Dalveren, Gonca Gökçe Menekşe
Loading...

Profile URL
Name Variants
Gonca Gökçe Menekşe, Dalveren
Dalveren, Gonca Gokce Menekse
G., Dalveren
G.,Dalveren
D.,Gonca Gökçe Menekşe
Gonca Gokce Menekse, Dalveren
Dalveren, Gonca Gökçe Menekşe
G.G.M.Dalveren
D.,Gonca Gokce Menekse
D., Gonca Gokce Menekse
Dalveren,G.G.M.
Dalveren, Gonca Gokce Menekse
G., Dalveren
G.,Dalveren
D.,Gonca Gökçe Menekşe
Gonca Gokce Menekse, Dalveren
Dalveren, Gonca Gökçe Menekşe
G.G.M.Dalveren
D.,Gonca Gokce Menekse
D., Gonca Gokce Menekse
Dalveren,G.G.M.
Job Title
Doktor Öğretim Üyesi
Email Address
gonca.menekse@atilim.edu.tr
Main Affiliation
Information Systems Engineering
Status
Former Staff
Website
ORCID ID
Scopus Author ID
Turkish CoHE Profile ID
Google Scholar ID
WoS Researcher ID
Sustainable Development Goals
1NO POVERTY
0
Research Products
2ZERO HUNGER
0
Research Products
3GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
0
Research Products
4QUALITY EDUCATION
5
Research Products
5GENDER EQUALITY
0
Research Products
6CLEAN WATER AND SANITATION
0
Research Products
7AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
1
Research Products
8DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
0
Research Products
9INDUSTRY, INNOVATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE
1
Research Products
10REDUCED INEQUALITIES
0
Research Products
11SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
0
Research Products
12RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
1
Research Products
13CLIMATE ACTION
0
Research Products
14LIFE BELOW WATER
0
Research Products
15LIFE ON LAND
0
Research Products
16PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
3
Research Products
17PARTNERSHIPS FOR THE GOALS
0
Research Products

This researcher does not have a Scopus ID.

This researcher does not have a WoS ID.

Scholarly Output
29
Articles
19
Views / Downloads
133/992
Supervised MSc Theses
3
Supervised PhD Theses
1
WoS Citation Count
217
Scopus Citation Count
303
Patents
0
Projects
0
WoS Citations per Publication
7.48
Scopus Citations per Publication
10.45
Open Access Source
15
Supervised Theses
4
| Journal | Count |
|---|---|
| IEEE Access | 5 |
| Sustainability | 2 |
| 2018 International Symposium on Networks, Computers and Communications, ISNCC 2018 -- 2018 International Symposium on Networks, Computers and Communications, ISNCC 2018 -- 19 June 2018 through 21 June 2018 -- Rome -- 142427 | 2 |
| Journal of Eye Movement Research | 2 |
| Avrupa Bilim ve Teknoloji Dergisi | 1 |
Current Page: 1 / 4
Scopus Quartile Distribution
Competency Cloud

