9,515 results on '"Demir P"'
Search Results
202. Intracranial extra-axial chondromas: clues to computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging diagnosis
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Demir, Mustafa Kemal, Yapıcıer, Özlem, Ertem, Önder, Ecertastan, Ozge, Kılıc, Deniz, Güzel, Aslan, and Kılıc, Türker
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- 2024
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203. Evaluation of the Patients with the Diagnosis of Pontocerebellar Hypoplasia: A Multicenter National Study
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Cavusoglu, Dilek, Ozturk, Gulten, Turkdogan, Dilsad, Kurul, Semra Hiz, Yis, Uluc, Komur, Mustafa, Incecik, Faruk, Kara, Bulent, Sahin, Turkan, Unver, Olcay, Dilber, Cengiz, Mert, Gulen Gul, Gunay, Cagatay, Uzan, Gamze Sarikaya, Ersoy, Ozlem, Oktay, Yavuz, Mermer, Serdar, Tuncer, Gokcen Oz, Gungor, Olcay, Ozcora, Gul Demet Kaya, Gumus, Ugur, Sezer, Ozlem, Cetin, Gokhan Ozan, Demir, Fatma, Yilmaz, Arzu, Gurbuz, Gurkan, Topcu, Meral, Topaloglu, Haluk, Ceylan, Ahmet Cevdet, Ceylaner, Serdar, Gleeson, Joseph G., Icagasioglu, Dilara Fusun, and Sonmez, F. Mujgan
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- 2024
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204. Evaluation of Frost Tolerance in Sugar Beet Cultivars During Early Growth Stages
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Kulan, Engin Gökhan and Kaya, Mehmet Demir
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- 2024
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205. Projector deep feature extraction-based garbage image classification model using underwater images
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Demir, Kubra and Yaman, Orhan
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- 2024
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206. Looking For Timing Variations in the Transits of 16 Exoplanets
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Yalçınkaya, S., Esmer, E. M., Baştürk, Ö., Muhaymin, A., Kutluay, A. C., Silistre, D. İ., Akar, F., Southworth, J., Mancini, L., Davoudi, F., Karamanlı, E., Tezcan, F., Demir, E., Yılmaz, D., Güleroğlu, E., Tekin, M., Taşkın, İ., Aladağ, Y., Sertkan, E., Kurt, U. Y., Fişek, S., Kaptan, S., Aliş, S., Aksaker, N., Yelkenci, F. K., Tezcan, C. T., Kaya, A., Oğlakkaya, D., Aydın, Z. S., and Yeşilyaprak, C.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We update the ephemerides of 16 transiting exoplanets using our ground-based observations, new TESS data, and previously published observations including those of amateur astronomers. All these light curves were modeled by making use of a set of quantitative criteria with the EXOFAST code to obtain mid-transit times. We searched for statistically significant secular and/or periodic trends in the mid-transit times. We found that the timing data are well modeled by a linear ephemeris for all systems except for XO-2 b, for which we detect an orbital decay with the rate of -12.95 $\pm$ 1.85 ms/yr that can be confirmed with future observations. We also detect a hint of potential periodic variations in the TTV data of HAT-P-13 b which also requires confirmation with further precise observations., Comment: 23 pages, 17 figures
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- 2024
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207. Anticipatory Gains and Event-Driven Losses in Blockchain-Based Fan Tokens: Evidence from the FIFA World Cup
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Saggu, Aman, Ante, Lennart, and Demir, Ender
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Quantitative Finance - General Finance ,Quantitative Finance - Pricing of Securities ,Quantitative Finance - Trading and Market Microstructure ,91G70, 91B24, 91B25, 91B84, 91G70 ,J.4 - Abstract
National football teams increasingly issue tradeable blockchain-based fan tokens to strategically enhance fan engagement. This study investigates the impact of 2022 World Cup matches on the dynamic performance of each team's fan token. The event study uncovers fan token returns surged six months before the World Cup, driven by positive anticipation effects. However, intraday analysis reveals a reversal of fan token returns consistently declining and trading volumes rising as matches unfold. To explain findings, we uncover asymmetries whereby defeats in high-stake matches caused a plunge in fan token returns, compared to low-stake matches, intensifying in magnitude for knockout matches. Contrarily, victories enhance trading volumes, reflecting increased market activity without a corresponding positive effect on returns. We align findings with the classic market adage "buy the rumor, sell the news," unveiling cognitive biases and nuances in investor sentiment, cautioning the dichotomy of pre-event optimism and subsequent performance declines., Comment: 31 pages, 5 tables, 1 figure
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- 2024
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208. Estimating Physical Information Consistency of Channel Data Augmentation for Remote Sensing Images
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Burgert, Tom and Demir, Begüm
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
The application of data augmentation for deep learning (DL) methods plays an important role in achieving state-of-the-art results in supervised, semi-supervised, and self-supervised image classification. In particular, channel transformations (e.g., solarize, grayscale, brightness adjustments) are integrated into data augmentation pipelines for remote sensing (RS) image classification tasks. However, contradicting beliefs exist about their proper applications to RS images. A common point of critique is that the application of channel augmentation techniques may lead to physically inconsistent spectral data (i.e., pixel signatures). To shed light on the open debate, we propose an approach to estimate whether a channel augmentation technique affects the physical information of RS images. To this end, the proposed approach estimates a score that measures the alignment of a pixel signature within a time series that can be naturally subject to deviations caused by factors such as acquisition conditions or phenological states of vegetation. We compare the scores associated with original and augmented pixel signatures to evaluate the physical consistency. Experimental results on a multi-label image classification task show that channel augmentations yielding a score that exceeds the expected deviation of original pixel signatures can not improve the performance of a baseline model trained without augmentation., Comment: Accepted at the IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium
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- 2024
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209. Explainable Transformer Prototypes for Medical Diagnoses
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Demir, Ugur, Jha, Debesh, Zhang, Zheyuan, Keles, Elif, Allen, Bradley, Katsaggelos, Aggelos K., and Bagci, Ulas
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Deployments of artificial intelligence in medical diagnostics mandate not just accuracy and efficacy but also trust, emphasizing the need for explainability in machine decisions. The recent trend in automated medical image diagnostics leans towards the deployment of Transformer-based architectures, credited to their impressive capabilities. Since the self-attention feature of transformers contributes towards identifying crucial regions during the classification process, they enhance the trustability of the methods. However, the complex intricacies of these attention mechanisms may fall short of effectively pinpointing the regions of interest directly influencing AI decisions. Our research endeavors to innovate a unique attention block that underscores the correlation between 'regions' rather than 'pixels'. To address this challenge, we introduce an innovative system grounded in prototype learning, featuring an advanced self-attention mechanism that goes beyond conventional ad-hoc visual explanation techniques by offering comprehensible visual insights. A combined quantitative and qualitative methodological approach was used to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method on the large-scale NIH chest X-ray dataset. Experimental results showed that our proposed method offers a promising direction for explainability, which can lead to the development of more trustable systems, which can facilitate easier and rapid adoption of such technology into routine clinics. The code is available at www.github.com/NUBagcilab/r2r_proto.
