has been stated in the hierarchical relation. Note that this graph is consistent with the SKOS data model. I.e. there is no condition requiring that skos:broaderTransitive be irreflexive.

Example 38 (consistent)
<A> skos:broader <B> .
<B> skos:broader <A> .

However, for many applications where knowledge organization systems are used, a cycle in the hierarchical relation represents a potential problem. For these applications, computing the transitive closure of skos:broaderTransitive then looking for statements of the form X skos:broaderTransitive X is a convenient strategy for finding cycles in the hierarchical relation. How an application should handle such statements is not defined in this specification and may vary between applications.

8.6.9. Alternate Paths in the Hierarchical Relation

In the graph below, there are two alternate paths from A to C in the hierarchical relation.

Example 39 (consistent)
<A> skos:broader <B> , <C> .
<B> skos:broader <C> .

In the graph below, there are two alternate paths from A to D in the hierarchical relation.

Example 40 (consistent)
<A> skos:broader <B> , <C> .
<B> skos:broader <D> .
<C> skos:broader <D> .

This is a pattern which arises naturally in "poly-hierarchical" knowledge organization systems.

Both of these graphs are consistent with the SKOS data model. I.e. there is no condition requiring that there be only one path between any two nodes in the hierarchical relation.

8.6.10. Disjointness of skos:related and skos:broaderTransitive

This specification treats the hierarchical and associative relations as fundamentally distinct in nature. Therefore a "clash" between hierarchical and associative links is not consistent with the SKOS data model. The examples above illustrate some situations in which a "clash" is seen to arise.

This position follows the usual definitions given to hierarchical and associative relations in thesaurus standards [ISO2788] [BS8723-2], and supports common practice in many existing knowledge organization systems.

Note that this specification takes the stronger position that, not only are the immediate (i.e. direct) hierarchical and associative links disjoint, but associative links are also disjoint with indirect hierarchical links. This is captured formally in the integrity condition asserting that skos:related and skos:broaderTransitive are disjoint properties.


9. Concept Collections

9.1. Preamble

SKOS concept collections are labeled and/or ordered groups of SKOS concepts.

Collections are useful where a group of concepts shares something in common, and it is convenient to group them under a common label, or where some concepts can be placed in a meaningful order.

9.2. Vocabulary

skos:Collection
skos:OrderedCollection
skos:member
skos:memberList

9.3. Class & Property Definitions

S28 skos:Collection and skos:OrderedCollection are each instances of owl:Class.
S29 skos:OrderedCollection is a sub-class of skos:Collection.
S30 skos:member and skos:memberList are each instances of owl:ObjectProperty.
S31 The rdfs:domain of skos:member is the class skos:Collection.
S32 The rdfs:range of skos:member is the union of classes skos:Concept and skos:Collection.
S33 The rdfs:domain of skos:memberList is the class skos:OrderedCollection.
S34 The rdfs:range of skos:memberList is the class rdf:List.
S35 skos:memberList is an instance of owl:FunctionalProperty.
S36 For any resource, every item in the list given as the value of the skos:memberList property is also a value of the skos:member property.

9.4. Integrity Conditions

S37 skos:Collection is disjoint with each of skos:Concept and skos:ConceptScheme.

9.5. Examples

The graph below illustrates a SKOS collection with 3 members.

Example 41 (consistent)
<MyCollection> rdf:type skos:Collection ;
  skos:member <X> , <Y> , <Z> .

The graph below illustrates an ordered SKOS collection with 3 members. Note the use of the Turtle syntax (...), representing an RDF Collection (list).

Example 42 (consistent)
<MyOrderedCollection> rdf:type skos:OrderedCollection ;
  skos:memberList ( <X> <Y> <Z> ) .

9.6. Notes

9.6.1. Inferring Collections from Ordered Collections

Statement S36 states the logical relationship between the skos:memberList and skos:member properties. This relationship means that a collection can be inferred from an ordered collection. This is illustrated in the example below.

Example 43 (entailment)
<MyOrderedCollection> rdf:type skos:OrderedCollection ;
  skos:memberList ( <X> <Y> <Z> ) .

entails

<MyOrderedCollection> rdf:type skos:Collection ;
  skos:member <X> , <Y> , <Z> .

Note that SKOS does not provide any way to explicitly state that a collection is not ordered.

9.6.2. skos:memberList Integrity

Note that skos:memberList is a functional property, i.e. it does not have more than one value. This is intended to capture within the SKOS data model that it doesn't make sense for an ordered collection to have more than one member list. Unfortunately, there is no way to use this condition as an integrity condition without explicitly stating that two lists are different objects. In other words, although the graph below is consistent with the SKOS data model, it entails nonsense (a list with two first elements and a forked tail).

Example 44 (entailment)
<OrderedCollectionResource>
  skos:memberList ( <A> <B> ) , ( <X> <Y> ) .

entails

<OrderedCollectionResource>
  skos:memberList [ rdf:first <A> , <X> ; rdf:rest [ rdf:first <B> ; rdf:rest rdf:nil ] , [ rdf:first <Y> ; rdf:rest rdf:nil ] .

However, as stated in [RDF-SEMANTICS] section 3.3.3, semantic extensions to RDF may place extra syntactic well-formedness restrictions on the use of the RDF collection vocabulary (rdf:first, rdf:rest, rdf:nil) in order to rule out such graphs.

9.6.3. Nested Collections

In the example below, a collection is nested within another collection.

Example 45 (consistent)
<MyCollection> rdf:type skos:Collection ;
  skos:member <A> , <B> , <MyNestedCollection> .

<MyNestedCollection> rdf:type skos:Collection ;
  skos:member <X> , <Y> , <Z> .

This example is consistent with the SKOS data model, because the range of skos:member is the union of skos:Concept and skos:Collection.

9.6.4. SKOS Concepts, Concept Collections and Semantic Relations

In the SKOS data model, skos:Concept and skos:Collection are disjoint classes. The domain and range of the SKOS semantic relation properties is skos:Concept. Therefore, if any of the SKOS semantic relation properties (e.g. skos:narrower) are used to link to or from a collection, the graph will not be consistent with the SKOS data model.

This is illustrated in the example below, which is not consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 46 (not consistent)
<A> skos:narrower <B> .
<B> rdf:type skos:Collection .

