Canakkale Province
The land use-climate change-biodiversity nexus in European islands stakeholders
Moustakas, Aristides, Christoforidi, Irene, Zittis, George, Demirel, Nazli, Fois, Mauro, Zotos, Savvas, Gallou, Eirini, Stamatiadou, Valentini, Tzirkalli, Elli, Zoumides, Christos, Košić, Kristina, Christopoulou, Aikaterini, Dragin, Aleksandra, Łowicki, Damian, Gil, Artur, Almeida, Bruna, Chrysos, Panos, Balzan, Mario V., Mansoldo, Mark D. C., Ólafsdóttir, Rannveig, Ayhan, Cigdem Kaptan, Atay, Lutfi, Tase, Mirela, Stojanović, Vladimir, Ladičorbić, Maja Mijatov, Díaz, Juan Pedro, Expósito, Francisco Javier, Quiroga, Sonia, Cano, Miguel Ángel Casquet, Wang, Haoran, Suárez, Cristina, Manolaki, Paraskevi, Vogiatzakis, Ioannis N.
To promote climate adaptation and mitigation, it is crucial to understand stakeholder perspectives and knowledge gaps on land use and climate changes. Stakeholders across 21 European islands were consulted on climate and land use change issues affecting ecosystem services. Climate change perceptions included temperature, precipitation, humidity, extremes, and wind. Land use change perceptions included deforestation, coastal degradation, habitat protection, renewable energy facilities, wetlands, and others. Additional concerns such as invasive species, water or energy scarcity, infrastructure problems, and austerity were also considered. Climate and land use change impact perceptions were analysed with machine learning to quantify their influence. The predominant climatic characteristic is temperature, and the predominant land use characteristic is deforestation. Water-related problems are top priorities for stakeholders. Energy-related problems, including energy deficiency and issues with wind and solar facilities, rank high as combined climate and land use risks. Stakeholders generally perceive climate change impacts on ecosystem services as negative, with natural habitat destruction and biodiversity loss identified as top issues. Land use change impacts are also negative but more complex, with more explanatory variables. Stakeholders share common perceptions on biodiversity impacts despite geographic disparity, but they differentiate between climate and land use impacts. Water, energy, and renewable energy issues pose serious concerns, requiring management measures.
- North America > The Bahamas (0.14)
- Europe > Portugal > Lisbon > Lisbon (0.14)
- Europe > Portugal > Azores (0.04)
- (32 more...)
Rethinking Suicidal Ideation Detection: A Trustworthy Annotation Framework and Cross-Lingual Model Evaluation
Dzafic, Amina, Kavut, Merve, Bayram, Ulya
Suicidal ideation detection is critical for real-time suicide prevention, yet its progress faces two under-explored challenges: limited language coverage and unreliable annotation practices. Most available datasets are in English, but even among these, high-quality, human-annotated data remains scarce. As a result, many studies rely on available pre-labeled datasets without examining their annotation process or label reliability. The lack of datasets in other languages further limits the global realization of suicide prevention via artificial intelligence (AI). In this study, we address one of these gaps by constructing a novel Turkish suicidal ideation corpus derived from social media posts and introducing a resource-efficient annotation framework involving three human annotators and two large language models (LLMs). We then address the remaining gaps by performing a bidirectional evaluation of label reliability and model consistency across this dataset and three popular English suicidal ideation detection datasets, using transfer learning through eight pre-trained sentiment and emotion classifiers. These transformers help assess annotation consistency and benchmark model performance against manually labeled data. Our findings underscore the need for more rigorous, language-inclusive approaches to annotation and evaluation in mental health natural language processing (NLP) while demonstrating the questionable performance of popular models with zero-shot transfer learning. We advocate for transparency in model training and dataset construction in mental health NLP, prioritizing data and model reliability.