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- 2024
210. Asymptotically-Flat Black Hole Solutions in Symmergent Gravity
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Puliçe, Beyhan, Pantig, Reggie C., Övgün, Ali, and Demir, Durmuş
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General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
Symmergent gravity is an emergent gravity model with an $R+R^2$ curvature sector and an extended particle sector having new particles beyond the known ones. With constant scalar curvature, asymptotically flat black hole solutions are known to have no sensitivity to the quadratic curvature term (coefficient of $R^2$). With variable scalar curvature, however, asymptotically-flat symmergent black hole solutions turn out to explicitly depend on the quadratic curvature term. In the present work, we construct asymptotically-flat symmergent black holes with variable scalar curvature and use its evaporation, shadow, and deflection angle to constrain the symmergent gravity parameters. Concerning their evaporation, we find that the new particles predicted by symmergent gravity, even if they do not interact with the known particles, can enhance the black hole evaporation rate. Concerning their shadow, we show that statistically significant symmergent effects are reached at the $2\,\sigma$ level for the observational data of the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) on the Sagittarius A* supermassive black hole. Concerning their weak deflection angle, we reveal discernible features for the boson-fermion number differences, particularly at large impact parameters. These findings hold the potential to serve as theoretical predictions for future observations and investigations on black hole properties., Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in Fortschritte der Physik. Dedicated to Durmu\c{s} Demir (1967-2024), our supervisor, candid friend, and guiding light. His unwavering supports always led our way
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- 2024
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211. Malicious Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces: How Impactful can Destructive Beamforming be?
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Rivetti, Steven, Demir, Ozlem Tugfe, Bjornson, Emil, and Skoglund, Mikael
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
Reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RISs) have demonstrated significant potential for enhancing communication system performance if properly configured. However, a RIS might also pose a risk to the network security. In this letter, we explore the impact of a malicious RIS on a multi-user multiple-input single-output (MISO) system when the system is unaware of the RIS's malicious intentions. The objective of the malicious RIS is to degrade the \ac{SNR} of a specific \ac{UE}, with the option of preserving the SNR of the other UEs, making the attack harder to detect. To achieve this goal, we derive the optimal RIS phase-shift pattern, assuming perfect channel state information (CSI) at the hacker. We then relax this assumption by introducing CSI uncertainties and subsequently determine the RIS's phase-shift pattern using a robust optimization approach. Our simulations reveal a direct proportionality between the performance degradation caused by the malicious RIS and the number of reflective elements, along with resilience toward CSI uncertainties., Comment: Submitted to IEEE wireless communication letters
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- 2024
212. Mind the Modality Gap: Towards a Remote Sensing Vision-Language Model via Cross-modal Alignment
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Zavras, Angelos, Michail, Dimitrios, Demir, Begüm, and Papoutsis, Ioannis
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Deep Learning (DL) is undergoing a paradigm shift with the emergence of foundation models, aptly named by their crucial, yet incomplete nature. In this work, we focus on Contrastive Language-Image Pre-training (CLIP), an open-vocabulary foundation model, which achieves high accuracy across many image classification tasks and is often competitive with a fully supervised baseline without being explicitly trained. Nevertheless, there are still domains where zero-shot CLIP performance is far from optimal, such as Remote Sensing (RS) and medical imagery. These domains do not only exhibit fundamentally different distributions compared to natural images, but also commonly rely on complementary modalities, beyond RGB, to derive meaningful insights. To this end, we propose a methodology for the purpose of aligning distinct RS imagery modalities with the visual and textual modalities of CLIP. Our two-stage procedure, comprises of robust fine-tuning CLIP in order to deal with the distribution shift, accompanied by the cross-modal alignment of a RS modality encoder, in an effort to extend the zero-shot capabilities of CLIP. We ultimately demonstrate our method on the tasks of RS imagery classification and cross-modal retrieval. We empirically show that both robust fine-tuning and cross-modal alignment translate to significant performance gains, across several RS benchmark datasets. Notably, these enhancements are achieved without the reliance on textual descriptions, without introducing any task-specific parameters, without training from scratch and without catastrophic forgetting.
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- 2024
213. Localization in Massive MIMO Networks: From Near-Field to Far-Field
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Ramezani, Parisa, Demir, Özlem Tuğfe, and Björnson, Emil
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
Source localization is the process of estimating the location of signal sources based on the signals received at different antennas of an antenna array. It has diverse applications, ranging from radar systems and underwater acoustics to wireless communication networks. Subspace-based approaches are among the most effective techniques for source localization due to their high accuracy, with Multiple SIgnal Classification (MUSIC) and Estimation of Signal Parameters by Rotational Invariance Techniques (ESPRIT) being two prominent methods in this category. These techniques leverage the fact that the space spanned by the eigenvectors of the covariance matrix of the received signals can be divided into signal and noise subspaces, which are mutually orthogonal. Originally designed for far-field source localization, these methods have undergone several modifications to accommodate near-field scenarios as well. This chapter aims to present the foundations of MUSIC and ESPRIT algorithms and introduce some of their variations for both far-field and near-field localization by a single array of antennas. We further provide numerical examples to demonstrate the performance of the presented methods., Comment: To appear as a chapter of the book "Massive MIMO for Future Wireless Communication Systems: Technology and Applications", to be published by Wiley
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- 2024
214. Embedding Knowledge Graphs in Degenerate Clifford Algebras
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Teyou, Louis Mozart Kamdem, Demir, Caglar, and Ngomo, Axel-Cyrille Ngonga
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Clifford algebras are a natural generalization of the real numbers, the complex numbers, and the quaternions. So far, solely Clifford algebras of the form $Cl_{p,q}$ (i.e., algebras without nilpotent base vectors) have been studied in the context of knowledge graph embeddings. We propose to consider nilpotent base vectors with a nilpotency index of two. In these spaces, denoted $Cl_{p,q,r}$, allows generalizing over approaches based on dual numbers (which cannot be modelled using $Cl_{p,q}$) and capturing patterns that emanate from the absence of higher-order interactions between real and complex parts of entity embeddings. We design two new models for the discovery of the parameters $p$, $q$, and $r$. The first model uses a greedy search to optimize $p$, $q$, and $r$. The second predicts $(p, q,r)$ based on an embedding of the input knowledge graph computed using neural networks. The results of our evaluation on seven benchmark datasets suggest that nilpotent vectors can help capture embeddings better. Our comparison against the state of the art suggests that our approach generalizes better than other approaches on all datasets w.r.t. the MRR it achieves on validation data. We also show that a greedy search suffices to discover values of $p$, $q$ and $r$ that are close to optimal.
