Browsing by Author "Siti Fatimah binti Mohd Tawil"
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Publication Islamic finance : a co-citation analysis(Gombak : International Islamic University Malaysia, 2009, 2009) ;Siti Fatimah binti Mohd TawilThe purpose of this research is to examine the co-citation pattern among authors of the Islamic Finance papers. This research identified the most frequently co-cited (paired) authors, identified their co-cited documents and themes, identified the contributions of co-cited authors made on the works of Islamic Finance, identified the clusters of citations within a sample of Islamic Finance literature and examined the relationship between the citing and co-cited documents in Islamic Finance literature. The methodology included co-citation analysis of the source documents and survey of their authors. Instruments used were the counting of the number of times two papers were cited and a set of questionnaire. Bibliographic citations and themes for both citing and cited documents were entered into a data structure built in InMagic. Samples of 100 papers were used as the source documents. Results were represented by tabulation of tables, clusters and graphs wherever applicable. The most highly cocited authors were Chapra & Ahmad Ziauddin, Chapra & Iqbal M, Chapra & Iqbal Z, Chapra & El Naggar, Al-Maududi & Afzalur Rahman, Chapra & Volker and Chapra & Al-Qureshi. The three most highly cited documents were “Towards a just monetary system”, “Banking and Finance in the Arab Middle East” and “Islam and the Theory of Interest”. The three most highly cited themes were Islamic Economics, Riba and Third world. All documents and themes were co-cited only once. The research fronts were Islamic Law, Islamic Economics, Financial Institutions, Third world and Profits. The clusters that have been done were the clusters on the highly co-cited authors, highly cited documents, highly cited themes and the research fronts. Findings of this research project would shed lights on the co-cited documents used to produce papers and publications on Islamic Finance. In addition, this research contributed as part of the state-of-the-art review of works on Islamization at IIUM and to the area of cocitation analysis that examine a field from a religious perspective. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Ontology development for do`a and zikir Al-Ma`thur for counselling(Kuala Lumpur :International Islamic University Malaysia,2017, 2017) ;Siti Fatimah binti Mohd TawilThe purpose of this research was to develop an ontology for Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur for counselling. The ontology was constructed to provide high school counsellors with access to relevant Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur for counselling session and intervention. Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur are essential supplications towards ALLAH Azza wa Jalla, in facing challenges in life and in coping with stress. Existing search systems could not find the Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur that matched counselling cases. In fact, Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur were scattered among many sources, and even listed under different headings. The objectives of this research were to identify the methodology for ontology development for Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur for counselling; to develop an ontology for Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur for counselling, and to evaluate the ontology developed for Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur for counselling. The ontology development methodology was highly influenced by the methodology demonstrated by Fernandez-Lopez et al. (1997) with a close reference to Thunkijjanukij’s (2009) work and Protégé practical guide by Horridge et al. (2004, 2011). The Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur ontology for counselling consisted of concepts extracted from supplications derived from Al-Quran and Hadith compiled by selected credible scholars, and counselling cases from the Ministry of Education, Malaysia. The ontology was built in Protégé OWL Editor Version 5. The evaluation of the ontology comprised four stages: validation and verification by two subject matter experts at the completion of the ontology conceptualization phase; following Gomez-Perez et al. (2004) and Kreider (2013) guideline and criteria; competency questions through SPARQL query testing; and users assessment on suitability of the ontology. The applied methodology has successfully developed the Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur ontology for counselling. The ontology consisted of 325 concepts and 303 instances with a total of 3648 axioms. Major semantic relationships were hasSupplication and isSupplicationFor. A total of 1015 Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur were derived from the selected credible sources and 207 counselling cases collected from three participating high schools in Gombak district. The validation and verification results included the positive endorsement and constructive judgement upon most of the ontology components. The ontology has met the criteria adopted from Gomez-Perez et al. (2004) and Kreider (2013) in terms of its comprehensiveness, consistency, extensible, ease of use and completeness. The Do’a and Zikr al-Ma’thur ontology provided correct answers to all 86 competency questions through SPARQL query testing. The ontology also yielded 83% suitable level through users assessment. Further works included the implementation of ontology concepts in ranked-output search system and its implementation as seeds for crawling on the semantic web.2 2