Similarly, the graph below is not consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 47 (not consistent)
<A> skos:broader <B> .
<B> rdf:type skos:Collection .

Similarly, the graph below is not consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 48 (not consistent)
<A> skos:related <B> .
<B> rdf:type skos:Collection .

However, the graph below is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 49 (consistent)
<A> skos:narrower <B> , <C> , <D> .

<ResourceCollection> rdfs:label "Resource Collection"@en ;
  skos:member <B> , <C> , <D> .

This means that, for thesauri and other knowledge organization systems where "node labels" are used within the systematic display for that thesaurus, the appropriate SKOS representation requires careful consideration. Furthermore, where "node labels" are used in the systematic display, it may not always be possible to fully reconstruct the systematic display from a SKOS representation alone. Fully representing all of the information represented in a systematic display of a thesaurus or other knowledge organization system, including details of layout and presentation, is beyond the scope of SKOS.


10. Mapping Properties

10.1. Preamble

The SKOS mapping properties are skos:closeMatch, skos:exactMatch, skos:broadMatch, skos:narrowMatch and skos:relatedMatch. These properties are used to state mapping (alignment) links between SKOS concepts in different concept schemes, where the links are inherent in the meaning of the linked concepts.

The properties skos:broadMatch and skos:narrowMatch are used to state a hierarchical mapping link between two concepts.

The property skos:relatedMatch is used to state an associative mapping link between two concepts.

The property skos:closeMatch is used to link two concepts that are sufficiently similar that they can be used interchangeably in some information retrieval applications. In order to avoid the possibility of "compound errors" when combining mappings across more than two concept schemes, skos:closeMatch is not declared to be a transitive property.

The property skos:exactMatch is used to link two concepts, indicating a high degree of confidence that the concepts can be used interchangeably across a wide range of information retrieval applications. skos:exactMatch is a transitive property, and is a sub-property of skos:closeMatch.

10.2. Vocabulary

skos:mappingRelation
skos:closeMatch
skos:exactMatch
skos:broadMatch
skos:narrowMatch
skos:relatedMatch

10.3. Class & Property Definitions

S38 skos:mappingRelation, skos:closeMatch, skos:exactMatch, skos:broadMatch, skos:narrowMatch and skos:relatedMatch are each instances of owl:ObjectProperty.
S39 skos:mappingRelation is a sub-property of skos:semanticRelation.
S40 skos:closeMatch, skos:broadMatch, skos:narrowMatch and skos:relatedMatch are each sub-properties of skos:mappingRelation.
S41 skos:broadMatch is a sub-property of skos:broader, skos:narrowMatch is a sub-property of skos:narrower, and skos:relatedMatch is a sub-property of skos:related.
S42 skos:exactMatch is a sub-property of skos:closeMatch.
S43 skos:narrowMatch is owl:inverseOf the property skos:broadMatch.
S44 skos:relatedMatch, skos:closeMatch and skos:exactMatch are each instances of owl:SymmetricProperty.
S45 skos:exactMatch is an instance of owl:TransitiveProperty.

10.4. Integrity Conditions

S46 skos:exactMatch is disjoint with each of the properties skos:broadMatch and skos:relatedMatch.

Note that because skos:exactMatch is a symmetric property, and skos:broadMatch and skos:narrowMatch are inverses, skos:exactMatch is therefore also disjoint with skos:narrowMatch.

10.5. Examples

The graph below asserts an exact equivalence mapping link between <A> and <B>.

Example 50 (consistent)
<A> skos:exactMatch <B> .

The graph below asserts a close equivalence mapping link between <A> and <B>.

Example 51 (consistent)
<A> skos:closeMatch <B> .

The graph below asserts a hierarchical mapping link between <A> and <B> (where <B> is broader than <A>), and an associative mapping link between <A> and <C>.

Example 52 (consistent)
<A> skos:broadMatch <B> ; skos:relatedMatch <C> .

The graph below is not consistent with the SKOS data model, because there is a "clash" between exact and hierarchical mapping links.

Example 53 (not consistent)
<A> skos:exactMatch <B> ; skos:broadMatch <B> .

The graph below is not consistent with the SKOS data model, because there is a "clash" between exact and associative mapping links.

Example 54 (not consistent)
<A> skos:exactMatch <B> ; skos:relatedMatch <B> .

10.6. Notes

10.6.1. Mapping Properties, Semantic Relation Properties and Concept Schemes

By convention, the SKOS mapping properties are only used to link concepts in different concept schemes. However, note that using the SKOS semantic relation properties (skos:broader, skos:narrower, skos:related) to link concepts in different concept schemes is also consistent with the SKOS data model (see Section 8).

The mapping properties skos:broadMatch, skos:narrowMatch and skos:relatedMatch are provided as a convenience, for situations where the provenance of data is known, and it is useful to be able to tell "at a glance" the difference between internal links within a concept scheme and mapping links between concept schemes.

However, using the SKOS mapping properties is no substitute for the careful management of RDF graphs or the use of provenance mechanisms.

The rationale behind this design is that it is hard to draw an absolute distinction between internal links within a concept scheme and mapping links between concept schemes. This is especially true in an open environment where different people might re-organize concepts into concept schemes in different ways. What one person views as two concept schemes with mapping links between, another might view as one single concept scheme with internal links only. This specification allows both points of view to co-exist, which (it is hoped) will promote flexibility and innovation in the re-use of SKOS data in the Web.

There is therefore an intimate connection between the SKOS semantic relation properties and the SKOS mapping properties. The property skos:broadMatch is a sub-property of skos:broader, skos:narrowMatch is a sub-property of skos:narrower, and skos:relatedMatch is a sub-property of skos:related. The full set of sub-property relationships is illustrated below.

skos:semanticRelation
 |
 +- skos:related
 |   |
 |   +- skos:relatedMatch
 |
 +- skos:broaderTransitive
 |   |
 |   +- skos:broader
 |       |
 |       +- skos:broadMatch
 |
 +- skos:narrowerTransitive
 |   |
 |   +- skos:narrower
 |       |
 |       +- skos:narrowMatch
 |
 +- skos:mappingRelation
     |
     +- skos:closeMatch
     |   |
     |   +- skos:exactMatch
     |
     +- skos:relatedMatch
     |
     +- skos:broadMatch
     |
     +- skos:narrowMatch 

Examples below illustrate some entailments which follow from this sub-property tree, and from the domain and range of skos:semanticRelation.