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- 2024
215. Multi-agent Reinforcement Learning for Energy Saving in Multi-Cell Massive MIMO Systems
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Cai, Tianzhang, Wang, Qichen, Zhang, Shuai, Demir, Özlem Tuğfe, and Cavdar, Cicek
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
We develop a multi-agent reinforcement learning (MARL) algorithm to minimize the total energy consumption of multiple massive MIMO (multiple-input multiple-output) base stations (BSs) in a multi-cell network while preserving the overall quality-of-service (QoS) by making decisions on the multi-level advanced sleep modes (ASMs) and antenna switching of these BSs. The problem is modeled as a decentralized partially observable Markov decision process (DEC-POMDP) to enable collaboration between individual BSs, which is necessary to tackle inter-cell interference. A multi-agent proximal policy optimization (MAPPO) algorithm is designed to learn a collaborative BS control policy. To enhance its scalability, a modified version called MAPPO-neighbor policy is further proposed. Simulation results demonstrate that the trained MAPPO agent achieves better performance compared to baseline policies. Specifically, compared to the auto sleep mode 1 (symbol-level sleeping) algorithm, the MAPPO-neighbor policy reduces power consumption by approximately 8.7% during low-traffic hours and improves energy efficiency by approximately 19% during high-traffic hours, respectively.
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- 2024
216. Pilot Length Optimization with RS-LS Channel Estimation for Extremely Large Aperture Arrays
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Alıcıoğlu, Mert, Demir, Özlem Tuğfe, and Björnson, Emil
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
Extremely large aperture arrays can enable unprecedented spatial multiplexing in beyond 5G systems due to their extremely narrow beamfocusing capabilities. However, acquiring the spatial correlation matrix to enable efficient channel estimation is a complex task due to the vast number of antenna dimensions. Recently, a new estimation method called the "reduced-subspace least squares (RS-LS) estimator" has been proposed for densely packed arrays. This method relies solely on the geometry of the array to limit the estimation resources. In this paper, we address a gap in the existing literature by deriving the average spectral efficiency for a certain distribution of user equipments (UEs) and a lower bound on it when using the RS-LS estimator. This bound is determined by the channel gain and the statistics of the normalized spatial correlation matrices of potential UEs but, importantly, does not require knowledge of a specific UE's spatial correlation matrix. We establish that there exists a pilot length that maximizes this expression. Additionally, we derive an approximate expression for the optimal pilot length under low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) conditions. Simulation results validate the tightness of the derived lower bound and the effectiveness of using the optimized pilot length., Comment: Accepted to be presented in IEEE WCNC 2024
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- 2024
217. Parity-time symmetry breaking enables swarming motility in Caenorhabditis elegans
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Basaran, Mustafa, Yüce, Tevfik Can, Keçebaş, Ali, Altın, Baha, Yaman, Yusuf Ilker, Demir, Esin, Kocabaş, Coşkun, Özdemir, Şahin K., and Kocabaş, Aşkın
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Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Physics - Biological Physics ,Physics - Classical Physics - Abstract
Nonreciprocal interactions break action-reaction symmetry in systems of interacting bodies. This process inevitably introduces non-Hermitian dynamics which with its hallmark signature called exceptional points (EPs) has been a subject of intense research across different disciplines ranging from photonics to metamaterials. Whether non-Hermiticity and EPs are a fundamental property of nature and if so, how nature utilizes them to gain competitive advantage have remained largely unanswered. Although biological systems feature many examples of non-reciprocal interactions with the potential to drive non-Hermitian dynamics, these are often theoretically overlooked and not experimentally investigated. Here, we demonstrate in an active matter composed of social animal Caenorhabditis elegans and bacteria, non-Hermitian dynamics, and the emergence of EPs owing to the nonreciprocal nature of oxygen sensing, nonequilibrium interfacial current, and bacterial consumption. We observed that when driven through the EP, the system collectively breaks parity-time (PT) symmetry leading to traveling waves and arrested phase separation. We further find that these features enable the collective ability to localize interfaces between broken and exact PT-phases. Remarkably, this ability provides a strong evolutionary advantage to animals living in soil. Altogether our results provide mechanistic insights into the detailed symmetries controlling the collective response of biological systems; answer a long-standing problem; and give an example of the EP-enabled dynamics in a biological system.
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- 2024
218. Mixed Static and Reconfigurable Metasurface Deployment in Indoor Dense Spaces: How Much Reconfigurability is Needed?
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Li, Zhenyu, Topal, Ozan Alp, Demir, Özlem Tuğfe, Björnson, Emil, and Cavdar, Cicek
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
In this paper, we investigate how metasurfaces can be deployed to deliver high data rates in a millimeter-wave (mmWave) indoor dense space with many blocking objects. These surfaces can either be static metasurfaces (SMSs) that reflect with fixed phase-shifts or reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RISs) that can reconfigure their phase-shifts to the currently served user. The latter comes with an increased power, cabling, and signaling cost. To see how reconfigurability affects the network performance, we propose an iterative algorithm based on the feasible point pursuit successive convex approximation method. We jointly optimize the types and phase-shifts of the surfaces and the time portion allocated to each user equipment to maximize the minimum data rate achieved by the network. Our numerical results demonstrate that the minimum data rate improves as more RISs are introduced but the gain diminishes after some point. Therefore, introducing more reconfigurability is not always necessary. Another result shows that to reach the same data rate achieved by using 22 SMSs, at least 18 RISs are needed. This suggests that when it is costly to deploy many RISs, as an inexpensive alternative solution, one can reach the same data rate just by densely deploying more SMSs., Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Accepted to be presented in IEEE WCNC 2024
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- 2024
219. A Consistent Lebesgue Measure for Multi-label Learning
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Demir, Kaan, Nguyen, Bach, Xue, Bing, and Zhang, Mengjie
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Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Multi-label loss functions are usually non-differentiable, requiring surrogate loss functions for gradient-based optimisation. The consistency of surrogate loss functions is not proven and is exacerbated by the conflicting nature of multi-label loss functions. To directly learn from multiple related, yet potentially conflicting multi-label loss functions, we propose a Consistent Lebesgue Measure-based Multi-label Learner (CLML) and prove that CLML can achieve theoretical consistency under a Bayes risk framework. Empirical evidence supports our theory by demonstrating that: (1) CLML can consistently achieve state-of-the-art results; (2) the primary performance factor is the Lebesgue measure design, as CLML optimises a simpler feedforward model without additional label graph, perturbation-based conditioning, or semantic embeddings; and (3) an analysis of the results not only distinguishes CLML's effectiveness but also highlights inconsistencies between the surrogate and the desired loss functions.
