Litcius/Paper detail

Introducing the Open Energy Ontology: Enhancing data interpretation and interfacing in energy systems analysis

Meisam Booshehri, Lukas Emele, Simon Flügel, Hannah Förster, Johannes Frey, Ulrich Frey, Martin Glauer, Janna Hastings, Christian Hofmann, Carsten Hoyer-Klick, Ludwig Hülk, Anna Kleinau, Kevin Knosala, Leander Kotzur, Patrick Kuckertz, Till Mossakowski, Christoph Muschner, Fabian Neuhaus, Michaja Pehl, Martin Robinius, Vera Sehn, Mirjam Stappel

2021Energy and AI103 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Heterogeneous data, different definitions and incompatible models are a huge problem in many domains, with no exception for the field of energy systems analysis. Hence, it is hard to re-use results, compare model results or couple models at all. Ontologies provide a precisely defined vocabulary to build a common and shared conceptualisation of the energy domain. Here, we present the Open Energy Ontology (OEO) developed for the domain of energy systems analysis. Using the OEO provides several benefits for the community. First, it enables consistent annotation of large amounts of data from various research projects. One example is the Open Energy Platform (OEP). Adding such annotations makes data semantically searchable, exchangeable, re-usable and interoperable. Second, computational model coupling becomes much easier. The advantages of using an ontology such as the OEO are demonstrated with three use cases: data representation, data annotation and interface homogenisation. We also describe how the ontology can be used for linked open data (LOD).

Topics & Concepts

OntologyComputer scienceInteroperabilityInterfacingOntology-based data integrationInterface (matter)Process ontologyAnnotationDomain (mathematical analysis)Energy (signal processing)USableField (mathematics)Data model (GIS)VocabularyUpper ontologyInformation retrievalWorld Wide WebSemantic WebArtificial intelligenceBubbleComputer hardwareMathematical analysisParallel computingPhilosophyLinguisticsMathematicsStatisticsPure mathematicsMaximum bubble pressure methodEpistemologyDistributed and Parallel Computing SystemsScientific Computing and Data ManagementSemantic Web and Ontologies