Example 55 (entailment)
<A> skos:broadMatch <B> .

entails

<A> skos:mappingRelation <B> .
<A> skos:broader <B> .
<A> skos:broaderTransitive <B> .
<A> skos:semanticRelation <B> .
<A> rdf:type skos:Concept .
<B> rdf:type skos:Concept .
Example 56 (entailment)
<A> skos:narrowMatch <B> .

entails

<A> skos:mappingRelation <B> .
<A> skos:narrower <B> .
<A> skos:narrowerTransitive <B> .
<A> skos:semanticRelation <B> .
<A> rdf:type skos:Concept .
<B> rdf:type skos:Concept .
Example 57 (entailment)
<A> skos:relatedMatch <B> .

entails

<A> skos:mappingRelation <B> .
<A> skos:related <B> .
<A> skos:semanticRelation <B> .
<A> rdf:type skos:Concept .
<B> rdf:type skos:Concept .
Example 58 (entailment)
<A> skos:exactMatch <B> .

entails

<A> skos:closeMatch <B> .
<A> skos:mappingRelation <B> .
<A> skos:semanticRelation <B> .
<A> rdf:type skos:Concept .
<B> rdf:type skos:Concept .

Note also that, because different people might re-organize concepts into concept schemes in different ways, a graph might assert mapping links between concepts in the same concept scheme, and there are no formal integrity conditions in the SKOS data model that would make such a graph inconsistent. E.g. the graph below is consistent with the SKOS data model. However, in practice it is expected that such a graph would only ever arise from the merge of two or more graphs from different sources.

Example 59 (consistent)
<A> skos:broadMatch <B> ; skos:relatedMatch <C> .

<A> skos:inScheme <MyScheme> .
<B> skos:inScheme <MyScheme> .
<C> skos:inScheme <MyScheme> .

10.6.2. "Clashes" Between Hierarchical and Associative Links

Examples below illustrate "clashes" between hierarchical and associative mapping links, which are not consistent with the SKOS data model (because of the sub-property relationships illustrated above, and because of the data model for SKOS semantic relation properties defined in Section 8).

Example 60 (not consistent)
<A> skos:broadMatch <B> ; skos:relatedMatch <B> .
Example 61 (not consistent)
<A> skos:narrowMatch <B> ; skos:relatedMatch <B> .
Example 62 (not consistent)
<A> skos:broadMatch <B> .
<B> skos:broadMatch <C> .
<A> skos:relatedMatch <C> .

10.6.3. Mapping Properties and Transitivity

The only SKOS mapping property which is declared as transitive is skos:exactMatch. An example entailment is illustrated below:

Example 63 (entailment)
<A> skos:exactMatch <B> .
<B> skos:exactMatch <C> .

entails

<A> skos:exactMatch <C> .

All other SKOS mapping properties are not transitive. Therefore, entailments as illustrated in examples below are not supported by the SKOS data model.

Example 64 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:broadMatch <B> .
<B> skos:broadMatch <C> .

does not entail

<A> skos:broadMatch <C> .
Example 65 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:relatedMatch <B> .
<B> skos:relatedMatch <C> .

does not entail

<A> skos:relatedMatch <C> .
Example 66 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:closeMatch <B> .
<B> skos:closeMatch <C> .

does not entail

<A> skos:closeMatch <C> .

10.6.4. Mapping Properties and Reflexivity

None of the SKOS mapping properties are reflexive, neither are they irreflexive.

Because skos:exactMatch, skos:broadMatch and skos:relatedMatch are not irreflexive, the graph below is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 67 (consistent)
<A> skos:exactMatch <A> .
<B> skos:broadMatch <B> .
<C> skos:relatedMatch <C> .

However, see also Section 8 on the reflexivity of SKOS semantic relation properties.

10.6.5. Cycles and Alternate Paths Involving skos:broadMatch

There are no formal integrity conditions preventing either cycles or alternate paths in a graph of hierarchical mapping links.

In the graph below there are two cycles involving skos:broadMatch. This graph is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 68 (consistent)
<A> skos:broadMatch <B> .
<B> skos:broadMatch <A> .

<X> skos:broadMatch <Y> .
<Y> skos:broadMatch <Z> .
<Z> skos:broadMatch <X> .

In the graph below there are two alternate paths involving skos:broadMatch. This graph is consistent with the SKOS data model.

Example 69 (consistent)
<A> skos:broadMatch <B> .
<B> skos:broadMatch <C> .
<A> skos:broadMatch <C> .

See however Section 8 on cycles and alternate paths involving skos:broader.

10.6.6. Cycles Involving skos:exactMatch and skos:closeMatch

Example 70 (entailment)
<A> skos:exactMatch <B>

entails

<A> skos:exactMatch <A> .
<A> skos:closeMatch <A> .

Due to the entailment above (which arises through a combination of S42, S44 and S45), applications must be able to cope with cycles in skos:exactMatch and skos:closeMatch.

10.6.7. Sub-Property Chains Involving skos:exactMatch

There are no sub-property chain axioms in the SKOS data model involving the skos:exactMatch or skos:closeMatch properties. Hence the entailments illustrated below are not supported.

Example 71 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:exactMatch <B> .
<B> skos:broadMatch <C> .

does not entail

<A> skos:broadMatch <C> .
Example 72 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:exactMatch <B> .
<B> skos:relatedMatch <C> .

does not entail

<A> skos:relatedMatch <C> .
Example 73 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:closeMatch <B> .
<B> skos:broadMatch <C> .

does not entail

<A> skos:broadMatch <C> .
Example 74 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:closeMatch <B> .
<B> skos:relatedMatch <C> .

does not entail

<A> skos:relatedMatch <C> .