An Interpretable Machine Learning Approach to Understanding the Relationships between Solar Flares and Source Active Regions
Cavus, Huseyin, Wang, Jason T. L., Singampalli, Teja P. S., Coban, Gani Caglar, Zhang, Hongyang, Raheem, Abd-ur, Wang, Haimin
Solar flares are defined as outbursts on the surface of the Sun. They occur when energy accumulated in magnetic fields enclosing solar active regions (ARs) is abruptly expelled. Solar flares and associated coronal mass ejections are sources of space weather that adversely impact devices at or near Earth, including the obstruction of high-frequency radio waves utilized for communication and the deterioration of power grid operations. Tracking and delivering early and precise predictions of solar flares is essential for readiness and catastrophe risk mitigation. This paper employs the random forest (RF) model to address the binary classification task, analyzing the links between solar flares and their originating ARs with observational data gathered from 2011 to 2021 by SolarMonitor.org and the XRT flare database. We seek to identify the physical features of a source AR that significantly influence its potential to trigger >=C-class flares. We found that the features of AR_Type_Today, Hale_Class_Yesterday are the most and the least prepotent features, respectively. NoS_Difference has a remarkable effect in decision-making in both global and local interpretations.
- North America > United States > New Jersey > Essex County > Newark (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye > Canakkale Province > Canakkale (0.04)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.04)
Prediction of Geoeffective CMEs Using SOHO Images and Deep Learning
Alobaid, Khalid A., Wang, Jason T. L., Wang, Haimin, Jing, Ju, Abduallah, Yasser, Wang, Zhenduo, Farooki, Hameedullah, Cavus, Huseyin, Yurchyshyn, Vasyl
The application of machine learning to the study of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and their impacts on Earth has seen significant growth recently. Understanding and forecasting CME geoeffectiveness is crucial for protecting infrastructure in space and ensuring the resilience of technological systems on Earth. Here we present GeoCME, a deep-learning framework designed to predict, deterministically or probabilistically, whether a CME event that arrives at Earth will cause a geomagnetic storm. A geomagnetic storm is defined as a disturbance of the Earth's magnetosphere during which the minimum Dst index value is less than -50 nT. GeoCME is trained on observations from the instruments including LASCO C2, EIT and MDI on board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), focusing on a dataset that includes 136 halo/partial halo CMEs in Solar Cycle 23. Using ensemble and transfer learning techniques, GeoCME is capable of extracting features hidden in the SOHO observations and making predictions based on the learned features. Our experimental results demonstrate the good performance of GeoCME, achieving a Matthew's correlation coefficient of 0.807 and a true skill statistics score of 0.714 when the tool is used as a deterministic prediction model. When the tool is used as a probabilistic forecasting model, it achieves a Brier score of 0.094 and a Brier skill score of 0.493. These results are promising, showing that the proposed GeoCME can help enhance our understanding of CME-triggered solar-terrestrial interactions.
- North America > United States > New Jersey > Essex County > Newark (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye > Canakkale Province > Canakkale (0.04)
- North America > United States > Texas > Kleberg County (0.04)
- (3 more...)
Bridging the Bosphorus: Advancing Turkish Large Language Models through Strategies for Low-Resource Language Adaptation and Benchmarking
Acikgoz, Emre Can, Erdogan, Mete, Yuret, Deniz
Large Language Models (LLMs) are becoming crucial across various fields, emphasizing the urgency for high-quality models in underrepresented languages. This study explores the unique challenges faced by low-resource languages, such as data scarcity, model selection, evaluation, and computational limitations, with a special focus on Turkish. We conduct an in-depth analysis to evaluate the impact of training strategies, model choices, and data availability on the performance of LLMs designed for underrepresented languages. Our approach includes two methodologies: (i) adapting existing LLMs originally pretrained in English to understand Turkish, and (ii) developing a model from the ground up using Turkish pretraining data, both supplemented with supervised fine-tuning on a novel Turkish instruction-tuning dataset aimed at enhancing reasoning capabilities. The relative performance of these methods is evaluated through the creation of a new leaderboard for Turkish LLMs, featuring benchmarks that assess different reasoning and knowledge skills. Furthermore, we conducted experiments on data and model scaling, both during pretraining and fine-tuning, simultaneously emphasizing the capacity for knowledge transfer across languages and addressing the challenges of catastrophic forgetting encountered during fine-tuning on a different language. Our goal is to offer a detailed guide for advancing the LLM framework in low-resource linguistic contexts, thereby making natural language processing (NLP) benefits more globally accessible.