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- 2024
220. Parametric Near-Field Channel Estimation for Extremely Large Aperture Arrays
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Kosasih, Alva, Demir, Özlem Tuğfe, and Björnson, Emil
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
Accurate channel estimation is critical to fully exploit the beamforming gains when communicating with extremely large aperture arrays. The propagation distances between the user and receiver, which potentially has thousands of antennas/elements, are such that they are located in the radiative near-field region of each other when considering the Fraunhofer distance of the entire array. Therefore, it is imperative to consider near-field effects to achieve proper channel estimation. This paper proposes a parametric multi-user near-field channel estimation algorithm based on MUltiple SIgnal Classification (MUSIC) method to obtain the essential parameters describing the users' locations. We derive the estimated channel by incorporating the estimated parameters into the near-field channel model. Additionally, we implement a least-squares-based estimation corrector, resulting in a precise near-field channel estimation. Simulation results demonstrate that our proposed scheme outperforms classical least-squares and minimum mean-square error channel estimation methods in terms of normalized beamforming gain and normalized mean-square error., Comment: Presented in IEEE Asilomar Conference 2023
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- 2024
221. Integrating Generative AI in Hackathons: Opportunities, Challenges, and Educational Implications
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Sajja, Ramteja, Ramirez, Carlos Erazo, Li, Zhouyayan, Demiray, Bekir Z., Sermet, Yusuf, and Demir, Ibrahim
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Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
Hackathons have emerged as pivotal platforms in the software industry, driving both innovation and skill development for organizations and students alike. These events enable companies to quickly prototype new ideas while offering students practical, hands-on learning experiences. Over time, hackathons have transitioned from purely competitive events to valuable educational tools, integrating theory with real-world problem-solving through collaboration between academia and industry. The infusion of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning is now reshaping hackathons, providing enhanced learning opportunities while also introducing ethical challenges. This study explores the influence of generative AI on students' technological choices, focusing on a case study from the 2023 University of Iowa Hackathon. The findings offer insights into AI's role in these events, its educational impact, and propose strategies for integrating such technologies in future hackathons, ensuring a balance between innovation, ethics, and educational value., Comment: 9792 words, 26 pages, 12 figures
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- 2024
222. Joint Processing and Transmission Energy Optimization for ISAC in Cell-Free Massive MIMO with URLLC
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Behdad, Zinat, Demir, Özlem Tuğfe, Sung, Ki Won, and Cavdar, Cicek
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
In this paper, we explore the concept of integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) within a downlink cell-free massive MIMO (multiple-input multiple-output) system featuring multi-static sensing and users requiring ultra-reliable low-latency communications (URLLC). Our focus involves the formulation of two non-convex algorithms that jointly solve power and blocklength allocation for end-to-end (E2E) minimization. The objectives are to jointly minimize sensing/communication processing and transmission energy consumption, while simultaneously meeting the requirements for sensing and URLLC. To address the inherent non-convexity of these optimization problems, we utilize techniques such as the Feasible Point Pursuit - Successive Convex Approximation (FPP-SCA), Concave-Convex Programming (CCP), and fractional programming. We conduct a comparative analysis of the performance of these algorithms in ISAC scenarios and against a URLLC-only scenario where sensing is not integrated. Our numerical results highlight the superior performance of the E2E energy minimization algorithm, especially in scenarios without sensing capability. Additionally, our study underscores the increasing prominence of energy consumption associated with sensing processing tasks as the number of sensing receive access points rises. Furthermore, the results emphasize that a higher sensing signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio threshold is associated with an escalation in E2E energy consumption, thereby narrowing the performance gap between the two proposed algorithms., Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2401.10133
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- 2024
223. Exploring Masked Autoencoders for Sensor-Agnostic Image Retrieval in Remote Sensing
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Hackstein, Jakob, Sumbul, Gencer, Clasen, Kai Norman, and Demir, Begüm
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Self-supervised learning through masked autoencoders (MAEs) has recently attracted great attention for remote sensing (RS) image representation learning, and thus embodies a significant potential for content-based image retrieval (CBIR) from ever-growing RS image archives. However, the existing MAE based CBIR studies in RS assume that the considered RS images are acquired by a single image sensor, and thus are only suitable for uni-modal CBIR problems. The effectiveness of MAEs for cross-sensor CBIR, which aims to search semantically similar images across different image modalities, has not been explored yet. In this paper, we take the first step to explore the effectiveness of MAEs for sensor-agnostic CBIR in RS. To this end, we present a systematic overview on the possible adaptations of the vanilla MAE to exploit masked image modeling on multi-sensor RS image archives (denoted as cross-sensor masked autoencoders [CSMAEs]) in the context of CBIR. Based on different adjustments applied to the vanilla MAE, we introduce different CSMAE models. We also provide an extensive experimental analysis of these CSMAE models. We finally derive a guideline to exploit masked image modeling for uni-modal and cross-modal CBIR problems in RS. The code of this work is publicly available at https://github.com/jakhac/CSMAE., Comment: Accepted at the IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing. Our code is available at https://github.com/jakhac/CSMAE
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- 2024
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224. Radio Map Estimation -- An Open Dataset with Directive Transmitter Antennas and Initial Experiments
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Jaensch, Fabian, Caire, Giuseppe, and Demir, Begüm
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Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
Over the last years, several works have explored the application of deep learning algorithms to determine the large-scale signal fading (also referred to as ``path loss'') between transmitter and receiver pairs in urban communication networks. The central idea is to replace costly measurement campaigns, inaccurate statistical models or computationally expensive ray-tracing simulations by machine learning models which, once trained, produce accurate predictions almost instantly. Although the topic has attracted attention from many researchers, there are few open benchmark datasets and codebases that would allow everyone to test and compare the developed methods and algorithms. We take a step towards filling this gap by releasing a publicly available dataset of simulated path loss radio maps together with realistic city maps from real-world locations and aerial images from open datasources. Initial experiments regarding model architectures, input feature design and estimation of radio maps from aerial images are presented and the code is made available., Comment: 13 pages, 121 figures, This work has been submitted to the IEEE for possible publication
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- 2024
225. Towards 6G MIMO: Massive Spatial Multiplexing, Dense Arrays, and Interplay Between Electromagnetics and Processing
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Björnson, Emil, Chae, Chan-Byoung, Heath Jr., Robert W., Marzetta, Thomas L., Mezghani, Amine, Sanguinetti, Luca, Rusek, Fredrik, Castellanos, Miguel R., Jun, Dongsoo, and Demir, Özlem Tugfe
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
The increasing demand for wireless data transfer has been the driving force behind the widespread adoption of Massive MIMO (multiple-input multiple-output) technology in 5G. The next-generation MIMO technology is now being developed to cater to the new data traffic and performance expectations generated by new user devices and services in the next decade. The evolution towards "ultra-massive MIMO (UM-MIMO)" is not only about adding more antennas but will also uncover new propagation and hardware phenomena that can only be treated by jointly utilizing insights from the communication, electromagnetic (EM), and circuit theory areas. This article offers a comprehensive overview of the key benefits of the UM-MIMO technology and the associated challenges. It explores massive multiplexing facilitated by radiative near-field effects, characterizes the spatial degrees-of-freedom, and practical channel estimation schemes tailored for massive arrays. Moreover, we provide a tutorial on EM theory and circuit theory, and how it is used to obtain physically consistent antenna and channel models. Subsequently, the article describes different ways to implement massive and dense antenna arrays, and how to co-design antennas with signal processing. The main open research challenges are identified at the end., Comment: Submitted to Proceedings of the IEEE, 36 pages, 23 figures
