WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / WoS Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7150

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 311
  • Article
    The Relation of Geogenic and Antrophogenic Factors with Blood and Hair Lead and Arsenic Levels in Women Living in Can and Bayramic Districts of Canakkale Province
    (Nobel Ilac, 2019) Baba, Alper; Gunduz, Orhan; Bakar, Coskun; Sulun, Serdar; Save, Dilsad
    Objective: Mining areas and associated industrial activities carry considerable risks for human health due to multi-pathway exposure of heavy metals such as arsenic and lead. The objective of this study was to compare arsenic and lead levels it human blood and hair samples in all industrial mining area in northwestern Turkey with that of non-exposed group demonstrating similar sociocultural characteristics. Material and Method: The population of the study consisted of 674 nonsmoker women over the age of 40 who were selected on random basis from mine region and control area. Venous blood samples were taken and analyzed fur blood lead and arsenic levels in all participants. Hair samples were later collected from 108 women with high levels in blood samples. Results: The results showed that the highest prevalence of occurrences was found in district centers whereas relatively lower values were observed in the villages. Hail arsenic and lead levels were comparably higher in the industrialized area (can Region) where low-quality coal combustion used in power generation and residential heating were dominant. Conclusion: Although high correlations were not found, blood and hair arsenic and lead levels in individuals living in industrial in agricultural areas were found to he high at levels influencing the human health On the other hand, these results should be further supported and verified with advanced and long duration monitoring activities.
  • Article
    The OpenAIRE Guide for Research Institutions
    (Turkish Librarians Assoc, 2012) Gurdal, Gultekin; Turkfidani, Ata; Kutluturk, Levent; Celik, Sonmez; Keten, Burcu
    This text is transcript of OpenAIRE Guide which is prepared in order to help research institutions was released on 13.04.2011and translated with the cooperation of ANKOS Open Access and Institutional Repositories Grup members and OpenAIREplus project team of Turkey which is coordinated from Izmir Institute of Technology Library. OpenAIRE Project aims to support researchers in complying with the European Commission Seventh Framework Programme Open Access Pilot through a European Helpdesk System; support researchers in depositing their research publications in an institutional or disciplinary repository; build up an OpenAIRE portal and e-infrastructure for repository networks. The project will work in tadem with OpeanAIREplus Project which has the principal goal of creating a robust, participatory service for the cross-linking of peer-reviewed scientific publications and associated datasets.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 1
    Modules Whose Maximal Submodules Have Τ-Supplements
    (Luhansk Taras Shevchenko Natl Univ, 2010) Buyukasik, Engin
    Let R be a ring and tau be a preradical for the category of left R-modules. In this paper, we study on modules whose maximal submodules have tau-supplements. We give some characterizations of these modules interms their certain submodules, so called tau-localsubmodules. For some certain preradicals tau, i.e. tau=delta and idempotent tau, we prove that every maximal submodule of M has a tau-supplement if and only if every cofinite submodule of M has a tau-supplement. For a radical tau onR-Mod, we prove that, forevery R-module every submodule is a tau-supplement if and only if R/tau(R) is semisimple and tau is hereditary
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 1
    The Final Declaration of 3rd National Open Access Workshop (21 October 2014)
    (Turkish Librarians Assoc, 2014) Tonta, Yasar; Gurdal, Gultekin
    The article shares with the public the recommendations of the Final Declaration prepared within the scope of the Third (Turkish) National Open Access Workshop organized by ANKOS (Anatolian University Libraries Consortium), AEKA (ANKOS Open Access and Consortial Archives), YOK (Higher Education Council), and HU BBY (Hacettepe University Department of Information Management). The article urges that as soon as possible the necessary arrangements be made for the acceptance of the free circulation of information-one of the priorities of the European Union's European Research Area. and for the transition to implementation of open access at the national level. important in order to integrate with the Horizon 2020 project.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 7
    Projektiranje Nasipa Zeljezničkih Pruga Primjenom Neuronskih Mreža
    (Croatian Soc Civil Engineers-hsgi, 2013) Tayfur, Gokmen; Egeli, Isfendiyar
    The main requirement in the design of high-speed railway embankments are low values of total differential settlements. The use of cement stabilized layers in embankments, as compared to non-stabilized layers that are now most often in use, is analysed in the paper. Different cement proportions and different water/cement ratios for stabilized layers are considered. It was established that the use of cement stabilized layers in embankments can greatly reduce thickness of individual layers, while also reducing settlement. The research was conducted using the feed forward neural network.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 1
    Preliminary Design of an Immersed Tunnel in Izmir
    (Croatian Soc Civil Engineers-hsgi, 2012) Egeli, Isfendiyar; Kartaltepe, Nisa
    Preliminary design of an immersed tunnel in Izmir Possibilities for building the Izmir Bay Immersed Tube Tunnel are analyzed in the paper. Study results show that the tunnel construction is feasible if a particular soil improvement is conducted properly. A minimum SPT-N value, compatible with concrete to be used in construction of the immersed tube, is defined so as to enable subsequent improvement of soil density. This procedure enables achievement of the minimum post-improvement soil-structure interaction stiffness level, as well as fulfilment of all other geotechnical criteria. This was demonstrated using the existing data about sub-sea soil in which the tunnel construction is planned.
