Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12416/8651

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  • Conference Object
    Sentiment Analysis for Arabic Using Deep Learning
    (Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH, 2026) al-Hamadani, S.A.S.; Sever, H.
    With the explosive growth of digital communication, understanding sentiment in online content has become increasingly critical for a wide range of applications, from customer feedback analysis to social media monitoring. However, sentiment analysis for Arabic presents unique challenges due to the language's rich morphology, diverse dialects, and complex syntactic structures. These challenges are further amplified in multimodal settings, where the fusion of textual, visual, and auditory cues is required to capture the full spectrum of human emotion. To address these issues, this paper introduces a new framework for Arabic Multimodal Sentiment Analysis (AMSA), combining multi-level deep learning approaches across text, audio, and visual modalities. Our approach utilizes state-of-the-art transformer-based architecturees, including Multimodal Transformer (MulT) and Early Fusion models, to tackle both linguistic complexity and multimodal alignment. Specifically, we leverage DeBERTa for extracting rich textual features, ViT (Vision Transformer) for visual cues, and Whisper for capturing nuanced audio signals, creating robust and contextualized representations. Experimental results on a curated Arabic multimodal dataset demonstrate the effectiveness of this approach, with our proposed MulT model achieving an F1 score of 72.73%, reflecting a substantial improvement of 13.98% in F1 score and 14.6% in accuracy over existing baselines. These findings highlight the power of cross-modal attention mechanisms and early fusion strategies in accurately capturing subtle sentiments across multiple modalities. © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2026.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 2
    Citation - Scopus: 4
    An Intelligent System for Detecting Mediterranean Fruit Fly [Medfly; Ceratitis Capitata (Wiedemann)]
    (Pagepress Publ, 2022) Eyyuboglu, Halil Tanyer; Sari, Filiz; Uzun, Yusuf; Tolun, Mehmet Resit
    Nowadays, the most critical agriculture-related problem is the harm caused to fruit, vegetable, nut, and flower crops by harmful pests, particularly the Mediterranean fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata, named Medfly. Medfly's existence in agricultural fields must be monitored systematically for effective combat against it. Special traps are utilised in the field to catch Medflies which will reveal their presence and applying pesticides at the right time will help reduce their population. A technologically supported automated remote monitoring system should eliminate frequent site visits as a more economical solution. This paper develops a deep learning system that can detect Medfly images on a picture and count their numbers. A particular trap equipped with an integrated camera that can take photos of the sticky band where Medflies are caught daily is utilised. Obtained pictures are then transmitted by an electronic circuit containing a SIM card to the central server where the object detection algorithm runs. This study employs a faster region-based convolutional neural network (Faster R-CNN) model in identifying trapped Medflies. When Medflies or other insects stick on the trap's sticky band, they spend extraordinary effort trying to release themselves in a panic until they die. Therefore, their shape is badly distorted as their bodies, wings, and legs are buckled. The challenge is that the deep learning system should detect these Medflies of distorted shape with high accuracy. Therefore, it is crucial to utilise pictures containing trapped Medfly images with distorted shapes for training and validation. In this paper, the success rate in identifying Medflies when other insects are also present is approximately 94%, achieved by the deep learning system training process, owing to the considerable amount of purpose-specific photographic data. This rate may be seen as quite favourable when compared to the success rates provided in the literature.