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- 2024
226. A quick and effective approach for removing Ni(II) from paper mill wastewater with magnesium ferrite nanoadsorbent: method development, reusability, isotherm models, and adsorption kinetics
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Bahçıvan, Aleyna, Atakol, Arda, Zaman, Buse Tuğba, Bozyiğit, Gamze Dalgıç, Demir, Selami, and Bakırdere, Sezgin
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- 2025
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227. Transforming last mile delivery with heterogeneous assistants: drones and delivery robots
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Chen, Cheng, Demir, Emrah, Hu, Xisheng, and Huang, Hainan
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- 2025
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228. Effect of obstructive sleep apnea risk on sialorrhea in patients with Parkinson’s disease
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Özkutlu, Özge, Demir, Esma, Ünlüer, Nezehat Özgül, and Sonkaya, Rıza
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- 2025
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229. Erratum to: Alleviation of Cadmium Stress on Pollens of Quince Varieties Through Epibrassinolide
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Muradoğlu, Ferhad, Beyhan, Ömer, Demir, Taki, Manzoor, Muhammad Arsalan, Sönmez, Ferit, and Balık, Hüseyin İrfan
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- 2025
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230. Effect of milk thistle (Silybum marianum L.) oil on pro-inflammatory cytokines, acute phase proteins, rumen metagenomic profile, rumen fluid variables and performance in calves
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Kara, Kanber, Pi̇rci̇, Gönül, Yılmaz Öztaş, Sena, Demi̇r, Seyrani, and Yılmaz, Kurşat
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- 2025
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231. Clinical and genetic characteristics of patients with monocarboxylate transporter-8 deficiency: a multicentre retrospective study
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Çelik, Nurullah, Demir, Korcan, Dibeklioğlu, Saime Ergen, Dündar, Bumin Nuri, Hatipoğlu, Nihal, Mutlu, Gül Yeşiltepe, Arslan, Emrullah, Yıldırımçakar, Didem, Çayır, Atilla, Hacıhamdioğlu, Bülent, Sütçü, Zümrüt Kocabey, Ünsal, Yağmur, and Karagüzel, Gülay
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- 2025
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232. Clinical and molecular spectrum along with genotype–phenotype correlation of 25 patients diagnosed with 3 M syndrome: a study from Turkey
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Akalın, Akçahan, Özalkak, Şervan, Yıldırım, Ruken, Karakaya, Amine Aktar, Kolbaşı, Barış, Durmuşalioğlu, Enise Avcı, Kökali, Funda, Ürel-Demir, Gizem, Öz, Veysel, Ünal, Edip, Atik, Tahir, Şimşek-Kiper, Pelin Özlem, and Elcioglu, Nursel H.
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- 2025
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233. The journey of MEFV heterozygous children: with or without colchicine
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Çakan, Mustafa, Alkaya, Ayşenur, Koru, Lütfiye, Öksel, Betül, Akgün, Özlem, Tunce, Eray, Yener, Gülçin Otar, Tanatar, Ayşe, Demir, Ferhat, Şahin, Nihal, Bağlan, Esra, Öztürk, Kübra, Sönmez, Hafize Emine, Özdel, Semanur, Sözeri, Betül, and Ayaz, Nuray Aktay
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- 2025
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234. Towards silent and efficient flight by combining bioinspired owl feather serrations with cicada wing geometry.
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Wei, Zixiao, Wang, Stanley, Farris, Sean, Chennuri, Naga, Wang, Ningping, Shinsato, Stara, Demir, Kahraman, Horii, Maya, and Gu, Grace
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Animals ,Flight ,Animal ,Wings ,Animal ,Feathers ,Hemiptera ,Strigiformes ,Hydrodynamics ,Computer Simulation ,Biomechanical Phenomena - Abstract
As natural predators, owls fly with astonishing stealth due to the serrated feather morphology that produces advantageous flow characteristics. Traditionally, these serrations are tailored for airfoil edges with simple two-dimensional patterns, limiting their effect on noise reduction while negotiating tradeoffs in aerodynamic performance. Conversely, the intricately structured wings of cicadas have evolved for effective flapping, presenting a potential blueprint for alleviating these aerodynamic limitations. In this study, we formulate a synergistic design strategy that harmonizes noise suppression with aerodynamic efficiency by integrating the geometrical attributes of owl feathers and cicada forewings, culminating in a three-dimensional sinusoidal serration propeller topology that facilitates both silent and efficient flight. Experimental results show that our design yields a reduction in overall sound pressure levels by up to 5.5 dB and an increase in propulsive efficiency by over 20% compared to the current industry benchmark. Computational fluid dynamics simulations validate the efficacy of the bioinspired design in augmenting surface vorticity and suppressing noise generation across various flow regimes. This topology can advance the multifunctionality of aerodynamic surfaces for the development of quieter and more energy-saving aerial vehicles.
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- 2024
235. FSHing for DNA Damage: Key Features of MutY Detection of 8-Oxoguanine:Adenine Mismatches.
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Majumdar, Chandrima, Demir, Merve, Merrill, Steven, Hashemian, Mohammad, and David, Sheila
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Humans ,DNA Repair ,Adenine ,Escherichia coli ,DNA Damage ,DNA ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Follicle Stimulating Hormone ,Guanine - Abstract
ConspectusBase excision repair (BER) enzymes are genomic superheroes that stealthily and accurately identify and remove chemically modified DNA bases. DNA base modifications erode the informational content of DNA and underlie many disease phenotypes, most conspicuously, cancer. The OG of oxidative base damage, 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (OG), is particularly insidious due to its miscoding ability that leads to the formation of rare, pro-mutagenic OG:A mismatches. Thwarting mutagenesis relies on the capture of OG:A mismatches prior to DNA replication and removal of the mis-inserted adenine by MutY glycosylases to initiate BER. The threat of OG and the importance of its repair are underscored by the association between inherited dysfunctional variants of the MutY human homologue (MUTYH) and colorectal cancer, known as MUTYH-associated polyposis (MAP). Our functional studies of the two founder MUTYH variants revealed that both have compromised activity and a reduced affinity for OG:A mismatches. Indeed, these studies underscored the challenge of the recognition of OG:A mismatches that are only subtly structurally different than T:A base pairs. Since the original discovery of MAP, many MUTYH variants have been reported, with most considered to be variants of uncertain significance. To reveal features associated with damage recognition and adenine excision by MutY and MUTYH, we have developed a multipronged chemical biology approach combining enzyme kinetics, X-ray crystallography, single-molecule visualization, and cellular repair assays. In this review, we highlight recent work in our laboratory where we defined MutY structure-activity relationship (SAR) studies using synthetic analogs of OG and A in cellular and in vitro assays. Our studies revealed the 2-amino group of OG as the key distinguishing feature of OG:A mismatches. Indeed, the unique position of the 2-amino group in the major groove of OGsyn:Aanti mismatches provides a means for its rapid detection among a large excess of highly abundant and structurally similar canonical base pairs. Furthermore, site-directed mutagenesis and structural analysis showed that a conserved C-terminal domain β-hairpin FSH loop is critical for OG recognition with the His serving as the lesion detector. Notably, MUTYH variants located within and near the FSH loop have been associated with different forms of cancer. Uncovering the role(s) of this loop in lesion recognition provided a detailed understanding of the search and repair process of MutY. Such insights are also useful to identify mutational hotspots and pathogenic variants, which may improve the ability of physicians to diagnose the likelihood of disease onset and prognosis. The critical importance of the FSH loop in lesion detection suggests that it may serve as a unique locus for targeting probes or inhibitors of MutY/MUTYH to provide new chemical biology tools and avenues for therapeutic development.