10.6.8. skos:closeMatch, skos:exactMatch, owl:sameAs, owl:equivalentClass, owl:equivalentProperty

OWL provides three properties which might, at first glance, appear similar to skos:closeMatch or skos:exactMatch. owl:sameAs is used to link two individuals in an ontology, and indicates that they are the same individual (i.e. the same resource). owl:equivalentClass is used to link two classes in an ontology, and indicates that those classes have the same class extension. owl:equivalentProperty is used to link two properties in an ontology and indicates that both properties have the same property extension.

skos:closeMatch and skos:exactMatch are used to link SKOS concepts in different schemes. A skos:closeMatch link indicates that two concepts are sufficiently similar that they can be used interchangeably in some information retrieval applications. A skos:exactMatch link indicates a high degree of confidence that two concepts can be used interchangeably across a wide range of information retrieval applications.

owl:sameAs, owl:equivalentClass or owl:equivalentProperty would typically be inappropriate for linking SKOS concepts in different concept schemes, because the formal consequences that follow could be undesirable.

The example below illustrates some undesirable entailments that would follow from using owl:sameAs in this way.

Example 75 (entailment)
<A> rdf:type skos:Concept ;
  skos:prefLabel "love"@en ;
  skos:inScheme <MyScheme> .

<B> rdf:type skos:Concept ;
  skos:prefLabel "adoration"@en ;
  skos:inScheme <AnotherScheme> .

<A> owl:sameAs <B> .

entails

<A>
  skos:prefLabel "love"@en ;
  skos:prefLabel "adoration"@en ;
  skos:inScheme <MyScheme> ;
  skos:inScheme <AnotherScheme> .

<B>   
  skos:prefLabel "love"@en ;
  skos:prefLabel "adoration"@en ;
  skos:inScheme <MyScheme> ;
  skos:inScheme <AnotherScheme> .

In this example, using owl:sameAs to link two SKOS concepts in different concept schemes does actually lead to an inconsistency with the SKOS data model, because both <A> and <B> now have two preferred lexical labels in the same language. This will not always be the case, however.


11. References

[BS8723-2]
BS8723 Structured Vocabularies for Information Retrieval Part 2: Thesauri, British Standards Institution (BSI), 2005.
[BS8723-3]
BS8723 Structured Vocabularies for Information Retrieval Part 3: Vocabularies Other Than Thesauri, British Standards Institution (BSI), 2005.
[SW]
W3C Semantic Web Activity. Available at http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/
[RDF-PRIMER]
RDF Primer, Frank Manola and Eric Miller, Editors, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-rdf-primer-20040210/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-primer/
[RDFS]
RDF Vocabulary Description Language 1.0: RDF Schema, Dan Brickley and R. V. Guha, Editors, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-rdf-schema-20040210/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-schema/
[OWL-GUIDE]
OWL Web Ontology Language Guide, Michael K. Smith, Chris Welty and Deborah L. McGuinness, Editors, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-owl-guide-20040210/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/owl-guide/
[SPARQL]
SPARQL Query Language for RDF, Eric Prud'hommeaux and Andy Seaborne, Editors, W3C Recommendation, 15 January 2008, http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-rdf-sparql-query-20080115/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-query/
[LCSH]
Library of Congress Subject Headings, The Library of Congress Cataloging Distribution Service. Available at http://www.loc.gov/cds/lcsh.html and at http://lcsh.info/
[AGROVOC]
AGROVOC Thesaurus, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). Available at http://www.fao.org/agrovoc
[OWL-SEMANTICS]
OWL Web Ontology Language Semantics and Abstract Syntax, Peter F. Patel-Schneider, Patrick Hayes and Ian Horrocks, Editors, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-owl-semantics-20040210/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/owl-semantics/
[RDF-XML]
RDF/XML Syntax Specification (Revised), Dave Beckett, Editor, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-rdf-syntax-grammar-20040210/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-syntax-grammar/
[TURTLE]
Turtle - Terse RDF Triple Language, David Beckett and Tim Berners-Lee, W3C Team Submission, 14 January 2008, http://www.w3.org/TeamSubmission/2008/SUBM-turtle-20080114/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TeamSubmission/turtle/
[RDF-SEMANTICS]
RDF Semantics, Patrick Hayes, Editor, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-rdf-mt-20040210/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-mt/
[NTRIPLES]
RDF Test Cases, Jan Grant and Dave Beckett, Editors, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-rdf-testcases-20040210/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-testcases/
[WEBARCH]
Architecture of the World Wide Web, Volume One, Ian Jacobs and Norman Walsh, Editors, W3C Recommendation, 15 December 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-webarch-20041215/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/webarch/
[COOLURIS]
Cool URIs for the Semantic Web, Leo Sauermann and Richard Cyganiak, Editors, W3C Interest Group Note, 31 March 2008, http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/NOTE-cooluris-20080331/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/cooluris/
[RECIPES]
Best Practice Recipes for Publishing RDF Vocabularies, Diego Berrueta and Jon Phipps, Editors, W3C Working Draft, 23 January 2008, http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/WD-swbp-vocab-pub-20080123/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/swbp-vocab-pub/
[RDF-CONCEPTS]
Resource Description Framework (RDF): Concepts and Abstract Syntax, Graham Klyne and Jeremy J. Carroll, Editors, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-rdf-concepts-20040210/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-concepts/
[BCP47]
Tags for Identifying Languages, A. Phillips and M. Davis, Editors, September 2006. Available at http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/bcp/bcp47.txt
[XML-SCHEMA]
XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second Edition, Paul V. Biron and Ashok Malhotra, Editors, W3C Recommendation, 28 October 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xmlschema-2-20041028/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/
[SWBP-DATATYPES]
XML Schema Datatypes in RDF and OWL, Jeremy J. Carroll and Jeff Z. Pan, Editors, W3C Working Group Note, 14 March 2006, http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/NOTE-swbp-xsch-datatypes-20060314/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/swbp-xsch-datatypes/
[OWL-REFERENCE]
OWL Web Ontology Language Reference, Mike Dean and Guus Schreiber, Editors, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004, http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-owl-ref-20040210/. Latest version available at http://www.w3.org/TR/owl-ref/
[ISO2788]
ISO 2788:1986 Documentation -- Guidelines for the establishment and development of monolingual thesauri, International Organization for Standardization (ISO), 1986.

Appendix A. SKOS eXtension for Labels (XL)

This appendix defines an optional extension to the Simple Knowledge Organization System, called the SKOS eXtension for Labels (XL). This extension provides additional support for identifying, describing and linking lexical entities.

