They're driver extension packages. Judging by the version numbers, I'd bet they are extensions for Intel graphics drivers.
Before Windows 10, driver packages were single, monolithic things, covering every configuration for a given device. That made driver packages huge and complicated, and every time a vendor wanted to update something minor, they had to update the whole dang package. Starting with Windows 10, functionality can be split off into multiple components. You have a base driver package, and then some number of extensions. The extensions are supposed to add something groovy for the device, but they are not mandatory for the device to function. Only the base package is required.