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                <text>Identifying Adolescent Behavioral Profiles Through K-Means Clustering&#13;
Based on Smartphone Usage, Mental Health, and Academic Performance&#13;
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                <text>Machine Learning, Adolescent, Smartphone Usage, Mental Health, K-Means Algorithm, Cluster Analysis, Addiction Patterns</text>
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                <text>The pervasive integration of digital devices into students’ daily lives has profoundly shaped their learning habits and psychological well-being.&#13;
As technology becomes increasingly embedded in academic and personal routines, understanding the relationship between digital engagement,&#13;
mental health, and academic outcomes is vital for developing effective student-support and intervention frameworks in higher education. This&#13;
study seeks to uncover behavioral patterns among college students by examining the interconnections between smartphone usage, mental health&#13;
indicators, and academic performance through a data-driven machine learning approach. Utilizing the K-Means clustering algorithm, students&#13;
were categorized into distinct behavioral profiles derived from eight core features: daily screen time, sleep duration, grade performance, exercise&#13;
frequency, anxiety level, depression level, self-confidence, and screen exposure before sleep. A dataset comprising 3,000 entries was preprocessed&#13;
through normalization and analyzed within the Knowledge Discovery in Databases (KDD) framework to ensure structured and reliable data&#13;
processing. The Elbow Method identified four optimal clusters, each reflecting unique behavioral characteristics. Cluster 1 represented wellbalanced students with stable academic and emotional states; Cluster 2 included high-achieving yet anxious individuals; Cluster 3 captured those&#13;
exhibiting excessive digital engagement and psychological distress; and Cluster 4 comprised moderately engaged students with lower selfconfidence. Visual representations, including bar and radar charts, were generated to illustrate inter-cluster variations and enhance interpretability&#13;
of behavioral distinctions. The findings reveal that digital usage patterns are closely linked to mental health and academic performance, suggesting&#13;
that excessive or unregulated device use can heighten emotional strain and academic inconsistency. These insights highlight the necessity of&#13;
personalized mental health initiatives and targeted digital literacy programs grounded in behavioral segmentation. Overall, the study demonstrates&#13;
the applicability of unsupervised machine learning for behavioral profiling and provides evidence-based recommendations for educators, mental&#13;
health practitioners, and policymakers seeking to foster balanced and healthy digital habits among students</text>
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                <text>Dominic Dinand Aristo1,*&#13;
, Bhavana Srinivasan2&#13;
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                <text>https://ijiis.org/index.php/IJIIS/article/view/231/154</text>
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                <text>Amikom Purwokerto University, Indonesia</text>
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                <text>januari 2025</text>
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                <text>Fajar bagus W</text>
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                  <text>VOL 8, NO 1&#13;
JANUARY 2025</text>
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                <text>Classification and Prediction of Video Game Sales Levels Using the Naive&#13;
Bayes Algorithm Based on Platform, Genre, and Regional Market Data</text>
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                <text>Naïve Bayes, Video Game Sales, Machine Learning, Classification, Data Imbalance, Feature Engineering, Predictive Modeling.</text>
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                <text>The exponential expansion of the video game industry has resulted in a vast accumulation of market data that can be leveraged to analyze and&#13;
predict sales performance. This study aims to construct a classification model for video game sales levels by applying the Naïve Bayes algorithm,&#13;
recognized for its simplicity, efficiency, and strong baseline performance in supervised learning tasks. The research employs a public dataset&#13;
containing over 13,000 video game entries, encompassing key attributes such as genre, platform, publisher, release year, user and critic ratings,&#13;
and global sales figures. The target variable global sales was discretized into three categories: Low (&lt;1 million units), Medium (1–5 million&#13;
units), and High (&gt;5 million units) to represent distinct tiers of commercial success. Prior to modeling, the dataset underwent a comprehensive&#13;
preprocessing pipeline involving duplicate removal, handling of missing data, normalization of numerical attributes, and feature selection to&#13;
ensure optimal model performance. The Multinomial Naïve Bayes classifier was then implemented and assessed using standard evaluation&#13;
metrics, including accuracy, precision, recall, and F1-score. Experimental results revealed an accuracy of 71.82% and an F1-score of 70.03%,&#13;
signifying strong predictive capability for a probabilistic model of this simplicity. The classifier effectively identified low and medium sales&#13;
categories, though slightly underperformed on the high sales group due to class imbalance within the dataset. Further analysis of conditional&#13;
probabilities indicated that game genre, platform popularity (especially PS2 and Wii), and critic scores were the most influential determinants of&#13;
higher sales outcomes. These findings affirm that the Naïve Bayes algorithm provides a reliable and interpretable foundation for video game&#13;
sales prediction, serving as a benchmark model in market analytics. Future studies are encouraged to address data imbalance through&#13;
oversampling or synthetic data generation, incorporate contextual variables such as marketing strategies and release schedules, and explore&#13;
ensemble or deep learning approaches to enhance predictive accuracy and robustness</text>
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                <text>Rafi Pratama Putra1,*&#13;
, Nevita Cahaya Ramadani2&#13;
, Agi Nanjar3</text>
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                <text>https://ijiis.org/index.php/IJIIS/article/view/242/155</text>
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                <text>University of AMIKOM Purwokerto</text>
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                <text>january 2025</text>
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                <text>Fajar bagus W</text>
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                  <text>VOL 8, NO 1&#13;
JANUARY 2025</text>
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                <text>An Efficient Sampling Approach for Village Elections: Quick Count Using&#13;
Stratified Systematic Cluster Sampling</text>
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                <text>Quick Count, Sampling Method, Stratified Systematic Cluster Random Sampling, Village Head Election</text>