A special class of lexical entities, called skosxl:Label, is defined. Each instance of this class has a single RDF plain literal form, but two instances of this class are not necessarily the same individual if they share the same literal form.

Three labeling properties, skosxl:prefLabel, skosxl:altLabel and skosxl:hiddenLabel, are defined. These properties are used to label SKOS concepts with instances of skosxl:Label, and are otherwise analogous to the properties of the same local name defined in SKOS (skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel respectively).

The SKOS data model also defines the property skosxl:labelRelation. This property can be used to assert a direct (binary) link between instances of skosxl:Label. It is primarily intended as an extension point, to be refined for more specific types of link. No built-in refinements of skosxl:labelRelation are provided, although some examples of how this could be done are given.

A.1. XL Namespace and Vocabulary

The XL namespace URI is:

  • http://www.w3.org/2008/05/skos-xl#

Here the prefix skosxl: is used as an abbreviation for the XL namespace URI.

The XL vocabulary is the set of URIs given in the left-hand column of the table below.

Table 2. The XL Vocabulary
URI Defined by (section of this appendix)
skosxl:Label The skosxl:Label Class
skosxl:literalForm The skosxl:Label Class
skosxl:prefLabel Preferred, Alternate and Hidden skosxl:Labels
skosxl:altLabel Preferred, Alternate and Hidden skosxl:Labels
skosxl:hiddenLabel Preferred, Alternate and Hidden skosxl:Labels
skosxl:labelRelation Links Between skosxl:Labels

Here "the SKOS+XL vocabulary" refers to the union of the SKOS vocabulary and the XL vocabulary.

Here "the XL data model" refers to the class and property definitions stated in this appendix only. "The SKOS+XL data model" refers to the union of the data model defined in sections 3-10 above and the XL data model.

A.2. The skosxl:Label Class

A.2.1. Preamble

The class skosxl:Label is a special class of lexical entities.

An instance of the class skosxl:Label is a resource and may be named with a URI.

An instance of the class skosxl:Label has a single literal form. This literal form is an RDF plain literal (which is a string of UNICODE characters and an optional language tag [RDF-CONCEPTS]). The property skosxl:literalForm is used to give the literal form of an skosxl:Label.

If two instances of the class skosxl:Label have the same literal form, they are not necessarily the same resource.

A.2.2. Class and Property Definitions

S47 skosxl:Label is an instance of owl:Class.
S48 skosxl:Label is disjoint with each of skos:Concept, skos:ConceptScheme and skos:Collection.
S49 skosxl:literalForm is an instance of owl:DatatypeProperty.
S50 The rdfs:domain of skosxl:literalForm is the class skosxl:Label.
S51 The rdfs:range of skosxl:literalForm is the class of RDF plain literals.
S52 skosxl:Label is a sub-class of a restriction on skosxl:literalForm cardinality exactly 1.

A.2.3. Examples

The example below describes a skosxl:Label named with the URI <http://example.com/ns/A>, with the literal form "love" in English.

Example 76 (consistent)
<A> rdf:type skosxl:Label ; skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .

The four examples below are each not consistent with the XL data model, because an skosxl:Label is described with two different literal forms.

Example 77 (not consistent)
<B> rdf:type skosxl:Label ; skosxl:literalForm "love" ; skosxl:literalForm "adoration" .
Example 78 (not consistent)
<B> rdf:type skosxl:Label ; skosxl:literalForm "love"@en ; skosxl:literalForm "love"@fr .
Example 79 (not consistent)
<B> rdf:type skosxl:Label ; skosxl:literalForm "love"@en-GB ; skosxl:literalForm "love"@en-US .
Example 80 (not consistent)
<B> rdf:type skosxl:Label ; skosxl:literalForm "東"@ja-Hani ; skosxl:literalForm "ひがし"@ja-Hira .

A.2.4. Notes

A.2.4.1. Identity and Entailment

As stated above, each instance of the class skosxl:Label has one and only one literal form. In other words, there is a function mapping the class extension of skosxl:Label to the set of RDF plain literals. This function is defined by the property extension of skosxl:literalForm. Note especially two facts about this function.

First, the function is not injective. In other words, there is not a one-to-one mapping from instances of skosxl:Label to the set of RDF plain literals (in fact it is many-to-one). This means that two instances of skosxl:Label which have the same literal form are not necessarily the same individual. So, for example, the entailment illustrated below is not supported by the XL data model.

Example 81 (non-entailment)
<A> skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .
<B> skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .

does not entail

<A> owl:sameAs <B> .

Second, the function is not surjective. In other words, for a given plain literal l, there might not be any instances of skosxl:Label with literal form l.

A.2.4.2. Membership of Concept Schemes

The membership of an instance of skosxl:Label within a SKOS concept scheme can be asserted using the skos:inScheme property.

Example 82 (consistent)
<A> rdf:type skosxl:Label ; skosxl:literalForm "love"@en ; skos:inScheme <MyScheme> .

A.3. Preferred, Alternate and Hidden skosxl:Labels

A.3.1. Preamble

The three properties skosxl:prefLabel, skosxl:altLabel and skosxl:hiddenLabel are used to give the preferred, alternate and hidden labels of a resource respectively, where those labels are instances of the class skosxl:Label. These properties are analogous to the properties of the same local name defined in the SKOS vocabulary, and there are logical dependencies between these two sets of properties defined below.

A.3.2. Class and Property Definitions

S53 skosxl:prefLabel, skosxl:altLabel and skosxl:hiddenLabel are each instances of owl:ObjectProperty.
S54 The rdfs:range of each of skosxl:prefLabel, skosxl:altLabel and skosxl:hiddenLabel is the class skosxl:Label.
S55 The property chain (skosxl:prefLabel, skosxl:literalForm) is a sub-property of skos:prefLabel.
S56 The property chain (skosxl:altLabel, skosxl:literalForm) is a sub-property of skos:altLabel.
S57 The property chain (skosxl:hiddenLabel, skosxl:literalForm) is a sub-property of skos:hiddenLabel.

A.3.3. Examples

The example below illustrates the use of all three XL labeling properties, and is consistent with the SKOS+XL data model.

Example 83 (consistent)
<Love>
  skosxl:prefLabel <A> ;
  skosxl:altLabel <B> ;
  skosxl:hiddenLabel <C> .

