Jump to content

User:Abdulnaser M. Fashakh/sandbox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).</ref></ref>

Abdulnaser M. Fashakh Abdulnaser M. Fashakh (Arabic: عبد الناصر مطشر فشاخ) is an Iraqi academic, computer science researcher, and doctoral candidate. He is recognized for his contributions in the fields of cybersecurity, cyberbullying analysis, big data processing, and the social and psychological implications of digital abuse. He has published several peer-reviewed studies in international scientific journals indexed in Scopus.

Early Life and Education Abdulnaser was born on July 1, 1979, in Kuwait. He holds Iraqi nationality. His early academic path focused on technology and information systems, eventually leading to advanced studies in computer science. He is currently pursuing his Ph.D. at Altınbaş University in Istanbul, Turkey, where his research centers on cyberbullying and its psychological effects on vulnerable groups such as children, women, and minority communities.

Academic and Research Career Fashakh's research spans several key areas:

Cyberbullying detection and classification using machine learning and deep learning Sentiment analysis to assess emotional responses in social media content Big data analytics for social network behavior analysis Application of Python libraries like TensorFlow, Scikit-learn, and Pandas in large-scale data processing He has contributed to academic discussions on digital abuse and its societal consequences. His studies have been cited by researchers in cyberpsychology and educational technology.

Selected Contributions Developed models for detecting and classifying cyberbullying across multiple categories such as gender, age, and religion Proposed a framework combining natural language processing (NLP) with psychological analysis Participated in joint studies on social media influence among Iraqi university students Personal Life Abdulnaser is married and has two children. He is currently on study leave from his government job to complete his doctoral research. He speaks Arabic, English, and Turkish.

References

[edit]