  • Article
    Proposal of Conservation-Based Planning Approach for Agricultural Areas Designated as Special Project Area (OPA) in Turkey; Example of Mugla Plain
    (Kare Publ, 2018) Yorur, Neriman; İnceköse, Ülkü; Cirak, Aysegul Altinors; Aydin, Burcu Silaydin; Incekose, Ulku; Nemutlu, Fusun Erduran; Aydin, Gonul; Yorulmaz, Alper
    Agricultural areas are natural areas that must be protected and maintained in order to provide food, which is the most basic necessity of man. It is observed that agricultural areas are being removed from the industrialization and urbanization processes that are developed within the framework of industrial development oriented economic development policies that started with the Industrial Revolution and then spread to global scale. Especially agricultural areas in the urban fringes are threatened to be used for non-agricultural purposes due to the demand for spatial growth and are opposed to the pressure of settlement. One of the agricultural areas under threat is the Mugla Plain. It is important to protect the Mugla Plain, which is an absolute agricultural land and at the same time constitute part of the natural and cultural landscape of the city, and to sustain the agricultural activities. Mugla Plain is designated as Special Project and Planning Area (OPA) in 1/25.000 Scale Master Plan; it was aimed to develop a project to preserve the original quality of the agricultural character of Plain in this frame. In this article, analyzes and proposals made within the scope of the idea project prepared for the section of Mugla Plain defined as "Special Project and Planning Area" are presented. In the proposals, it was aimed to protect the agricultural quality of the plains and to prevent the spread of the settlement by integrating the plain with the urban residents. Towards achieving this goal, it has been adopted to develop approaches dealt with under the heading of "urban agriculture". Strategies developed in this context include recommendations on the protection and use of agricultural land; Establishment of agricultural development cooperative of Mugla Plain agricultural operators association; reduction of urbanization impact, and integrating the city with the natural landscape of the area.
  • Conference Object
    Citation - WoS: 5
    Citation - Scopus: 7
    Modeling Leakage of Ephemeral Secrets in Tripartite/Group Key Exchange
    (Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication, Engineers, IEICE, 2013) Manulis, Mark; Suzuki, Koutarou; Ustaoglu, Berkant
    We propose a security model, referred as g-eCK model, for group key exchange that captures essentially all non-trivial leakage of static and ephemeral secret keys of participants, i.e., group key exchange version of extended Canetti-Krawczyk (eCK) model. Moreover, we propose the first one-round tripartite key exchange (3KE) protocol secure in the g-eCK model under the gap Bilinear Diffie-Hellman (gap BDH) assumption and in the random oracle model.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 5
    Stormwater Management and Green Infrastructure Techniques for Sustainable Campus Design
    (Gazi Üniversitesi, 2011) Saygın, Nicel; Ulusoy, Pelin
    This study focuses on sustainable water resources management among extensive sustainable campus design principles. Water is a non-renewable asset for our increasingly arid geography due to reasons such as global warming. The sustainable approach to water resources consists of reclamation and capture of rainwater/stormwater, treatment and reuse of wastewater, protection and enhancement of groundwater quality and natural water bodies (creeks, streams, rivers, lakes and others) and creating water-efficient landscapes. Green infrastructure systems provide natural drainage and infiltration, prevent floods, improve water quality, and enhance ground water. In this study rainwater/stormwater is treated as a non-renewable resource instead of wastewater. This water resource can be captured and reused for different purposes such as irrigation, groundwater recharge, green corridors and landscape amenity by integration of rainwater/stormwater features into the site design. This study develops strategies for use of green infrastructure systems and recommendations to guide the implementation of these strategies. As a case study, first the current state of stormwater sustainability at Izmir Institute of Technology (IYTE) Campus, located in Gulbahce-Urla (Izmir), is discussed. Then, to improve and sustain the hydrologic balance, green infrastructure best management practices (BMPs) for IYTE School of Architecture grounds are developed as a pilot study of an ongoing masters thesis.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 2
    Evaluation of Malassezia Species by Fourier Transform Infrared (ft-Ir) Spectroscopy
    (Ankara Microbiology Society, 2011) Ergin, Çağrı; Vuran, M. Emre; Gök, Yaşar; Özdemir, Durmuş; Karaarslan, Aydın; Kaleli, İlnur; Çon, Ahmet Hilmi
    Malassezia species which are lipophilic exobasidiomycetes fungi, have been accepted as members of normal cutaneous flora as well as causative agent of certain skin diseases. In routine microbiology laboratory, species identification based on phenotypic characters may not yield identical results with taxonomic studies. Lipophilic and lipid-dependent Malassezia yeasts require lipid-enriched complex media. For this reason, Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy analysis focused on lipid window may be useful for identification of Malassezia species. In this study, 10 different standard Malassezia species (M.dermatis CBS 9145, M.furfur CBS 7019, M.japonica CBS 9432, M.globosa CBS 7966, M.nana CBS 9561, M.obtusa CBS 7876, M.pachydermatis CBS 1879, M.slooffiae CBS 7956, M.sympodialis CBS 7222 and M.yamatoensis CBS 9725) which are human pathogens, have been analyzed by FT-IR spectroscopy following standard cultivation onto modified Dixon agar medium. Results showed that two main groups (M1; M.globosa, Robtusa, M.sympodialis, M.dermatis, M.pachydermatis vs, M2; M.furfur, M.japonica, M.nana, M.slooffiae, M.yamatoensis) were discriminated by whole spectra analysis. M.obtusa in M1 by 1686-1606 cm(-1) wavenumber ranges and M.japonicum in M2 by 2993-2812 cm(-1) wavenumber ranges were identified with low level discrimination power. Discriminatory areas for species differentiation of M1 members as M.sympodialis, M.globosa and M.pachydermatis and M2 members as M.furfur and M.yamatoensis could not be identified. Several spectral windows analysis results revealed that FT-IR spectroscopy was not sufficient for species identification of culture grown Malassezia species.