<A> rdf:type skosxl:Label ;
  skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .

<B> rdf:type skosxl:Label ;
  skosxl:literalForm "adoration"@en .

<C> rdf:type skosxl:Label ;
  skosxl:literalForm "luv"@en .

A.3.4. Notes

A.3.4.1. "Dumbing-Down" to SKOS Lexical Labels

The sub-property chain axioms S55, S56 and S57 support the "dumbing-down" of XL labels to vanilla SKOS lexical labels via inference. This is illustrated in the example below.

Example 84 (entailment)
<Love>
  skosxl:prefLabel <A> ;
  skosxl:altLabel <B> ;
  skosxl:hiddenLabel <C> .

<A> rdf:type skosxl:Label ;
  skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .

<B> rdf:type skosxl:Label ;
  skosxl:literalForm "adoration"@en .

<C> rdf:type skosxl:Label ;
  skosxl:literalForm "luv"@en .

entails

<Love>
  skos:prefLabel "love"@en ;
  skos:altLabel "adoration"@en ;
  skos:hiddenLabel "luv"@en .
A.3.4.2. SKOS+XL Labeling Integrity

In Section 5, two integrity conditions were defined on the basic SKOS labeling properties. First, the properties skos:prefLabel, skos:altLabel and skos:hiddenLabel are pairwise disjoint. Second, a resource has no more than one value of skos:prefLabel per language. Because of the sub-property chain axioms defined above, the following four examples, whilst consistent w.r.t. the XL data model alone, are not consistent with the SKOS+XL data model.

Example 85 (not consistent)
# Two different preferred labels in the same language

<Love> skosxl:prefLabel <A> ; skosxl:prefLabel <B> .
<A> skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .
<B> skosxl:literalForm "adoration"@en .
Example 86 (not consistent)
# "Clash" between preferred and alternate labels

<Love> skosxl:prefLabel <A> ; skosxl:altLabel <B> .
<A> skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .
<B> skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .
Example 87 (not consistent)
# "Clash" between alternate and hidden labels

<Love> skosxl:altLabel <A> ; skosxl:hiddenLabel <B> .
<A> skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .
<B> skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .
Example 88 (not consistent)
# "Clash" between preferred and hidden labels

<Love> skosxl:prefLabel <A> ; skosxl:hiddenLabel <B> .
<A> skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .
<B> skosxl:literalForm "love"@en .

A.4. Links Between skosxl:Labels

A.4.1. Preamble

This section defines a pattern for representing binary links between instances of the class skosxl:Label.

Note that the vocabulary defined in this section is not intended to be used directly, but rather as an extension point which can be refined for more specific labeling scenarios.

A.4.2. Class and Property Definitions

S58 skosxl:labelRelation is an instance of owl:ObjectProperty.
S59 The rdfs:domain of skosxl:labelRelation is the class skosxl:Label.
S60 The rdfs:range of skosxl:labelRelation is the class skosxl:Label.
S61 skosxl:labelRelation is an instance of owl:SymmetricProperty.

A.4.3. Examples

The example below illustrates a link between two instances of the class skosxl:Label.

Example 89 (consistent)
<A> rdf:type skosxl:Label ; skosxl:literalForm "love" .
<B> rdf:type skosxl:Label ; skosxl:literalForm "adoration" .
<A> skosxl:labelRelation <B> .

A.4.4. Notes

A.4.4.1. Refinements of this Pattern

As mentioned above, the skosxl:labelRelation property serves as an extension point, which can be refined for more specific labeling scenarios.

For example, below a third party has refined the property skos:labelRelation to express acronym relationships, and used it to express the fact that "FAO" is an acronym for "Food and Agriculture Organization".

Example 90 (consistent)
# First define an extension to skosxl:labelRelation
ex:acronym rdfs:subPropertyOf skosxl:labelRelation .

# Now use it
<A> rdf:type skosxl:Label ; skosxl:literalForm "FAO"@en .
<B> rdf:type skosxl:Label ; skosxl:literalForm "Food and Agriculture Organization"@en .
<B> ex:acronym <A> .

Note that a sub-property of a symmetric property is not necessarily symmetric.


Appendix B. SKOS Overview

B.1. Classes in the SKOS Data Model

skos:Collection
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#Collection
Definition: Section 9. Concept Collections
Disjoint classes: skos:Concept
skos:ConceptScheme
skos:Concept
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#Concept
Definition: Section 3. The skos:Concept Class
Disjoint classes: skos:Collection
skos:ConceptScheme
skos:ConceptScheme
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#ConceptScheme
Definition: Section 4. Concept Schemes
Disjoint classes: skos:Collection
skos:Concept
skos:OrderedCollection
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#OrderedCollection
Definition: Section 9. Concept Collections
Super-classes: skos:Collection