- North America > United States (0.14)
- Europe > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye > Istanbul Province > Istanbul (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye > Istanbul Province > Istanbul (0.04)
- (13 more...)
- Education (1.00)
- Leisure & Entertainment (0.67)
Prediction of the SYM-H Index Using a Bayesian Deep Learning Method with Uncertainty Quantification
Abduallah, Yasser, Alobaid, Khalid A., Wang, Jason T. L., Wang, Haimin, Jordanova, Vania K., Yurchyshyn, Vasyl, Cavus, Huseyin, Jing, Ju
We propose a novel deep learning framework, named SYMHnet, which employs a graph neural network and a bidirectional long short-term memory network to cooperatively learn patterns from solar wind and interplanetary magnetic field parameters for short-term forecasts of the SYM-H index based on 1-minute and 5-minute resolution data. SYMHnet takes, as input, the time series of the parameters' values provided by NASA's Space Science Data Coordinated Archive and predicts, as output, the SYM-H index value at time point t + w hours for a given time point t where w is 1 or 2. By incorporating Bayesian inference into the learning framework, SYMHnet can quantify both aleatoric (data) uncertainty and epistemic (model) uncertainty when predicting future SYM-H indices. Experimental results show that SYMHnet works well at quiet time and storm time, for both 1-minute and 5-minute resolution data. The results also show that SYMHnet generally performs better than related machine learning methods. For example, SYMHnet achieves a forecast skill score (FSS) of 0.343 compared to the FSS of 0.074 of a recent gradient boosting machine (GBM) method when predicting SYM-H indices (1 hour in advance) in a large storm (SYM-H = -393 nT) using 5-minute resolution data. When predicting the SYM-H indices (2 hours in advance) in the large storm, SYMHnet achieves an FSS of 0.553 compared to the FSS of 0.087 of the GBM method. In addition, SYMHnet can provide results for both data and model uncertainty quantification, whereas the related methods cannot.
- North America > United States > New Jersey > Essex County > Newark (0.04)
- North America > United States > New Mexico > Los Alamos County > Los Alamos (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye > Canakkale Province > Canakkale (0.04)
- (4 more...)
- Energy (0.67)
- Government > Space Agency (0.34)
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (0.34)
Estimating Coronal Mass Ejection Mass and Kinetic Energy by Fusion of Multiple Deep-learning Models
Alobaid, Khalid A., Abduallah, Yasser, Wang, Jason T. L., Wang, Haimin, Fan, Shen, Li, Jialiang, Cavus, Huseyin, Yurchyshyn, Vasyl
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are massive solar eruptions, which have a significant impact on Earth. In this paper, we propose a new method, called DeepCME, to estimate two properties of CMEs, namely, CME mass and kinetic energy. Being able to estimate these properties helps better understand CME dynamics. Our study is based on the CME catalog maintained at the Coordinated Data Analysis Workshops (CDAW) Data Center, which contains all CMEs manually identified since 1996 using the Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO) on board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). We use LASCO C2 data in the period between January 1996 and December 2020 to train, validate and test DeepCME through 10-fold cross validation. The DeepCME method is a fusion of three deep learning models, including ResNet, InceptionNet, and InceptionResNet. Our fusion model extracts features from LASCO C2 images, effectively combining the learning capabilities of the three component models to jointly estimate the mass and kinetic energy of CMEs. Experimental results show that the fusion model yields a mean relative error (MRE) of 0.013 (0.009, respectively) compared to the MRE of 0.019 (0.017, respectively) of the best component model InceptionResNet (InceptionNet, respectively) in estimating the CME mass (kinetic energy, respectively). To our knowledge, this is the first time that deep learning has been used for CME mass and kinetic energy estimations.