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- 2024
236. Evaluation of pediatric rheumatologists’ approach to rituximab use: a questionnaire study
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Sunar Yayla, Emine Nur, Gezgin Yıldırım, Deniz, Adıgüzel Dündar, Hatice, Adrovic, Amra, Akbörü, Elifsu Gözde, Aktay Ayaz, Nuray, Aliyev, Emil, Avar Aydın, Pınar Özge, Aydın, Fatma, Baba, Özge, Bağlan, Esra, Bora Makay, Balahan, Bozkaya Yücel, Burcu, Çakan, Mustafa, Çelikel, Elif, Demir, Ferhat, Demir, Selcan, Demirkan, Fatma Gül, Ekici Tekin, Zahide, Esmeray Şenol, Pelin, Guliyeva, Vefa, Güngörer, Vildan, İşgüder, Rana, Kalyoncu, Mukaddes, Karadağ, Şerife Gül, Kısaoğlu, Hakan, Kışla Ekinci, Rabia Miray, Kızıldağ, Zehra, Kurt, Tuba, Özdel, Semanur, Özdemir Çiçek, Sümeyra, Öztürk, Kübra, Polat, Merve Cansu, Sezer, Müge, Sönmez, Hafize Emine, Sözeri, Betül, Şener, Seher, Taşkın, Sema Nur, Türkuçar, Serkan, Ünsal, Erbil, Yıldız, Çisem, and Bakkaloğlu, Sevcan A.
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- 2024
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237. How Effective are leptin Gene Polymorphisms and Methylation during the Course of Multiple Myeloma?
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Istemi Serin, Oyaci, Yasemin, Pehlivan, Mustafa, Demir, Ilknur, Demir, Burcak, Cinli, Tahir Alper, Yokus, Osman, and Pehlivan, Sacide
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- 2024
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238. Vakum paketli Şavak tulum peynirlerinde potasyum sorbatın kullanımı
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DEMİR P, ÖKSÜZTEPE G, İNCİLİ GK, and İLHAK Oİ
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vacuum package ,tulum cheese ,potassium sorbate ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
This study was carried out to determine the shelf life of vacuum packaged Şavak tulum cheese supplemented with potassium sorbate. For this purpose, ewe milk was divided to four groups as K (control group), A (added with 0.05% potassium sorbate), B (added with 0.1% potassium sorbate), and C (added with 0.2% potassium sorbate). The groups were stored in refrigerator (4°C) and analyzed for microbiological (Total mesophilic aerobic bacteria, LLP, lactic streptococcus, coliforms, lipolytic bacteria, proteolytic bacteria, yeast and mold, E. coli, Staph. aureus, and C. perfringens), chemical (pH, acidity, aw, fat, salt, dry matter, ash, and residue sorbic acid) and sensorial (package, appearance, structure, odor, taste and general acceptability) attributes on days 0, 15, 30, 60, 90, 120, 150, 180, 210.and 240. of storage. The control group, A, B and C groups were deteriorated as regards sensorial on days 120, 150, 180. and 270. of storage, respectively. C. perfringens was found in none of the groups. E. coli was found to be below detection limit after 90 days in control group, 15 days in A and B groups, and on day 0 in C group. Staph. aureus wasfound to be below detection limit after 30 days in control group, 15 days in A and B groups, and on day 0 in C group.Residue sorbic acid level was detected as 0.002 ppm in group A on day 120, 0.006 ppm in group B on day 150, and 0.11 ppm in group Con day 240. The most popular group by panelists was group C. Consequently, it was seen that savak tulum cheese can be vacuum packaged and consumed in small porsions by consumers, and the use of potassium sorbate in vacuum packaged Savak tuulum cheese has an inhibitory effect on E. coli and Staph.aureus.
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- 2017
- Full Text
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239. An Investigation of the Relationship between Digital Obesity and Digital Literacy Levels of Individuals in the Context of Turkey
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Demir, Fatima Betül, Öteles, Ülkü Ulukaya, and Koçoglu, Erol
- Abstract
The concepts of digital obesity and digital literacy, which are interconnected in influencing human beings, can find their place in all areas of life with the virtualized life industry in the globalizing world. Having these competencies, awareness can be explained by the orientation process between these concepts and the individual. In this direction, this study, which aims to examine the relationship between digital obesity and digital literacy levels of individuals, has been carried out, taking into account the existing orientation process. In the study, which was designed as a quantitative research, the relational survey model was used. The research was carried out with 549 participants. The results indicate that the level of digital obesity and digital literacy significantly predict the level. In addition, age, gender and educational status seem to play a partly mediating role in the relationship between digital obesity and digital literacy.
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- 2023
240. Gender, Self-Silencing, and Identity among School and out of School Emerging Adults
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Demir Kaya, Meva and Çok, Figen
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Identity, as important focus of psychosocial development, are closely related to self silencing and gender roles. Identity development is different in two genders and studies on young women in terms of identity development is limited. Being a part of a formal education or not is also important in identity development as well. Therefore, in this study, it is aimed to investigate the effects of gender roles and self-silencing on identity functions in women. Another purpose of this study is to examine whether the identity functions of women with and without university education differ. 269 young women from vocational training courses and 234 young women from universities participated in the research. Functions of Identity Scale, Silencing the Self Scale, Bem Sex Role Inventory, and demographic information form were utilized to women in a both individual and group session. According to Structural Equation Modelling results, gender roles were found directly and indirectly effective through self silencing on functions of identity. Direct relationships have shown that feminine gender characteristics increase self-silence while masculine gender features decrease self silencing. Self silencing also reduces identity functions. Self silencing mediated the relations between gender roles and functions of identity in young women. In addition, according to MANOVA results, functions of identity didn't differ significantly according to education. Finally, the findings were discussed in the context of gender roles and self-silencing in raising the level of identity functions of women considering education context.
