Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Conference Object Microarc: Event Driven Analysis and Design Method for Microservices(Elsevier B.V., 2025) Yıldız, Ali; Demirors, OnurThe rapid development of the Internet infrastructure has enabled software applications to leverage almost unlimited and scalable resources. Microservice-based architecture has emerged as a solution to harness the benefits of a distributed cloud-based infrastructure. Event-driven architecture is a powerful approach for addressing challenges in distributed systems, such as scalability, distributed data, and sharing of data at scale. In an event-driven microservice architecture, decoupled services interact by responding to events and event streams facilitate data sharing between them. Despite these advantages, there is no de facto method for the analysis and design of systems within microservice architecture. Organizations often face difficulties in developing microservice-based systems, owing to the lack of well-defined methodologies for analysis and design. In this study, we present an analysis and design method for microservice-based systems. MicroArc is a method for analyzing and designing microservice-based systems, and comprises modeling notations, guiding processes to articulate how the method is applied, and a supporting tool for modelling. The MicroArc approach enables the identification of events and microservice candidates by modeling the flow of processes in the early phase of development. © 2025 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.Book Part Citation - Scopus: 1Çatalhöyük as an Open Site? On the Openness of Virtual Reconstructions of Archaeological Sites to a Multiplicity of Interpretations(Oxford University Press, 2020) Aktüre, ZeynepIn this chapter, a framework for assessing the openness of virtual archaeological reconstructions to a multiplicity of readings is presented by focusing on the case of Çatalhöyük, in Turkey. Since its discovery in the 1950s, there has been a diversity of opinion on Çatalhöyük’s settlement rank along the path from settled village to urban agglomeration. This diversity of opinion has been expressed both verbally and visually, the latter including numerous computer-based visualizations for a variety of purposes and target audiences. Among the internationally approved principles for computer-based visualizations of cultural heritage is the need for intellectual and scientific transparency. Umberto Eco’s theory of the “open work,” as applied in literary and visual works including motion pictures, offers a theoretical framework for discussing the transparency of Çatalhöyük visualizations, as does Siegfried Kracauer’s idea of “cinematic materiality.” Three of the virtual works on Çatalhöyük are briefly presented in this chapter, as a basis for discussing the applicability of Eco’s and Kracauer’s ideas in this type of production as a measure for “open multivocality,” leading to an assessment of whether visualizations reveal any or all alternative interpretations of the site. © 2025 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.Book Part Citation - Scopus: 5Potential of Bacterial Cellulose for Sustainable Cities: a Review and Bibliometric Analysis on Bacterial Cellulose(Springer International Publishing, 2023) Kale, İ.; K, I, Rdök, O.; Bilgi, E.; Akyol-Altun, T.D.; Tokuç, A.; Köktürk, G.; Özkaban, F.This book chapter focuses on bacterial cellulose (BC), with many recent contemporary studies, an explanation of BC producers and synthesis mechanisms, and a summary of their production methods. Few studies are directly related to sustainability with BC, a promising biomaterial for different solutions due to its properties. Thus, a comprehensive review of BC and research trends in this area are evaluated by bibliometric analysis. The distribution of publications by years, influential countries, organizations, journals, authors, citation analysis, distribution of publications by scientific disciplines, keyword analysis, and research focuses are emphasized. Scientific publications were taken from the WoS database, and graphics were created with the “VOSviewer” and “Carrot2” programs. According to the analysis, studies on BC started in 1980, but studies on sustainability were found in 2005 and later. It has also been observed that studies on BC in materials science have increased significantly in 2016 and beyond. Finally, bacterial cellulose has been discussed in line with the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. Therefore it can be said that there is a potential for use in the textile, architecture, and food packaging sectors, and more detailed research is still needed. As a result, the dissemination of BC-related studies in these areas has great potential for a completely sustainable production method. © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023.