- North America > United States > New Jersey > Essex County > Newark (0.05)
- Europe > Poland (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye > Canakkale Province > Canakkale (0.04)
- (2 more...)
Auto.gov: Learning-based On-chain Governance for Decentralized Finance (DeFi)
Xu, Jiahua, Perez, Daniel, Feng, Yebo, Livshits, Benjamin
In recent years, decentralized finance (DeFi) has experienced remarkable growth, with various protocols such as lending protocols and automated market makers (AMMs) emerging. Traditionally, these protocols employ off-chain governance, where token holders vote to modify parameters. However, manual parameter adjustment, often conducted by the protocol's core team, is vulnerable to collusion, compromising the integrity and security of the system. Furthermore, purely deterministic, algorithm-based approaches may expose the protocol to novel exploits and attacks. In this paper, we present "Auto.gov", a learning-based on-chain governance framework for DeFi that enhances security and reduces susceptibility to attacks. Our model leverages a deep Q- network (DQN) reinforcement learning approach to propose semi-automated, intuitive governance proposals with quantitative justifications. This methodology enables the system to efficiently adapt to and mitigate the negative impact of malicious behaviors, such as price oracle attacks, more effectively than benchmark models. Our evaluation demonstrates that Auto.gov offers a more reactive, objective, efficient, and resilient solution compared to existing manual processes, thereby significantly bolstering the security and, ultimately, enhancing the profitability of DeFi protocols.
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Greater London > London (0.04)
- North America > United States > Oregon (0.04)
- North America > United States > Michigan (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye > Canakkale Province > Canakkale (0.04)
Top Gear or Black Mirror: Inferring Political Leaning From Non-Political Content
Polarization and echo chambers are often studied in the context of explicitly political events such as elections, and little scholarship has examined the mixing of political groups in non-political contexts. A major obstacle to studying political polarization in non-political contexts is that political leaning (i.e., left vs right orientation) is often unknown. Nonetheless, political leaning is known to correlate (sometimes quite strongly) with many lifestyle choices leading to stereotypes such as the "latte-drinking liberal." We develop a machine learning classifier to infer political leaning from non-political text and, optionally, the accounts a user follows on social media. We use Voter Advice Application results shared on Twitter as our groundtruth and train and test our classifier on a Twitter dataset comprising the 3,200 most recent tweets of each user after removing any tweets with political text. We correctly classify the political leaning of most users (F1 scores range from 0.70 to 0.85 depending on coverage). We find no relationship between the level of political activity and our classification results. We apply our classifier to a case study of news sharing in the UK and discover that, in general, the sharing of political news exhibits a distinctive left-right divide while sports news does not.
- Asia > Russia (0.14)
- Europe > Ireland (0.14)
- North America > United States > California > San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.14)
- (36 more...)
- Media > News (1.00)
- Information Technology > Services (1.00)
- Government > Voting & Elections (1.00)
- (4 more...)
- Information Technology > Communications > Social Media (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Natural Language (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Statistical Learning (0.67)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Performance Analysis (0.46)
#iot OR "internet of things"_2020-08-26_22-57-12.xlsx
The graph represents a network of 4,227 Twitter users whose tweets in the requested range contained "#iot OR "internet of things"", or who were replied to or mentioned in those tweets. The network was obtained from the NodeXL Graph Server on Thursday, 27 August 2020 at 06:10 UTC. The requested start date was Thursday, 27 August 2020 at 00:01 UTC and the maximum number of days (going backward) was 14. The maximum number of tweets collected was 7,500. The tweets in the network were tweeted over the 2-day, 1-hour, 47-minute period from Wednesday, 19 August 2020 at 15:44 UTC to Friday, 21 August 2020 at 17:31 UTC.
- Asia > Middle East > Saudi Arabia (0.14)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England (0.05)
- Asia > India (0.05)
- (3 more...)