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- 2023
241. Examining the Turkish Course Success of Secondary Students in the Context of Various Factors with the Structural Equality Model (SEM)
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Demir, Selvi
- Abstract
This research was created in order to detect the indirect, direct and total effects of some factors affecting the academic success of secondary school students in Turkish courses. Concordantly, in the research, the explanatory and predictive relationships between students' individual verbal expression self-efficacy perceptions, group verbal expression self-efficacy perceptions, motivation towards school and demographic characteristics (gender, number of siblings, education level of parents) as well as various variables (number of books at home, number of book pages read daily, the daily television watching frequency and daily internet use frequency) and academic success in Turkish lessons were examined. In the study group of the research, there are 506 eighth grade students studying in seven public secondary schools in the city center of Kilis. The data obtained were analyzed with a structural equation model to reveal the indirect and direct causality between internal and external variables through structural equations. As a result of the research, individual verbal expression self-efficacy perceptions and motivation towards school have only indirect effects on students' academic success in Turkish lessons, group verbal expression self-efficacy perception, number of siblings and father's education level have only direct effects. Besides, gender, the number of books at home and the number of daily book pages read have both indirect and direct effects on the academic success of students in Turkish lessons. However, in the study, it was detected that individual verbal expression self-efficacy perceptions, gender, number of books at home, number of daily book pages read, and motivation towards secondary school had indirect and/or direct effects on group verbal expression self-efficacy. [Note: The publication year (2022) shown on the PDF is incorrect. The correct publication year for this article is 2023.]
- Published
- 2023
242. Predictive Effect of Meaning of Life on Psychological Well-Being and Happiness among University Students
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Demir, Sezai, Isgör, Isa Yücel, and Yilmaz, Yasin
- Abstract
In this study, it is aimed to examine the predictive effect of the meaning in life on psychological wellbeing and happiness in university students. In the study, it was also investigated whether there was a significant difference between the meaning in life, psychological well-being and happiness scores in terms of gender. The study population of the research consists of students studying at Hatay Mustafa Kemal University Faculty of Education in the fall semester of the 2021-2022 academic year. The study group consisted of a total of 323 students, 236 (73.1%) g rls and 87 (26.9%) boys, aged between 20 and 26 (x 21.62), selected w th the conven ence sampl ng method, one of the non-random sampling methods. In the study personal information form, Short form of Oxford Happiness Questionnaire, Psychological Well-Being Scale and Meaning in Life Questionnaire were used as data collection tools. According to the findings obtained from the study, the meaning in life predicted students' psychological well-being at a significant level; it was seen that the meaning in life explained about 30% of the total variance in students' psychological well-being scores. In addition, the meaning in life predicted the happiness level of students at a significant level; it was seen that the meaning in life explained about 23% of the total variance in the happiness scores of the students in a meaningful way. Finally, it was found that there was no significant difference between the meaning in life, happiness and psychological well-being scores of the students according to their gender.
- Published
- 2023
243. Examination of Pre-Service Teachers' Attitudes towards Teachers' Lounge
- Author
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Çetin, Filiz and Göloglu Demir, Cennet
- Abstract
This study aims to determine the attitudes of pre-service teachers towards the teachers' lounge. Differences between the attitudes of pre-service teachers towards the teachers' lounge in terms of gender, program, perception of the teaching profession, and the time spent in the teachers' lounge during the internship were examined. The research has the characteristics of a descriptive research model and a survey research design. 634 pre-service teachers studying at the faculty of education and pedagogical formation program at a state university are the study group of this research. As a data collection tool in the research, the "Attitude Scale Towards the Teachers' Lounge" was used. The results of the research show that pre-service teachers' beliefs about the useful and versatile teachers' lounge and their beliefs about the relaxing aspect are at a moderate level, and their attitudes towards the are generally positive. Attitudes of female pre-service teachers towards the teachers' lounge are more positive than those of male teachers. Attitudes of the pre-service teachers studying in the pedagogical formation program towards the teachers' lounge are more positive than those of the pre-service teachers studying at the faculty of education. Attitudes of pre-service teachers who like the teaching profession towards the teachers' lounge are more positive than those of those who do not. The other results are that the attitudes of the teacher candidates who spend time in the teachers' lounge towards the teachers' lounge are more positive than the teacher candidates who do not spend time at all. [This article includes an extended summary in Turkish.]
- Published
- 2023
244. Examination of Pre-Service Teachers' Experiences in Teaching Practice with Distance Education
- Author
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Demir, Fehmi and Çatak, Muzaffer
- Abstract
The COVID-19 epidemic, which affects the functioning of institutions in almost every field, has also affected pre-service teacher education. In this process, unlike the traditional practice, pre-service teachers carried out the teaching practice with emergency distance education. However, since the application was sudden, urgent and new, it could not be adequately evaluated. In this research, it is aimed to examine the pre-service teachers' experiences of teaching practice with distance education in the COVID-19 process. The research was designed as a case study. Research data were obtained by semi-structured interview and observation forms. The collected data were analyzed with descriptive, and content analysis methods. The participants of the study are seven primary school pre-service teachers selected according to the typical case sampling technique and two primary school practice teachers who guide these candidates in the 2021 academic year. According to the results of the research, pre-service teachers teach according to their own possibilities and adapt to the process in teaching practice. However, they faced some problems such as the late delivery of the course topics to be taught, the lack of computers, and not knowing the level of the students in preparation, classroom management, teaching process and using technology. It is expected that future applications will be more effective if pre-service teachers receive training on distance education, are supported with distance education tools, and their infrastructure problems are resolved.
- Published
- 2023
245. An Action Research on Improving Environmental Sensitivity of Fourth Grade Primary School Students: What Happens in the School Garden?
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Demir, Fatima Betül, Kayis, Meryem, Aksoy, Dilan, Kaya, Ramazan, and Kaya, Emirhan
- Abstract
School gardens, which play an important role in environmental education, provide an opportunity for students to develop environmental awareness and gain environmental responsibility. In this study, which draws attention to this, it is aimed to reveal the applicability of the workshops prepared in the school garden in order to improve the environmental sensitivity of the students. The research was carried out with 10 female and 10 male 4th grade students in a public primary school in the city center of Bartin in the 2021-2022 academic year. The research was carried out with the action research design, one of the qualitative research methods. The data of the research were obtained through a scale developed by Peker (2020) and a semi-structured interview form prepared by the researchers. Quantitative data obtained using descriptive statistics and dependent group t-test statistical procedures; qualitative data were analyzed with content analysis technique. As a result of the research, it has been determined that environmental education workshops are effective in increasing students' environmental awareness. Students stated that environmental education activities are fun, useful and instructive. As a result, it is seen that the workshops applied in the school garden increase the environmental awareness of the 4th grade students and the process has a positive effect on them. As a result of the research, it can be suggested that environmental awareness should be brought to students through school gardens and reflected in educational environments by organizing various activities that encourage positive attitudes.
