WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14627/6

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Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
  • Article
    The Futures of New Diplomatic History in a Shifting International Order
    (Brill, 2025) Papuccular, Hazal
    This essay reflects on the agenda of globalizing diplomatic history as put forward in the manifesto "Provincializing `New' Diplomatic History." It first emphasizes that the Manifesto overlooks key structural dynamics, such as the transformation of the global order. These structural shifts have the potential to significantly influence the trajectories of global diplomatic history. This signifies that the suggestion for global diplomatic history is not merely an epistemic endeavor, but one that must also grapple with the politics of writing global - diplomatic - history in an age of rising disconnections and in an increasingly post-Western world order. Second, the essay points out that New Diplomatic History remains useful in many contexts, even if in a somewhat parochial form, because in many non-Western settings, it still represents a nascent approach to study diplomatic history. Thus, it still holds the potential to generate novel contributions to the historiography of diplomacy.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 1
    Citation - Scopus: 2
    Cochleogram-Based Speech Emotion Recognition With the Cascade of Asymmetric Resonators With Fast-Acting Compression Using Time-Distributed Convolutional Long Short-Term Memory and Support Vector Machines
    (Mdpi, 2025) Parlak, Cevahir
    Feature extraction is a crucial stage in speech emotion recognition applications, and filter banks with their related statistical functions are widely used for this purpose. Although Mel filters and MFCCs achieve outstanding results, they do not perfectly model the structure of the human ear, as they use a simplified mechanism to simulate the functioning of human cochlear structures. The Mel filters system is not a perfect representation of human hearing, but merely an engineering shortcut to suppress the pitch and low-frequency components, which have little use in traditional speech recognition applications. However, speech emotion recognition classification is heavily related to pitch and low-frequency component features. The newly tailored CARFAC 24 model is a sophisticated system for analyzing human speech and is designed to best simulate the functionalities of the human cochlea. In this study, we use the CARFAC 24 system for speech emotion recognition and compare it with state-of-the-art systems using speaker-independent studies conducted with Time-Distributed Convolutional LSTM networks and Support Vector Machines, with the use of the ASED and the NEMO emotional speech dataset. The results demonstrate that CARFAC 24 is a valuable alternative to Mel and MFCC features in speech emotion recognition applications.
  • Review
    Turkey: the Pendulum Between Military Rule and Civilian Authoritarianism
    (Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2021) Sarigol, Pinar
    [No Abstract Available]
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 6
    Citation - Scopus: 9
    The Evolution of Unprocessed Food Inflation in Turkey: an Exploratory Study on Select Products
    (Cambridge Univ Press, 2022) Demirkilic, Serkan; Ozertan, Gokhan; Tekguc, Hasan
    Food price increases stem from economic, agricultural, and political factors. Understanding the dynamics behind the food price formation process and assessing how potential factors contribute to food price changes will significantly affect policies formulated to manage food price increases. High food inflation rates have been a chronic problem in Turkey over the last decade, with unprocessed food prices rising faster than general price levels. In this article, we use exploratory analyses based on economic principles rather than econometric analyses. First, our results indicate that exchange rates are strongly associated with domestic food prices due to dependence on imported inputs. Second, deep-dive analyses on select products show that global price movements and pass-through prices from producer to consumer are not solely responsible for price increases.