Preface This joint volume of proceedings gathers together papers from the 1st Joint International Workshop on Semantic Sensor Networks and Terra Cognita (SSN-TC 2015) and the 4th International Workshop on Ordering and Reasoning (OrdRing 2015), held on the 11th of October and the 12th of October, respectively, during the 14th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC) in Bethlehem, PA. Semantic Sensor Networks and Terra Cognita (SSN-TC 2015) The wide availability of technologies such as GPS, map services and social networks, has resulted in the proliferation of geospatial data on the Web. Similarly, the amount of geospatial data extracted from the Web and published as Linked Data is increasing. Together with large volumes of machine-generated data from sensor networks and the emerging internet of things, these continually growing data have given rise to a number of innovative services and applications. Recently, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), which had a robust activity in Semantic Sensor Networking (SSN) through a completed working group, started a new Spatial Data on the Web Working Group (http://www.w3.org/2015/spatial/wiki/Main_Page) to develop a comprehensive recommendation in collaboration with the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC). ISWC formerly had two workshops, one aligned with W3C SSN and another aligned with OGC’s geospatial focus. Given that there will be very close collaboration with these two organizations as part of the new working group, we decided to merge the SSN and Terra Cognita workshops, which are in their 7th and 8th iterations, respectively, to form this new workshop. The purpose of SSN-TC is to provide an inter-disciplinary forum to explore and promote the technologies related to a combination of semantic web, geospatial web and sensor networking. More specifically, the goal is to develop an understanding of the ways semantic web technologies can contribute to the growth, integration and deployment of geospatial applications. In line with this goal, the proceedings of SSN-TC include a variety of papers related to semantic sensor networks and the geospatial semantic web. The proceedings include four peer-reviewed research papers and two peer-reviewed demonstration papers. Ordering and Reasoning (OrdRing 2015) More and more applications require real-time processing of massive, dynamically generated, ordered data; where order is often an essential factor reflecting recency, proximity or relevance. Stream and rank-aware data management techniques are progressively providing reactive and reliable query answering over such massive datasets. Key to their success is the use of streaming algorithms that harness the natural or enforceable orders in the data. Semantic technologies can play a relevant role in this setting, exploiting their expressive power to integrate those highly dynamic sources. The expressive power of Semantic technologies is needed in those applications, but Semantic Technologies risk being unable to address the needs of those applications, because they do not consider ordering as an essential property. Ranking results is often seen as an “added task”, performed after inference, without affecting the inference process, which is order-agnostic. However, we perceive a trend towards order-aware semantic technologies: both researchers and practitioners understand that order matters in reasoning over massive and highly dynamic data. The idea of Stream Reasoning is gaining considerable momentum. Some top-k query answering techniques for Linked Data appeared. Several works are considering SPARQL query answering on RDF annotated with labels partially ordered. The Description Logic community is investigating top-k ontological query answering. The OrdRing workshop (as its predecessors in 2011, 2013, and 2014) aims at bringing together this growing and very active community interested in integrating ordering with reasoning by using methods inspired by stream and rank-aware data management. Acknowledgements Several people made these workshops possible and deserve our gratitude. We would like to thank all the authors and workshop participants for their thoughtful and valuable contributions. The program committee members also deserve thanks for reviewing submissions and ensuring quality workshop programs. We would also like to thank the ISWC organizers, in particular Miriam Fernandez and Krzysztof Janowicz, for their support in organizing these workshops. In addition, the advisors of SSN-TC, which include Amit Sheth, Manfred Hauswirth, and Kerry Taylor, deserve special thanks for their valuable contributions during