- Published
- 2023
246. Expectations of Students from Classroom Rules: A Scenario Based Bayesian Network Analysis
- Author
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Demir, Ibrahim, Sener, Ersin, Karaboga, Hasan Aykut, and Basal, Ahmet
- Abstract
Classroom rules are a fundamental aspect of classroom management and ensuring compliance with established rules is crucial. Previous research has shown that students often pay little attention to the development of classroom rules. This quantitative study aims to investigate the expectations that students have concerning classroom rules. To this end, a 4-point Likert scale questionnaire consisting of 30 items was administered to 356 secondary school students. The Bayesian Search method and expert opinion were used to obtain a Bayesian Network model. The findings of the study indicate that students expect rules to be determined at the beginning of the academic year, wish to be involved in the determination process, and prefer minimal changes to the rules. They also expect a limited number of rules and reinforcement from teachers for displaying desirable behavior. Additionally, the study found that students are more likely to adhere to classroom rules in a clean and uncrowded environment, and prefer that their parents are not informed about these rules. The results also suggest that increased adherence to classroom rules leads to increased class inclusion, while decreased adherence results in decreased class inclusion. Furthermore, the study found that adoption of classroom rules leads to increased in-class cohesion, while non-adoption results in decreased cohesion. These findings contribute to the existing body of knowledge concerning student expectations of classroom rules.
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- 2023
247. Post-Earthquake Trauma Levels of University Students Evaluation: Example of 6 February Kahramanmaras Earthquake
- Author
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Koçoglu, Erol, Demir, Fatima Betül, Öteles, Ülkü Ulukaya, and Özeren, Ender
- Abstract
The earthquake, which affected the south and southeast of Turkey (approximately 10 provinces) on February 6, 2023, brought many devastating consequences. Earthquakes, which occur in all geographies of the world in variable time periods depending on the characteristics of the geological structure, cause many extraordinary situations and consequences for humanity. This situation and results require people defined as disaster victims to struggle with psychological problems arising from the effects of the event. Based on this, this study aims to determine the post-earthquake trauma levels of university students who experienced and were affected by two earthquakes that took place nine hours apart on February 6, 2023, where the districts of Pazarcik (Earthquake intensity 7.7) and Elbistan (Earthquake intensity 7.6) in Kahramanmaras province of Turkey were the epicenters. intended to be evaluated. In the study, which was carried out with the quantitative research method and the survey model, criterion sampling, one of the purposive sampling methods, was used to determine the research group. Data were collected with the "personal information form" created by the researchers and the "post-earthquake trauma level determination scale" developed by Tanhan & Kayri (2013). Unlike many studies on the extent of the earthquake that took place, it can be said that as a result of this study, which aims to examine the psychological and mental state of earthquake victims, many remarkable results such as the fact that the trauma levels of female earthquake victims are higher than that of men.
- Published
- 2023
248. Multi-Grade Teaching: Experiences of Teachers and Preservice Teachers in Turkey
- Author
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Kartal, Ayça and Güven Demir, Elif
- Abstract
This case study compared preservice primary school teachers' and primary school teachers' experiences with multi-grade teaching in the 2018--2019 academic year. The sample consisted of 17 fourth-year students in the department of primary school teaching education of a public university and 14 multigrade teachers from 12 schools in Turkey. The preservice teachers and multi-grade primary school teachers developed similar lesson plans and executed similar learning processes. Although the multigrade teachers claimed that they used different methods (brainstorming, drama, observation, etc.), the preservice teachers observed them mostly use Q&A and direct instruction techniques. The preservice teachers did not use multidisciplinary teaching activities but instead showed students videos and slides and designed textbook-based activities. They did not use different methods to plan a multi-grade lecture. Multi-grade teaching training offered by the faculties of education should be interdisciplinary and encourage collaboration among teachers from other branches (e.g., teacher agency). [Paper presented at the European Conference on Educational Research (Online, Sep 6-9, 2021).]
- Published
- 2023
249. Opinions of Arabic Prep Class Students on the Use of YouTube in Teaching Arabic
- Author
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Dagbasi, Gurkan, Özcan, Murat, and Demir, Yasin Murat
- Abstract
Today, technology has become a concept that expresses a serious need in terms of individual and society, especially in the last period of the global epidemic. Technological developments, which are closely followed all over the world, contribute to the improvement of communication between people at the same rate, and as a result of this information transfer process, individuals find the opportunity to express their feelings and thoughts on various media platforms. The use of this platform, which is called social media, has the feature of responding to the social needs of crowded masses consisting of all existing cultures and segments. Because of these reasons and needs, social media has a very important place in human life with its feature that brings together large masses. Foreign language learning activities have also developed through social media, and many foreign language lessons have become common on YouTube. Among these languages is Arabic, which is spoken by approximately 450 million people in the world. Arabic is one of the most widely taught foreign languages in our country. In this context, it is clear that social media, like other technologies, creates a suitable basis for the use of education in the Arabic teaching process. In this study, the opinions of university students about the use of YouTube, one of the social media tools, in teaching Arabic are included. 200 students studying in Arabic preparatory classes within higher education institutions participated in the research; His views on the Arabic lessons given on YouTube were examined. At the end of the study, Arabic preparatory class students; It has been revealed that they think that the use of YouTube in the Arabic teaching process is beneficial. As a result of the answers given to the open-ended question asked whether YouTube lessons are advantageous in teaching Arabic; It has been determined that YouTube Arabic lessons contribute to the students in the preparation process and course repetitions at school. Another result of the study is; It has emerged that the number of Arabic lessons given on YouTube is less than other languages, which is perceived as a serious deficiency by the students.
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- 2023
250. An Overview of Arabic Translation and Interpreting Programs in Turkish Higher Education
- Author
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Dagbasi, Gürkan, Özcan, Murat, and Demir, Yasin Murat
- Abstract
Although the history of translation is almost as old as the history of humankind, it was not until the second half of the twentieth century that translation studies were recognized as an independent discipline. Perhaps due to this fact, translation and interpreting programs at the higher education level started to be introduced in Turkey in the 1980s. These programs were English translation and interpreting programs. The first program to train Arabic translators and interpreters was opened at Kirikkale University in 2011 and remained the only program in its field until 2017. Between 2017 and 2023, nine more Arabic translation and interpreting programs, six at public universities and three at private universities, started actively admitting students. In this study, Arabic translation and interpreting programs in Turkey are examined from various angles. At the end of the study, it was concluded that the demand for the departments at state universities was higher, the students with the highest scores preferred Istanbul University. Interpreter and translator students scored an average of forty-two points in the eighty-question foreign language exam and there were an average of 3.8 faculty members in these programs. Eight faculty members work in these programs and the students who are admitted to them are mostly placed in universities in their home cities. The total capacity of the programs is sufficient and, although there is no unity in the curriculum of the programs, similar courses are offered in different classes. The programs focus on language skills for the first two years and, subsequently, focus on translation-oriented courses. At the end of the study, we make some suggestions for translation and interpreting programs by making associations with the findings of the related literature.
- Published
- 2023
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