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Jagannath Aryal

Jagannath Aryal contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

A generalised pre-training strategy for deep learning networks in semantic segmentation of remotely sensed images

In the segmentation of remotely sensed images, deep learning models are typically pre-trained using large image databases like ImageNet before fine-tuned on domain-specific datasets. However, the performance of these fine-tuned models is often hindered by the large domain gaps (i.e., differences in scenes and modalities) between ImageNet's images and remotely sensed images being processed. Therefore, many researchers have undertaken efforts to establish large-scale domain-specific image datasets for pre-training, aiming to enhance model performance. However, establishing such datasets is often challenging, requiring significant effort, and these datasets often exhibit limited generaliza-bility to other application scenarios. To address these issues, this study introduces a novel yet simple pre-training strategy designed to guide a model away from learning domain-specific features in a pre-training dataset during pre-training, thereby improving the generalisation ability of the pre-trained model. To evaluate the strategy's effectiveness, deep learning models are pre-trained on ImageNet and subsequently fine-tuned on four semantic segmentation datasets with diverse scenes and modalities, including iSAID, MFNet, PST900 and Potsdam. Experimental results show that the proposed pre-training strategy led to state-of-the-art accuracies on all four datasets, namely 67.4% mIoU for iSAID, 56.9% mIoU for MFNet, 84.22% mIoU for PST900, 91.88% mF1 for Potsdam. This research lays the groundwork for developing a unified foundation model applicable to both computer vision and remote sensing applications.

preprint2022arXiv

Container Orchestration in Edge and Fog Computing Environments for Real-Time IoT Applications

Resource management is the principal factor to fully utilize the potential of Edge/Fog computing to execute real-time and critical IoT applications. Although some resource management frameworks exist, the majority are not designed based on distributed containerized components. Hence, they are not suitable for highly distributed and heterogeneous computing environments. Containerized resource management frameworks such as FogBus2 enable efficient distribution of framework's components alongside IoT applications' components. However, the management, deployment, health-check, and scalability of a large number of containers are challenging issues. To orchestrate a multitude of containers, several orchestration tools are developed. But, many of these orchestration tools are heavy-weight and have a high overhead, especially for resource-limited Edge/Fog nodes. Thus, for hybrid computing environments, consisting of heterogeneous Edge/Fog and/or Cloud nodes, lightweight container orchestration tools are required to support both resource-limited resources at the Edge/Fog and resource-rich resources at the Cloud. Thus, in this paper, we propose a feasible approach to build a hybrid and lightweight cluster based on K3s, for the FogBus2 framework that offers containerized resource management framework. This work addresses the challenge of creating lightweight computing clusters in hybrid computing environments. It also proposes three design patterns for the deployment of the FogBus2 framework in hybrid environments, including 1) Host Network, 2) Proxy Server, and 3) Environment Variable. The performance evaluation shows that the proposed approach improves the response time of real-time IoT applications up to 29% with acceptable and low overhead.