Documentation
Copyright and License
- The Piri ontology is released under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license, allowing use, modification, and redistribution with proper attribution.
- Examples from the domain Nuclear Safety are interpreted excerpts and represent a RESEARCH BODY, NOT REAL GUIDANCE INFORMATION from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). All rights for IAEA content belong to the IAEA. For direct information and guidance visit www.iaea.org
Getting Started
How to start using the Piri Framework.
Configuration
Piri sets up on other semantic frameworks. Here you learn how to rely on that or align Piri with your proprietary semantification.
Core Components
The following components are recommended to be integrated from the start of your project. Nevertheless, all of these components can be used standalone.
Manage Incidents and knowledge related to them by relying on predefined Piri concepts.
Integrate regulatory and safety measures and link them to related incidents.
Integrate contextual elements or complete complete contextual models.
Anchor regulatory concepts in your knowledge by manual or machine annotation.
Extensions
The Piri framework can be extended seemlessly with the following components.
Ranking regulatory concepts is helpful in many scenarios.
Bringing regulatory and safety knowledge into a case structure allows for reasoning, learning, and supports human and machine explainability.
Model your regulatory roles by defining Piri agents.
Use the Piri method to regulate knowledge transfer.