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                <text>Quick counts are widely used to estimate election outcomes before official results are announced. However, their accuracy depends on the quality&#13;
of the sampling method used. This study applies the Stratified Systematic Cluster Random Sampling method in the 2019 village head election in&#13;
Panembangan Village, Indonesia, to provide an efficient and statistically sound quick count process suitable for rural contexts with limited&#13;
resources. The method integrates stratification (dividing voters by hamlet), clustering (grouping by polling stations), and systematic sampling&#13;
(selecting polling stations at fixed intervals). Out of 10 polling stations, 5 were systematically selected after stratification. All valid votes from&#13;
these polling stations were used for estimation. The results show that candidate Untung Sanyoto received 59.16% of the vote, while his opponent&#13;
received 40.84%. The margin of error was ±0.69% at a 95% confidence level, and the estimates closely matched the official election results,&#13;
demonstrating the method’s reliability. This study shows that combining statistical rigor with practical sampling strategies can produce fast,&#13;
accurate, and cost-effective results. It provides a scalable model for local elections, especially in regions facing geographic or logistical&#13;
challenges, and contributes to the development of transparent and trustworthy democratic practices</text>
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                <text>Khabib Adi Nugroho1,*, Turino2</text>
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                <text>https://ijiis.org/index.php/IJIIS/article/view/245/156</text>
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                <text>Amikom Purwokerto University, </text>
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                <text>januari 2025</text>
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                <text>Fajar bagus W</text>
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                  <text>VOL 8, NO 1&#13;
JANUARY 2025</text>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>A Machine Learning Approach to Indonesian Climate Change Sentiment&#13;
Analysis Using Naive Bayes</text>
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                <text>Climate Change, Sentiment Analysis, Twitter, Naive Bayes, Indonesia, Public Perception</text>
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                <text>Climate change poses a significant global challenge, particularly for archipelagic nations such as Indonesia that are highly vulnerable to rising&#13;
temperatures and extreme weather events. This study applies machine learning-based sentiment analysis to assess Indonesian public opinion on&#13;
climate change using Twitter data. A total of 5,120 Indonesian-language tweets were collected through keyword-based scraping related to climate&#13;
and weather conditions. Following text preprocessing (lowercasing, stopword removal, stemming, and cleaning), TF-IDF vectorization was used&#13;
to extract the top 400 most significant terms. The dataset was divided into training (80%) and testing (20%) subsets, and a Multinomial Naïve&#13;
Bayes classifier was trained to categorize sentiments into positive, neutral, and negative classes. The results show a dominance of negative&#13;
sentiment (62%), primarily associated with extreme heat and storm-related events, while neutral (24%) and positive (14%) sentiments were linked&#13;
to moderate weather conditions. Model evaluation achieved an F1-score of 0.95 for negative, 0.86 for neutral, and 0.83 for positive sentiment,&#13;
yielding a macro-average F1-score of 0.88. The analysis also identified “panas (hot),” “hujan (rain),” and “banjir (flood)” as top lexical indicators&#13;
influencing classification. Overall, the findings highlight that Indonesian public sentiment toward climate change is highly reactive to extreme&#13;
weather. The study underscores the potential of Naïve Bayes as a baseline model for real-time environmental sentiment monitoring, offering&#13;
valuable insights for institutions such as BMKG to enhance public communication and climate awareness strategies.</text>
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                <text>Henderi1,*, Sofa Sofiana2</text>
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            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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                <text>https://ijiis.org/index.php/IJIIS/article/view/246/157</text>
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                <text>Universitas Raharja, Indonesia</text>
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                <text>january 2025</text>
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                <text>Fajar bagus W</text>
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                  <text>VOL 8, NO 1&#13;
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                <text>A Gaussian Naive Bayes and SMOTE-Based Approach for Predicting&#13;
Breast Cancer Aggressiveness in Imbalanced Datasets</text>
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                <text>Breast Cancer, Gaussian Naive Bayes, Classification, SMOTE, Medical Diagnosis, Machine Learning.</text>
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                <text>Breast cancer remains one of the leading causes of death among women worldwide, making early and accurate detection essential to improving&#13;
patient outcomes. This study aims to develop a predictive model for breast cancer aggressiveness using the Gaussian Naive Bayes algorithm on&#13;
the Breast Cancer Wisconsin Diagnostic Dataset. The dataset contains 569 instances with 30 numerical features representing various cell&#13;
characteristics. Preprocessing steps included data cleaning, label encoding, and Min-Max normalization. The model was evaluated using&#13;
accuracy, precision, recall, F1-score, and a confusion matrix. Initially, the model achieved an accuracy of 78.88%; however, the recall for&#13;
malignant cases was relatively low at 45.5%, highlighting a critical limitation in detecting aggressive cancer. To address class imbalance and&#13;
improve model sensitivity, the Synthetic Minority Oversampling Technique (SMOTE) was applied. While detailed post-SMOTE metrics were&#13;
not reported in this version, the approach is expected to enhance recall and F1-score for the malignant class. This research demonstrates the&#13;
potential of Gaussian Naive Bayes, combined with data balancing techniques, as a fast and interpretable tool for early breast cancer diagnosis.&#13;
Future work will focus on model comparison, cross-validation, and statistical evaluation to improve robustness and reliability.&#13;
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                <text>Deshinta Arrova Dewi,&#13;
1,* Tri Basuki Kurniawan2</text>
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                <text>INTI International University, Malaysia, </text>
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                <text>Fajar bagus W</text>
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