B.2. Properties in the SKOS Data Model

skos:altLabel
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#altLabel
Definition: Section 5. Lexical Labels
Super-properties: http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label
skos:broadMatch
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#broadMatch
Definition: Section 10. Mapping Properties
Super-properties: skos:broader
skos:mappingRelation
Inverse of: skos:narrowMatch
skos:broader
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#broader
Definition: Section 8. Semantic Relations
Super-properties: skos:broaderTransitive
Inverse of: skos:narrower
skos:broaderTransitive
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#broaderTransitive
Definition: Section 8. Semantic Relations
Super-properties: skos:semanticRelation
Inverse of: skos:narrowerTransitive
Other characteristics: Transitive
skos:changeNote
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#changeNote
Definition: Section 7. Documentation Properties
Super-properties: skos:note
skos:closeMatch
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#closeMatch
Definition: Section 10. Mapping Properties
Super-properties: skos:mappingRelation
Other characteristics: Symmetric
skos:definition
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#definition
Definition: Section 7. Documentation Properties
Super-properties: skos:note
skos:editorialNote
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#editorialNote
Definition: Section 7. Documentation Properties
Super-properties: skos:note
skos:exactMatch
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#exactMatch
Definition: Section 10. Mapping Properties
Super-properties: skos:closeMatch
Other characteristics: Transitive
Symmetric
skos:example
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#example
Definition: Section 7. Documentation Properties
Super-properties: skos:note
skos:hasTopConcept
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#hasTopConcept
Definition: Section 4. Concept Schemes
Domain: skos:ConceptScheme
Range: skos:Concept
Inverse of: skos:topConceptOf
skos:hiddenLabel
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#hiddenLabel
Definition: Section 5. Lexical Labels
Super-properties: http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label
skos:historyNote
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#historyNote
Definition: Section 7. Documentation Properties
Super-properties: skos:note
skos:inScheme
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#inScheme
Definition: Section 4. Concept Schemes
Range: skos:ConceptScheme
skos:mappingRelation
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#mappingRelation
Definition: Section 10. Mapping Properties
Super-properties: skos:semanticRelation
skos:member
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#member
Definition: Section 9. Concept Collections
Domain: skos:Collection
Range: union of skos:Concept and skos:Collection
skos:memberList
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#memberList
Definition: Section 9. Concept Collections
Domain: skos:OrderedCollection
Range: http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#List
Other characteristics: Functional
skos:narrowMatch
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#narrowMatch
Definition: Section 10. Mapping Properties
Super-properties: skos:mappingRelation
skos:narrower
Inverse of: skos:broadMatch
skos:narrower
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#narrower
Definition: Section 8. Semantic Relations
Super-properties: skos:narrowerTransitive
Inverse of: skos:broader
skos:narrowerTransitive
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#narrowerTransitive
Definition: Section 8. Semantic Relations
Super-properties: skos:semanticRelation
Inverse of: skos:broaderTransitive
Other characteristics: Transitive
skos:notation
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#notation
Definition: Section 6. Notations
skos:note
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#note
Definition: Section 7. Documentation Properties
skos:prefLabel
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#prefLabel
Definition: Section 5. Lexical Labels
Super-properties: http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label
skos:related
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#related
Definition: Section 8. Semantic Relations
Super-properties: skos:semanticRelation
Other characteristics: Symmetric
skos:relatedMatch
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#relatedMatch
Definition: Section 10. Mapping Properties
Super-properties: skos:mappingRelation
skos:related
Other characteristics: Symmetric
skos:scopeNote
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#scopeNote
Definition: Section 7. Documentation Properties
Super-properties: skos:note
skos:semanticRelation
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#semanticRelation
Definition: Section 8. Semantic Relations
Domain: skos:Concept
Range: skos:Concept
skos:topConceptOf
URI: http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#topConceptOf
Definition: Section 4. Concept Schemes
Super-properties: skos:inScheme
Inverse of: skos:hasTopConcept

Appendix C. SKOS Data Model as RDF Triples

The SKOS Data Model as RDF Triples can be found at http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core.

Note that it is not possible to express all of the statements of the SKOS data model as RDF triples and thus the schema forms a normative subset of this specification.

The SKOS eXtension for Labels (XL) Data Model as RDF Triples can be found at http://www.w3.org/2008/05/skos-xl.

Note also that it is not possible to express all of the statements of the XL data model as RDF triples and thus the schema forms a normative subset of this specification.


Appendix D. SKOS Namespace

The SKOS schema defines vocabulary using the namespace http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#. This namespace was used to define the original SKOS schema which served as a starting point for this Recommendation. As a result of this, elements present in previous versions of the machine-readable schema have been removed from the current version. In a number of cases, the definition or semantics of elements in the schema has changed.

Retaining the existing SKOS namespace avoids some issues with existing KOS that are already using the SKOS schema. Users should, however, be aware of the change in the semantics of skos:broader (and skos:narrower) which may impact on SKOS applications.

Where elements have been removed, no explicit deprecation axioms have been expressed in the schema. Historical versions of the SKOS schema, are, however, available from the SKOS Web site "version history" page, and those elements which have been removed from the recent version of the vocabulary are listed below.

  • skos:symbol
  • skos:prefSymbol
  • skos:altSymbol
  • skos:CollectableProperty
  • skos:subject
  • skos:isSubjectOf
  • skos:primarySubject
  • skos:isPrimarySubjectOf
  • skos:subjectIndicator

In the case of skos:broader and skos:narrower, the semantics of the vocabulary elements have been changed — these properties are no longer declared to be transitive. Thus the follow entailment does not hold.

Example 91 (non-entailment)
<A> skos:broader <B> .
<B> skos:broader <C> .

does not entail

<A> skos:broader <C> .

A transitive super property of skos:broaderskos:broaderTransitive — is provided which allows for query across the transitive closure of skos:broader relations. A similar property — skos:narrowerTransitive — is provided for query across the transitive closure of skos:narrower.


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      Revision 1.69  2008/12/16 01:23:16  ajm65
      fixed error in tags

      Revision 1.68  2008/12/16 01:20:56  ajm65
      Added links to S.. statements;

      Revision 1.67  2008/12/16 01:18:06  ajm65
      fixed refs to examples;

      Revision 1.66  2008/12/16 01:12:38  ajm65
      fixed references to Snn;

      Revision 1.65  2008/12/16 01:04:41  ajm65
      checked and fixed toc and headings;

      Revision 1.64  2008/12/16 00:56:12  ajm65
      fix spurious dot

      Revision 1.63  2008/12/16 00:53:01  ajm65
      checked quick access div

      Revision 1.62  2008/12/16 00:50:44  ajm65
      fixed overview tables;

      Revision 1.61  2008/12/16 00:40:48  ajm65
      fixed headings and toc;

      Revision 1.60  2008/12/16 00:13:47  ajm65
      minor editorial wordsmithing

      Revision 1.59  2008/12/15 23:19:09  ajm65
      fixed example number "70a" to "70"

      Revision 1.58  2008/12/15 18:05:05  ajm65
      fixed section on documentation properties for resolution of issue 157; includes now typed as owl:AnnotationProperty; examples 17 and 25 removed; editorial changes

      Revision 1.57  2008/12/15 17:29:47  ajm65
      removed at risk notice re namespace change

      Revision 1.56  2008/12/15 16:35:18  ajm65
      fixed all mention of property chains to use "sub-property chain";

      Revision 1.55  2008/12/15 16:26:33  ajm65
      added some entailments to examples in section 10.6.1 illustrating consequences of skos:mappingRelation sub-property of skos:semanticRelation;

      Revision 1.54  2008/12/15 16:17:19  ajm65
      removed S40, S41 as now redundant; renumbered statements

      Revision 1.53  2008/12/15 16:01:56  ajm65
      added note on well-formedness of lists;

      Revision 1.52  2008/12/15 15:51:20  ajm65
      updated explanation in section 9.6.3 for range of skos:member;

      Revision 1.51  2008/12/15 15:45:34  ajm65
      Added statement on range of skos:member.

