İHÜ Araştırma ve Akademik Performans Sistemi
DSpace@İHÜ, İbn Haldun Üniversitesi’nin bilimsel araştırma ve akademik performansını izleme, analiz etme ve raporlama süreçlerini tek çatı altında buluşturan bütünleşik bilgi sistemidir.

Güncel Gönderiler
Jenis kopi boru dari Turki: Menengiç Kahvesi
(IKA FAPSI UNPAD, 2026) Bulut, Sefa; Herawati, Netty; Bulut, Sefa; Eğitim Bilimleri Fakültesi, Rehberlik ve Psikolojik Danışmanlık Bölümü
[No Abstract Available]
Peran kopi dalam budaya Turki
(IKA FAPSI UNPAD, 2026) Herawati, Netty; Bulut, Sefa; Eğitim Bilimleri Fakültesi, Rehberlik ve Psikolojik Danışmanlık Bölümü
[No Abstract Available]
ChatGPT for mental health support: A systematic scoping review of human-computer interaction implications
(Sage Publications, 2026) Nazir, Thseen; Eğitim Bilimleri Fakültesi, Rehberlik ve Psikolojik Danışmanlık Bölümü
Large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT are increasingly used around mental health, yet design-oriented syntheses remain limited. We conducted a PRISMA-aligned systematic scoping review focused specifically on ChatGPT (GPT-3.5/4+) in mental health-related use including "in the wild" adoption by laypeople, training applications, and clinical-adjacent pilots. Searches of five databases (November 2022 to August 2025), with citation tracking and gray-literature screening, yielded 34 studies spanning randomized and non-randomized experiments, pilot trials, surveys/interviews, simulations, digital ethnography, and structured editorials. Evidence supports adjunct, not replacement, roles. In education/supervision, one randomized trial and a comparative supervision study show skill gains when practice is scaffolded with rubrics and human oversight; expert ratings judged trainee case conceptualizations acceptable. In clinical/adjacent contexts, signals include quality-of-life improvement (small inpatient pilot), short-term anxiety reduction when the model provides empathetic feedback, and a clinical RCT (outside psychiatry) showing reduced anxiety/depression with a ChatGPT adjunct. Studies of public/self-help use document appropriation of ChatGPT as a "digital therapist" with identified risks including privacy concerns, boundary violations, and over-reliance. Safety-critical tasks remain unreliable (e.g., under-identification of suicide risk, degradation with complexity, and cultural-fit gaps). We derive human-computer interaction requirements: clear scope-of-use messaging, prompt scaffolding, human-in-the-loop, privacy-preserving defaults, and explicit escalation/hand-off pathways.
From isolation to integration: The mental health journey of international students in Türkiye
(Mahmut Demir, 2026) Nazir, Thseen; Yılmaz, Zeynep Esra; Eğitim Bilimleri Fakültesi, Rehberlik ve Psikolojik Danışmanlık Bölümü
This study explored mental health, coping strategies, perceived social support, and barriers to help-seeking among first-year international students in Turkish language programs in Türkiye. A mixed-methods approach combined survey data from 381 students from 48 countries with interviews from 60 participants. Standardized scales (Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale, Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support, Brief COPE) were used. Results showed 45.93% with optimal mental health, 45.14% with moderate mental health, and 8.92% with low mental health. Family and friend support strongly predicted well-being, while stigma and institutional and cultural barriers restricted access to counseling and help-seeking. Qualitative findings identified additional coping strategies and sources of support. The study emphasizes the need for culturally sensitive counseling and more accessible mental health services to address the unique challenges faced by international students.
Why do state policies toward religious minorities change? Evidence from the Muslim minority in postcommunist Bulgaria
(Cambridge University Press, 2026) Lika, Idlir; İnsan ve Toplum Bilimleri Fakültesi, Siyaset Bilimi ve Uluslararası İlişkiler Bölümü
Between 2011 and 2018, Bulgaria enacted a series of reforms accommodating the two most salient demands of its Muslim minority in the postcommunist period: the registration of elected Muslim leadership and the provision of state funding for religious communities. This constituted a significant departure from the restrictive policies pursued during the first two decades after communism and from the repressive legacies of earlier periods. Through process tracing based on 11 semi-structured elite interviews, press releases, and secondary sources, I argue that the geostrategic concerns of Bulgarian elites from the influence of the minority's kin-state, Turkey, from 2011 onward, and their aim to decrease the dependence of the minority on the kin-state provided the main motivation to accommodate Muslims' religious demands. These concerns were driven by domestic political changes in Turkey in the post-2011 period and their reflections in the country's foreign policy.






















