Scopus Kapalı Erişimli Yayınlar
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11727/10761
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Item Early Postoperative Acute Kidney Injury Among Pediatric Liver Transplant Recipients(2018) Sahinturk, Helin; Kundakci, Aycan; Zeyneloglu, Pinar; Gedik, Ender; Pirat, Arash; Haberal, Mehmet; 0000-0003-0159-4771; 0000-0002-7175-207X; 0000-0002-3462-7632; AAJ-1419-2021; AAH-7003-2019; ABI-2971-2020; AAJ-8097-2021Item A Self-tuning Heuristic for the Design of Communication Networks(2015) Dengiz, Berna; Alabas-Uslu, CigdemThis paper addresses the design of communication networks that has a large application area. The problem is to design a minimum cost network subject to a given reliability level. Complexity of the problem is twofold: (1) finding a minimum-cost network topology that every pair of nodes can communicate with each other and (2) computing overall reliability to provide the reliability constraint. Over the last two decades, metahemistic algorithms have been widely applied to solve this problem due to its NP-hardness. In this study, a self-tuning heuristic (STH), which is a new approach free from parameter tuning, is applied to the design of communication networks. Extensive computational results confirm that STH generates superior solutions to the problem in comparison to some well-known local search metaheuristics, and also more sophisticated metaheuristics proposed in the literature. The practical advantage of STH lies in both its effectiveness and simplicity in application to the design problem.Item A Self-adaptive Local Search Algorithm for the Classical Vehicle Routing Problem(2011) Alabas-Uslu, Cigdem; Dengiz, BernaThe purpose of this study is introduction of a local search heuristic free from parameter tuning to solve classical vehicle routing problem (VRP). The VRP can be described as the problem of designing optimal delivery of routes from one depot to a number of customers under the limitations of side constraints to minimize the total traveling cost. The importance of this problem comes from practical as well as theoretical point of view. The proposed heuristic, self-adaptive local search (SALS), has one generic parameter which is learnt throughout the search process. Computational experiments confirm that SALS gives high qualified solutions to the VRP and ensures at least an average performance, in terms of efficiency and effectiveness, on the problem when compared with the recent and sophisticated approaches from the literature. The most important advantage of the proposed heuristic is the application convenience for the end-users. SALS also is flexible that can be easily applied to variations of VRP. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Item Understanding the Effect of Assignment of Importance Scores of Evaluation Criteria Randomly in the Application of DOE-TOPSIS in Decision Making(2019) Ic, Yusuf Tansel; Yurdakul, Mustafa; 0000-0001-9274-7467; AGE-3003-2022In conventional applications of hybrid DoE-TOPSIS technique in decision making problems, full factorial design layouts are generally used because of their ability to measure the effects of all possible combinations for evaluation factors. In a typical application, for a design layout, a number of replications are generated by assigning different sets of relative importance scores for evaluation factors. A TOPSIS score is then obtained for each experiment and replication pair. Regression analysis is finally applied to obtain a relationship with inputs (values of evaluation factors) and outputs (alternatives' TOPSIS meta-model scores). The key in conventional application of hybrid DoE-TOPSIS technique is generation of relative importance scores. Each set of scores can be assigned by a decision maker or generated randomly. This paper aims to determine whether using either of the two methods in determination of relative importance scores makes any difference in the ranking orders of alternatives.Item Gold nanocomposites for biomedical applications(2019) Akturk, Omer; Erdemli, Ozge; Tunali, Beste Cagdas; 0000-0001-8606-8863; AAF-4496-2019; AAG-3927-2019Item A METHOD SUGGESTION TO MEASURE THE EFFECTIVENESS OF INFORMED CONSENT DURING TREATMENT PROCESS A Study on University Students(2019) Buken, Erhan; Yasar, Zehtiye Fusun; Zengin, Hatice Yagmur; Buken, Bora; 0000-0002-4779-0623; 0000-0002-9855-2449; AAL-6847-2021; ABA-3224-2021It is difficult and subjective to evaluate how much of the treatment information given has been understood by the patient during the informing process. Various court decisions show that courts expect a hundred percent success in the informing process. This research was conducted to observe the effectiveness of written and verbal information given under ideal conditions. A coronary angiography consent form was standardized to measure readability and understandability. Two different labyrinth tests were performed from the text. Tests were performed on the Baskent University students in Turkey. The labyrinth test's subjects responded to the test after verbal information, had an absolute rate of 32.5% while the labyrinth test's subjects, responded to prior verbal information had an absolute success rate of 15%. 87.7% of those who achieved absolute success, in the second labyrinth test, also received verbal information. In the verbally informed group, those who achieved absolute success in the first test were 8.5%, while this rate increased to 28.5% after verbal information. There was no difference between the groups, in terms of the number of correct answers and response time, in the first test. Significant differences between the groups' tests arose in the test administered after being informed. This paper argues that the difference of total correct answers between the groups, in the post-test, stems from the effects of verbal informing. This study observed that verbally informing is more effective than written informing. It concludes that the success of the informing process can be measured by developing standardized methods, though it is unlikely to achieve 100% success.Item Is ingroup favoritism contingent on the expectation of reciprocity from ingroup members?: The case of reputation manipulation(2019) Kologlugil, Serhat; Tekes, BurcuWe use a game of cooperation with minimal groups to test whether ingroup favoritism can be explained by the expectation of reciprocity from ingroup members. To do this, we first manipulate participants' level expected cooperation from ingroup and outgroup partners by letting them play the game with different partners having different (high or low) cooperative reputations. We then analyze how these expectations affect ingroup bias in the game across different reputation conditions. We find that even if subjects expect the same level of cooperation from ingroup and outgroup partners withhigh reputation, they still cooperate more with the former than the latter. This contradicts the reciprocity hypothesis in the literature which explains intergroup discrimination solely in reference to differential reciprocal expectations. But, against ingroup and outgroup partners withlow cooperative reputation, subjects' level of cooperation almost exactly parallel their reciprocal expectations. This result is in line with the reciprocity hypothesis. We explain these findings by arguing that both reciprocal expectations and social identity play their parts in the emergence of ingroup favoritism, but that their relative strengths may depend on the interaction with other contextual factors. We also argue in favor of further experimental research as to how reciprocity and social identity interact with such third factors as partner's reputation in different games of social exchange.Item Early Postoperative Pulmonary Complications Following Heart Transplantation(2015) Pirat, Aras; Firat, A. Camkiran; Komurcu, O.; Zeyneoglu, P.; Turker, M.; Sezgin, A.