the planning and organization of SSN-TC. October 2015 Rolf Grütter Cory Henson Kostis Kyzirakos Matthew Perry Dalia Varanka Jean-Paul Calbimonte Irene Celino Emanuele Della Valle Daniele Dell'Aglio Markus Krötzsch Stefan Schlobach Table of contents Semantic Sensor Networks and Terra Cognita Emrooz: A Scalable Database for SSN Observations 1 Markus Stocker, Narasinha Shurpali, Kerry Taylor, George Burba, Mauno Rönkkö, Mikko Kolehmainen Autonomous Composition and Execution of REST APIs for Smart Sensors 13 Daniela Ventura, Ruben Verborgh, Vincenzo Catania, Erik Mannens The Schema Editor of OpenIoT for Semantic Sensor Networks 25 Prem Prakash Jayaraman, Jean-Paul Calbimonte, Hoan Nguyen Mau Quoc ReDef: Context-aware Recognition of Interleaved Activities using OWL 2 and Defeasible Reasoning 31 Georgios Meditskos, Efstratios Kontopoulos, Ioannis Kompatsiaris Designing SDI4Apps POI Base 43 Otakar Cerba, Tomáš Mildorf, Raitis Berzins Developing GeoSPARQL Applications with Oracle Spatial and Graph 57 Matthew Perry, Ana Estrada, Souripriya Das, Jayanta Banerjee Ordering and Reasoning Models of High-Level Declarative Stream Processing 62 Özgür Özcep Running out of Bindings? Integrating Facts and Events in Linked Data Stream Processing 63 Shen Gao, Thomas Scharrenbach, Jorg-Uwe Kietz, Abraham Bernstein Event-Driven Rule-Based Reasoning using EYE 75 Ben De Meester, Dörthe Arndt, Pieter Bonte, Jabran Bhatti, Wim Dereuddre, Ruben Verborgh, Femke Ongenae, Filip De Turck, Erik Mannens, Rik Van de Walle Heaven Test Stand: towards comparative research on RSP engines 87 Riccardo Tommasini, Emanuele Della Valle, Marco Balduini, Daniele Dell’Aglio Program Committees Semantic Sensor Networks and Terra Cognita Pramod Anantharam Kno.e.sis Center, Wright State University, OH, USA Spiros Athanasiou "Athena" Research and Innovation Center, Greece Arun Ayyagari The Boeing Company, Chicago, IL, USA Franz Baader TU Dresden, Germany Payam Barnaghi University of Surrey, Guildford, UK Sotiris Batsakis University of Huddersfield, UK Jon Blower University of Reading, UK Boyan Brodaric Geological Survey of Canada Oscar Corcho Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain Isabel Cruz University of Illinois at Chicago, USA Ralf Denzer Cismet GmbH, Saarbrücken, Germany Curdin Derungs GISLab UFSP Spur, University of Zurich, Switzerland Peter Edwards University of Aberdeen, UK Alasdair Gray Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK Andreas Harth Institute of Applied Informatics and Formal Description Methods (AIFB), Karlsruhe, Germany Krzysztof Janowicz University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA Marinos Kavouras School of Rural and Surveying Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Greece Dave Kolas Raytheon BBN Technologies, Washington, DC, USA Manolis Koubarakis National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece Yong Liu Microsoft, Bellevue, Washington, USA Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo University of Leipzig, Germany Özgür Lütfü Özcep Institute of Information Systems, University of Lübeck, Germany Josiane Xavier Parreira Siemens AG Österreich Dieter Pfoser George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, USA Clemens Portele interactive instruments, Bonn, Germany Ross Purves University of Zürich – Irchel, Switzerland Thorsten Reitz Esri R&D Center Zurich, Switzerland Spiros Skiadopoulos University of Peloponnese, Greece Raphaël Troncy EURECOM, Biot, France Nancy Wiegand Space Science and Engineering Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA Stefan Woelfl Department of Computer Science, University of Freiburg, Germany Ordering and Reasoning Darko Anicic Siemens AG, Germany Marco Balduini Politecnico di Milano, Italy Alessandro Bozzon TU Delft, Netherlands Oscar Corcho Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain Soheila Dehghanzadeh Insight Centre for Data Analytics, Ireland Shen Gao University of Zurich, Switzerland Peter Haase Metaphacts, Germany Freddy Lecue IBM Research, Ireland Alejandro Llaves Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain Tomas Masopust TU Dresden, Germany Alessandro Margara University of Lugano, Switzerland Alessandra Mileo Insight Centre for Data Analytics, Ireland Jeff Z. Pan University of Aberdeen, UK Giuseppe Pirrò University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany Umberto Straccia ISTI-CNR, Italy Anni-Yasmin Turhan TU Dresden, Germany Maria-Ester Vidal Universidad Simón Bolívar, Venezuela Haofen Wang East China University of Science and Technology, China Kewen Wang Griffith University, US Zhe Wu Oracle, US Shima Zahmatkesh Politecnico di Milano, Italy