      Revision 1.50  2008/12/15 15:17:20  ajm65
      Fixed capitalisation in headings referring to reflexivity and transitivity

      Revision 1.49  2008/12/15 13:43:32  ajm65
      Added note on domain of skos:notation

      Revision 1.48  2008/12/15 13:36:52  ajm65
      minor editorial changes to notes in section 6

      Revision 1.47  2008/12/15 13:21:41  ajm65
      minor editorial to 5.6.5

      Revision 1.46  2008/12/15 13:09:26  ajm65
      editorial changes to section 5.6.5 to remove language refering to "languages", replace with only mention of "language tag".

      Revision 1.45  2008/12/15 13:02:46  ajm65
      editorial changes around example 17, to be more consistent with other notes on usage conventions.

      Revision 1.44  2008/12/15 12:49:18  ajm65
      fixed prose above example 12 for language tag

      Revision 1.43  2008/12/15 12:48:13  ajm65
      s/subproperties/sub-properties/ for consistency

      Revision 1.42  2008/12/15 12:23:49  ajm65
      removed at risk comment from section 10.6.7

      Revision 1.41  2008/12/15 12:22:17  ajm65
      fix 10.6.6. heading

      Revision 1.40  2008/12/15 12:21:29  ajm65
      fixed example 60 entailment

      Revision 1.39  2008/12/15 12:18:01  ajm65
      fixed property hierarchy in section 10.6.1

      Revision 1.38  2008/12/15 11:15:50  ajm65
      remove implied attribute definitions because w3c validator no longer recognises doctyp correctly

      Revision 1.37  2008/12/15 11:12:54  ajm65
      added implied attributes to doctype to enable DTD validation, see http://www.oxygenxml.com/forum/topic2603.html

      Revision 1.36  2008/12/11 17:12:34  sbechhof2
      Renumbering

      Revision 1.35  2008/12/11 17:00:32  sbechhof2
      Implementing ISSUE-187 change.
      Extending list of changes since last version.

      Revision 1.34  2008/12/04 17:52:34  sbechhof2
      Changing namespace references to 2004/02

      Revision 1.33  2008/12/04 17:27:35  sbechhof2
      Changing labeling properties to owl:AnnotationProperty

      Revision 1.32  2008/12/04 15:03:22  sbechhof2
      Fixed Alistair's URI

      Revision 1.31  2008/12/02 15:22:40  sbechhof2
      Removed skos:example from list of deleted vocab.

      Revision 1.30  2008/12/02 10:40:18  ajm65
      editorial changes to appendix on namespace

      Revision 1.29  2008/11/20 17:15:08  sbechhof2
      Fixed bugs in RDFa

      Revision 1.28  2008/11/20 15:24:42  sbechhof2
      Removing "name" attributes from a tags for validation

      Revision 1.27  2008/11/20 10:15:33  sbechhof2
      Adding basic RDFa metadata

      Revision 1.26  2008/11/17 14:43:34  sbechhof2
      Draft appendix dealing with schema name space

      Revision 1.25  2008/10/22 15:23:43  ajm65
      implemented editorial changes for issue 134

      Revision 1.24  2008/10/22 11:51:48  sbechhof2
      Changes to 6.5.1 in response to ISSUE-156

      Revision 1.23  2008/10/22 11:41:51  sbechhof2
      Reverting 6.5 back to original wording

      Revision 1.22  2008/10/13 14:40:01  sbechhof2
      Additional text in 1.3 in response to ISSUE-161

      Revision 1.21  2008/10/09 16:20:52  ajm65
      renumber sections, update toc

      Revision 1.20  2008/10/09 16:18:18  ajm65
      Added example anchors

      Revision 1.19  2008/10/09 16:16:49  ajm65
      Added new sub-section on domain of skos:inScheme

      Revision 1.18  2008/10/09 15:55:36  ajm65
      Removed at risk comment for topConceptOf

      Revision 1.17  2008/10/09 15:46:21  ajm65
      merged S44, S45, renumbered statements

      Revision 1.16  2008/10/09 15:34:24  sbechhof2
      Additional references to Turtle syntax in response to ISSUE-158
      and ISSUE-166

      Revision 1.15  2008/10/09 15:23:02  sbechhof2
      Minor wordsmithing of section 6.5 to remove reference to convention in
      response to ISSUE-156

      Revision 1.14  2008/10/09 14:55:51  sbechhof2
      Addition of discussion relating to cycles in closeMatch in response
      to ISSUE-174

      Revision 1.13  2008/10/09 14:42:21  sbechhof2
      Changes to Section 5.4 and S14 in response to ISSUE-168 and ISSUE-170

      Revision 1.12  2008/10/09 14:35:13  sbechhof2
      Edit to 4.6.3 in response to ISSUE-167

      Revision 1.11  2008/10/09 14:33:54  sbechhof2
      **Really** adding reference in response to ISSUE-165 :-(

      Revision 1.10  2008/10/09 14:30:48  sbechhof2
      Addition of RDF concepts citation in response to ISSUE-165

      Revision 1.9  2008/10/09 12:02:24  sbechhof2
      Added additional reference to RDF schema in response to ISSUE-154

      Revision 1.7  2008/10/09 11:46:51  sbechhof2
      Update section titles referring to transitivity and reflexivity
      in response to ISSUE-142

      Revision 1.6  2008/10/09 11:35:02  sbechhof2
      Removed sentence about OWL species following Example 16 in response
      to ISSUE-39

      Revision 1.5  2008/10/02 10:35:59  ajm65
      fixed BCP reference

      Revision 1.4  2008/10/01 22:28:08  ajm65
      Fixed error in example 1

      Revision 1.3  2008/10/01 22:22:49  ajm65
      Fixed CVS log

      Revision 1.2  2008/10/01 22:21:49  ajm65
      Temporarily fixed headings to allow generation of table of contents in amaya

      Revision 1.1  2008/10/01 22:13:24  ajm65
      initial, resources copied from 20080820

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