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Ontology:Q221: Difference between revisions

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usage notes
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== Usage notes ==
== Usage notes ==


In common language, a "process" is basically the same thing as a "series of events". <cite>MDem</cite> throws around the word "process" a lot, but I think what is truly meant by this is an individual happening or "sub-happening" which can form a series of unique events. A "process" which can form a "repeated pattern" is technically an interaction, while a series of unique events can often get labeled a process, thwarting the effort to discover non-unique series of events which could constitute repeated patterns.
In common language, a "process" is basically the same thing as a "series of events". [[Ontology:Q19000|<cite>MDem</cite>]] throws around the word "process" a lot, but I think what is truly meant by this is an individual happening or "sub-happening" which can form a series of unique events. A "process" which can form a "repeated pattern" is technically an interaction, while a series of unique events can often get labeled a process, thwarting the effort to discover non-unique series of events which could constitute repeated patterns.




[[Category:Storytelling ontology]] [[Category:Generic factical system ontologies]]  __NOTOC__
[[Category:Storytelling ontology]] [[Category:Generic factical system ontologies]]  __NOTOC__

Revision as of 02:37, 11 April 2025

  1. hypothetical interaction

Characteristics in draft

Properties

item type
S0 1-1-1
alias (en)
hypothetical process
QID references [Item] 1-1-1
subset of
--
instance of
--
superset of
--

Usage notes

In common language, a "process" is basically the same thing as a "series of events". MDem throws around the word "process" a lot, but I think what is truly meant by this is an individual happening or "sub-happening" which can form a series of unique events. A "process" which can form a "repeated pattern" is technically an interaction, while a series of unique events can often get labeled a process, thwarting the effort to discover non-unique series of events which could constitute repeated patterns.