--- a/ontology/prov-o-html-sections/description-expanded-terms.inc.html Mon Jul 02 22:43:11 2012 -0400
+++ b/ontology/prov-o-html-sections/description-expanded-terms.inc.html Mon Jul 02 22:46:05 2012 -0400
@@ -37,8 +37,11 @@
</p>
<p>More general and more specific properties are also provided by the expanded terms. More generally, the property <a href="#wasInfluencedBy" class="qname">prov:wasInfluencedBy</a> is a superproperty that relates any influenced Entity, Activity, or Agent to any other influencing Entity, Activity, or Agent that had an effect on its characteristics.
- More specifically, three subproperties of <span class="repeated">prov:wasDerivedFrom</span> are provided for certain kinds of derivation among Entities: <a href="#wasQuotedFrom" class="qname">prov:wasQuotedFrom</a> cites a potentially larger Entity (such as a Book, or Blog) from which an Entity was taken, <a href="#wasRevisionOf" class="qname">prov:wasRevisionOf</a> cites an older version of a revised Entity (such as first edition of a book), and <a href="#hadPrimarySource" class="qname">prov:hadPrimarySource</a> cites an ancestor Entity produced by some agent with direct experience and knowledge about the topic.
-
+ More specifically, three subproperties of <span class="repeated">prov:wasDerivedFrom</span> are provided for certain kinds of derivation among Entities:
+ <a href="#wasQuotedFrom" class="qname">prov:wasQuotedFrom</a> cites a potentially larger Entity (such as a Book, or Blog) from which an Entity was taken,
+ <a href="#wasRevisionOf" class="qname">prov:wasRevisionOf</a> cites an older version of a revised Entity (such as a first edition of a book), and
+ <a href="#hadPrimarySource" class="qname">prov:hadPrimarySource</a> cites an ancestor Entity produced by some agent with direct experience and
+ knowledge about the topic (such as a read from a sensor, or a journal written during an historical event).
</p>
<p>The <strong>second</strong> category relates Entities according to their levels of abstraction, where some Entities may present more aspects than their more general counterparts.