6 results
Scholarly Output Search Results
Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
Conference Object Citation - Scopus: 2Insights From Eye-Movement Events in an Educational Computer-Based Environment (ece) for Endo-Neurosurgery Training Considering Gender, Hand Condition and Scenario Effects(Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2018) Dalveren,G.G.M.; Cagiltay,N.E.Surgical residents of endo-neurosurgery are required to develop several surgical skills such as eye-hand coordination, ability to use both hand coordination, and depth perception. During the process of gaining these skills, there are several effective factors on the individual performance such as gender, nature of the scenarios and hand condition that can be important to better organize appropriate training programs. Earlier studies show that, surgeons' mental workload show differences according to the difficulty levels of the tasks and hand conditions during the operations. Also there are some evidences showing that male surgeons performing the surgical tasks with a better performance compared to the females. However, in the literature there are not many studies conducted to better understand these effects by analyzing the eye-movements on simulation-based surgical training environments. This study aims to understand the mental workload and gender differences from fixation number and fixation duration eye-movement events. In this study four different computer-based-simulation scenarios which are developed for an Educational Computer-based-simulation Environment (ECE) for endo-neurosurgery training have been performed by 23 (3 female) surgical residents. Participants have performed each scenario in different hand conditions (dominant, non-dominant and both hand). While surgical residents were performing the scenarios their eye-movements were recorded by an eye-tracker. The Binocular Individual Threshold (BIT) classification algorithm was used for eye-movement event classification. According to the results of fixation number and fixation duration events in these four scenarios, hand conditions, scenario fidelity levels and gender are found to be important factors that make changes on mental workload of surgical residents. It can be concluded that, in non-dominant and both hand conditions mental workload increases according to the dominant hand condition. Additionally results show that scenario fidelity levels and gender have an effect on the eye-movements of surgical residents. © 2018 IEEE.Conference Object Insights From Eye-Movement Events in an Educational Computer-Based Environment (ece) for Endo-Neurosurgery Training Considering Gender, Hand Condition and Scenario Effects(Ieee, 2018) Dalveren, Gonca Gokce Menekse; Cagiltay, Nergiz ErcilSurgical residents of endo-neurosurgery are required to develop several surgical skills such as eye-hand coordination, ability to use both hand coordination, and depth perception. During the process of gaining these skills, there are several effective factors on the individual performance such as gender, nature of the scenarios and hand condition that can be important to better organize appropriate training programs. Earlier studies show that, surgeons' mental workload show differences according to the difficulty levels of the tasks and hand conditions during the operations. Also there are some evidences showing that male surgeons performing the surgical tasks with a better performance compared to the females. However, in the literature there are not many studies conducted to better understand these effects by analyzing the eye-movements on simulation-based surgical training environments. This study aims to understand the mental workload and gender differences from fixation number and fixation duration eye-movement events. In this study four different computer-based-simulation scenarios which are developed for an Educational Computer-based-simulation Environment (ECE) for endo-neurosurgery training have been performed by 23 (3 female) surgical residents. Participants have performed each scenario in different hand conditions (dominant, non-dominant and both hand). While surgical residents were performing the scenarios their eye-movements were recorded by an eye-tracker. The Binocular Individual Threshold (BIT) classification algorithm was used for eye-movement event classification. According to the results of fixation number and fixation duration events in these four scenarios, hand conditions, scenario fidelity levels and gender are found to be important factors that make changes on mental workload of surgical residents. It can be concluded that, in non-dominant and both hand conditions mental workload increases according to the dominant hand condition. Additionally results show that scenario fidelity levels and gender have an effect on the eye-movements of surgical residents.Conference Object Insights From Eye-Movement Events in an Educational Computer-Based Environment (ece) for Endo-Neurosurgery Training Considering Gender, Hand Condition and Scenario Effects(Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2018) Dalveren,G.G.M.; Cagiltay,N.E.Surgical residents of endo-neurosurgery are required to develop several surgical skills such as eye-hand coordination, ability to use both hand coordination, and depth perception. During the process of gaining these skills, there are several effective factors on the individual performance such as gender, nature of the scenarios and hand condition that can be important to better organize appropriate training programs. Earlier studies show that, surgeons' mental workload show differences according to the difficulty levels of the tasks and hand conditions during the operations. Also there are some evidences showing that male surgeons performing the surgical tasks with a better performance compared to the females. However, in the literature there are not many studies conducted to better understand these effects by analyzing the eye-movements on simulation-based surgical training environments. This study aims to understand the mental workload and gender differences from fixation number and fixation duration eye-movement events. In this study four different computer-based-simulation scenarios which are developed for an Educational Computer-based-simulation Environment (ECE) for endo-neurosurgery training have been performed by 23 (3 female) surgical residents. Participants have performed each scenario in different hand conditions (dominant, non-dominant and both hand). While surgical residents were performing the scenarios their eye-movements were recorded by an eye-tracker. The Binocular Individual Threshold (BIT) classification algorithm was used for eye-movement event classification. According to the results of fixation number and fixation duration events in these four scenarios, hand conditions, scenario fidelity levels and gender are found to be important factors that make changes on mental workload of surgical residents. It can be concluded that, in non-dominant and both hand conditions mental workload increases according to the dominant hand condition. Additionally results show that scenario fidelity levels and gender have an effect on the eye-movements of surgical residents. © 2018 IEEE.Conference Object Citation - WoS: 6Simulation-Based Environments for Surgical Practice(Ieee, 2017) Dalveren, Gonca Gokce Menekse; Cagiltay, Nergiz Ercil; Ozcelik, Erol; Maras, HakanModeling and simulation environments provide several insights about the real situations such as endoscopic surgery. Endoscopic surgery requires both hand skills, so, understanding the effect of using dominant or non dominant hand on mental workload is important to better design, develop and implement modeling and simulation environments to support real-life implementations of surgical procedures. This experimental study presents a simulation application of eye-tracking approach to understand mental workload in different hand conditions: dominant hand, non-dominant hand and both hand. The results of the study show that, performing simulated surgical tasks by both hands compared to dominant hand, increases mental workload which is evident by higher pupil size. Accordingly, to manage the mental-load problems of surgeons while performing complex tasks that require both hand usage simulation-based environments can be used. Consequently, collection of detailed information such as eye-data, can give several insights about the behaviors of the surgeons. Also, their required skills can be improved by development of simulation and training environments.Conference Object Citation - WoS: 2Citation - Scopus: 2Software Engineering in Medical Informatics: a Systematic Literature Review(Assoc Computing Machinery, 2019) Dalveren, Gonca Gokce Menekse; Mishra, DeeptiThis study presents a systematic literature review to provide overall view of the application of Software Engineering (SE) in Medical Informatics (MI) field. Articles published from 2010 to 2019 from seven selected databases ( Emerald, PubMed, IEEE, ACM, Taylor Francis, SAGE and Wiley) were investigated. The existing literature was analyzed, and the emerging areas of research in the medical informatics field have been identified. According to the findings of this study, medical informatics research has been applied in many fields but there is still potential of further research in different areas. Most of the reviewed studies were conducted on data mining, decision support, deep learning and IoT. Also, it can be said that most of the applications are provided as web-based instead of mobile applications. To conclude, the results of this study provides insights to the researchers about the research directions and the gaps in the literature in the MI and SE fields.Conference Object Citation - Scopus: 8Simulation-Based Environments for Surgical Practice(Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2017) Dalveren,G.G.M.; Çağıltay,N.E.; Özçelik,E.; Maraş,H.Modeling and simulation environments provide several insights about the real situations such as endoscopic surgery. Endoscopic surgery requires both hand skills, so, understanding the effect of using dominant or non dominant hand on mental workload is important to better design, develop and implement modeling and simulation environments to support real-life implementations of surgical procedures. This experimental study presents a simulation application of eye-tracking approach to understand mental workload in different hand conditions: dominant hand, non-dominant hand and both hand. The results of the study show that, performing simulated surgical tasks by both hands compared to dominant hand, increases mental workload which is evident by higher pupil size. Accordingly, to manage the mental-load problems of surgeons while performing complex tasks that require both hand usage simulation-based environments can be used. Consequently, collection of detailed information such as eye-data, can give several insights about the behaviors of the surgeons. Also, their required skills can be improved by development of simulation and training environments. © 2017 IEEE.

