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Within [[service-oriented architecture]], S-RAMP is a specification released by [[Hewlett-Packard|HP]], [[IBM]], [[Software AG]], [[TIBCO]], and [[Red Hat]]<ref name="Lublinsky 2010">Boris Lublinsky HP, IBM, Software AG and TIBCO Releases Version 0.9 of the SOA Repository Specification - http://www.infoq.com/news/2010/04/SOARepository InfoQ, April 27, 2010</ref> which defines a common data model for SOA repositories<ref name="Stam 2014">Kurt Stam, Eric Wittmann S-RAMP Version 1.0. Part 1: Foundation - http://docs.oasis-open.org/s-ramp/s-ramp/v1.0/s-ramp-v1.0-part1-foundation.html OASIS, December 23, 2013</ref> as well as an interaction protocol to facilitate the use of common tooling and sharing of data.<ref name="Smithson 2014">Martin Smithson, Vincent Brunssen S-RAMP Version 1.0. Part 2: Atom Binding - http://docs.oasis-open.org/s-ramp/s-ramp/v1.0/s-ramp-v1.0-part2-atom-binding.html OASIS, December 23, 2013</ref>
[[Content Management Interoperability Services]] (CMIS) is an open standard for inter-operation of different [[content management system]]s over the internet, and provides a common data model for typed files and folders used with [[version control]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Vstath |first=Bill |title=Content Management Interoperability Services (CMIS) Version 1 |url=https://www.academia.edu/9403826
The NetCDF software libraries for array-oriented scientific data implements a common data model called the [[NetCDF#NetCDF-Java common data model|NetCDF Java common data model]], which consists of three layers built on top of each other to add successively richer semantics.
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=== Health ===
{{main|Electronic health record#Common data model (in health data context)}}
Within [[genomic and medical data]], the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership (OMOP) research program established under the U.S. [[National Institutes of Health]] has created a common data model for claims and electronic health records which can accommodate data from different sources around the world. PCORnet, which was developed by the [[Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute]], is another common data model for health data including electronic health records and patient claims. The Sentinel Common Data Model was initially started as Mini-Sentinel in 2008. It is used by the Sentinel Initiative of the USA's Food and Drug Administration. The
=== Logistics ===
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=== Microsoft Common Data Model ===
The Microsoft Common Data Model is a collection of many standardised extensible data schemas with entities, attributes, semantic metadata, and relationships, which represent commonly used concepts and activities in various businesses areas
=== Rail transport ===
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