Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12416/8651
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Article Citation - WoS: 1Citation - Scopus: 1Ordered Clustering-Based Semantic Music Recommender System Using Deep Learning Selection(Tech Science Press, 2025) Ha, Weitao; Gang, Sheng; Navaei, Yahya D.; Gezawa, Abubakar S.; Nanehkaran, Yaser A.Music recommendation systems are essential due to the vast amount of music available on streaming platforms, which can overwhelm users trying to find new tracks that match their preferences. These systems analyze users' emotional responses, listening habits, and personal preferences to provide personalized suggestions. A significant challenge they face is the "cold start" problem, where new users have no past interactions to guide recommendations. To improve user experience, these systems aim to effectively recommend music even to such users by considering their listening behavior and music popularity. This paper introduces a novel music recommendation system that combines order clustering and a convolutional neural network, utilizing user comments and rankings as input. Initially, the system organizes users into clusters based on semantic similarity, followed by the utilization of their rating similarities as input for the convolutional neural network. This network then predicts ratings for unreviewed music by users. Additionally, the system analyses user music listening behaviour and music popularity. Music popularity can help to address cold start users as well. Finally, the proposed method recommends unreviewed music based on predicted high rankings and popularity, taking into account each user's music listening habits. The proposed method combines predicted high rankings and popularity by first selecting popular unreviewed music that the model predicts to have the highest ratings for each user. Among these, the most popular tracks are prioritized, defined by metrics such as frequency of listening across users. The number of recommended tracks is aligned with each user's typical listening rate. The experimental findings demonstrate that the new method outperformed other classification techniques and prior recommendation systems, yielding a mean absolute error (MAE) rate and root mean square error (RMSE) rate of approximately 0.0017, a hit rate of 82.45%, an average normalized discounted cumulative gain (nDCG) of 82.3%, and a prediction accuracy of new ratings at 99.388%.Article Citation - WoS: 11Citation - Scopus: 17Convolutional Neural Network-Based Deep Learning for Landslide Susceptibility Mapping in the Bakhtegan Watershed(Nature Portfolio, 2025) Feng, Li; Zhang, Maosheng; Mao, Yimin; Liu, Hao; Yang, Chuanbo; Dong, Ying; Nanehkaran, Yaser A.Landslides pose a significant threat to infrastructure, ecosystems, and human safety, necessitating accurate and efficient susceptibility assessment methods. Traditional models often struggle to capture the complex spatial dependencies and interactions between geological and environmental factors. To address this gap, this study employs a deep learning approach, utilizing a convolutional neural network (CNN) for high-precision landslide susceptibility mapping in the Bakhtegan watershed, southwestern Iran. A comprehensive landslide inventory was compiled using 235 documented landslide locations, validated through remote sensing and field surveys. An equal number of non-landslide locations were systematically selected to ensure balanced model training. Fifteen key conditioning factors-including topographical, geological, hydrological, and climatological variables-were incorporated into the model. While traditional statistical methods often fail to extract spatial hierarchies, the CNN model effectively processes multi-dimensional geospatial data, learning intricate patterns influencing slope instability. The CNN model outperformed other classification approaches, achieving an accuracy of 95.76% and a precision of 95.11%. Additionally, error metrics confirmed its reliability, with a mean absolute error (MAE) of 0.11864, mean squared error (MSE) of 0.18796, and root mean squared error (RMSE) of 0.18632. The results indicate that the northern and northeastern regions of the Bakhtegan watershed are highly susceptible to landslides, highlighting areas where proactive mitigation strategies are crucial. This study demonstrates that deep learning, particularly CNNs, offers a powerful and scalable solution for landslide susceptibility assessment. The findings provide valuable insights for urban planners, engineers, and policymakers to implement effective risk reduction strategies and enhance resilience in landslide-prone regions.Article Citation - WoS: 15Citation - Scopus: 15Deep Learning Method for Compressive Strength Prediction for Lightweight Concrete(Techno-press, 2023) Nanehkaran, Yaser A.; Azarafza, Mohammad; Pusatli, Tolga; Bonab, Masoud Hajialilue; Irani, Arash Esmatkhah; Kouhdarag, Mehdi; Derakhshani, RezaConcrete is the most widely used building material, with various types including high-and ultra-high-strength, reinforced, normal, and lightweight concretes. However, accurately predicting concrete properties is challenging due to the geotechnical design code's requirement for specific characteristics. To overcome this issue, researchers have turned to new technologies like machine learning to develop proper methodologies for concrete specification. In this study, we propose a highly accurate deep learning-based predictive model to investigate the compressive strength (UCS) of lightweight concrete with natural aggregates (pumice). Our model was implemented on a database containing 249 experimental records and revealed that water, cement, water-cement ratio, fine-coarse aggregate, aggregate substitution rate, fine aggregate replacement, and superplasticizer are the most influential covariates on UCS. To validate our model, we trained and tested it on random subsets of the database, and its performance was evaluated using a confusion matrix and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) overall accuracy. The proposed model was compared with widely known machine learning methods such as MLP, SVM, and DT classifiers to assess its capability. In addition, the model was tested on 25 laboratory UCS tests to evaluate its predictability. Our findings showed that the proposed model achieved the highest accuracy (accuracy=0.97, precision=0.97) and the lowest error rate with a high learning rate (R2=0.914), as confirmed by ROC (AUC=0.971), which is higher than other classifiers. Therefore, the proposed method demonstrates a high level of performance and capability for UCS predictions.
