Researcher profile

Muhammad Ali Farooq

Muhammad Ali Farooq contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

ResearcherAffiliation not importedOpen to collaborate

Trust snapshot

Quick read

Trust 21 - EmergingVerification L1Unclaimed author
7works
0followers
5topics
4close collaborators

Actions

Decide how to stay connected

Follow researcher0

Identity and collaboration

How to connect with this researcher

Claiming links this public author record to a researcher profile and unlocks direct collaboration workflows.

Log in to claim

Direct collaboration

Open a focused conversation when the fit is right

Claim this author entity first to unlock direct invitations.

Research graph

See the researcher in context

Open full explorer

Inspect adjacent work, topics, institutions and collaborators without jumping out to a separate graph page.

Building this graph slice

BZPEER is loading the nearby papers, people, topics and institutions for this page.

Published work

7 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

From Review to Design: Ethical Multimodal Driver Monitoring Systems for Risk Mitigation, Incident Response, and Accountability in Automated Vehicles

As vehicles transition toward higher levels of automation, Driver Monitoring Systems (DMS) have become essential for ensuring human oversight, safety, and regulatory compliance in a vehicle. These systems rely on multimodal sensing and AI-driven inference to assess driver attention, cognitive state, and readiness to take control. While technologically promising, their deployment introduces a complex set of ethical and legal challenges - ranging from privacy and consent to data ownership and algorithmic fairness. While overarching frameworks such as the GDPR, EU AI Act, and IEEE standards offer important guidance, they lack the specificity required for addressing the unique risks posed by in-cabin sensing technologies. This paper adopts a review-to-design perspective, critically examining existing regulatory instruments and ethical frameworks -- such as the GDPR, the EU AI Act, and IEEE guidelines -- and identifying gaps in their applicability to the distinctive risks posed by multimodal, AI-enabled in-cabin monitoring. Building on this review, we propose a modular ethical design framework tailored specifically to Driver Monitoring Systems. The framework translates high-level principles into actionable design and deployment guidance, including user-configurable consent mechanisms, fairness-aware model development, transparency and explainability tools, and safeguards for driver emotional well-being. Finally, the paper outlines a risk analysis and failure mitigation strategy, emphasizing proactive incident response and accountability mechanisms tailored to the DMS context. Together, these contributions aim to inform the development of transparent, trustworthy, and human-centered driver monitoring systems for next-generation autonomous vehicles.

preprint2023arXiv

Development, Optimization, and Deployment of Thermal Forward Vision Systems for Advance Vehicular Applications on Edge Devices

In this research work, we have proposed a thermal tiny-YOLO multi-class object detection (TTYMOD) system as a smart forward sensing system that should remain effective in all weather and harsh environmental conditions using an end-to-end YOLO deep learning framework. It provides enhanced safety and improved awareness features for driver assistance. The system is trained on large-scale thermal public datasets as well as newly gathered novel open-sourced dataset comprising of more than 35,000 distinct thermal frames. For optimal training and convergence of YOLO-v5 tiny network variant on thermal data, we have employed different optimizers which include stochastic decent gradient (SGD), Adam, and its variant AdamW which has an improved implementation of weight decay. The performance of thermally tuned tiny architecture is further evaluated on the public as well as locally gathered test data in diversified and challenging weather and environmental conditions. The efficacy of a thermally tuned nano network is quantified using various qualitative metrics which include mean average precision, frames per second rate, and average inference time. Experimental outcomes show that the network achieved the best mAP of 56.4% with an average inference time/ frame of 4 milliseconds. The study further incorporates optimization of tiny network variant using the TensorFlow Lite quantization tool this is beneficial for the deployment of deep learning architectures on the edge and mobile devices. For this study, we have used a raspberry pi 4 computing board for evaluating the real-time feasibility performance of an optimized version of the thermal object detection network for the automotive sensor suite. The source code, trained and optimized models and complete validation/ testing results are publicly available at https://github.com/MAli-Farooq/Thermal-YOLO-And-Model-Optimization-Using-TensorFlowLite.

preprint2023arXiv

Event-based YOLO Object Detection: Proof of Concept for Forward Perception System

Neuromorphic vision or event vision is an advanced vision technology, where in contrast to the visible camera that outputs pixels, the event vision generates neuromorphic events every time there is a brightness change which exceeds a specific threshold in the field of view (FOV). This study focuses on leveraging neuromorphic event data for roadside object detection. This is a proof of concept towards building artificial intelligence (AI) based pipelines which can be used for forward perception systems for advanced vehicular applications. The focus is on building efficient state-of-the-art object detection networks with better inference results for fast-moving forward perception using an event camera. In this article, the event-simulated A2D2 dataset is manually annotated and trained on two different YOLOv5 networks (small and large variants). To further assess its robustness, single model testing and ensemble model testing are carried out.

preprint2020arXiv

Advanced Deep Learning Methodologies for Skin Cancer Classification in Prodromal Stages

Technology-assisted platforms provide reliable solutions in almost every field these days. One such important application in the medical field is the skin cancer classification in preliminary stages that need sensitive and precise data analysis. For the proposed study the Kaggle skin cancer dataset is utilized. The proposed study consists of two main phases. In the first phase, the images are preprocessed to remove the clutters thus producing a refined version of training images. To achieve that, a sharpening filter is applied followed by a hair removal algorithm. Different image quality measurement metrics including Peak Signal to Noise (PSNR), Mean Square Error (MSE), Maximum Absolute Squared Deviation (MXERR) and Energy Ratio/ Ratio of Squared Norms (L2RAT) are used to compare the overall image quality before and after applying preprocessing operations. The results from the aforementioned image quality metrics prove that image quality is not compromised however it is upgraded by applying the preprocessing operations. The second phase of the proposed research work incorporates deep learning methodologies that play an imperative role in accurate, precise and robust classification of the lesion mole. This has been reflected by using two state of the art deep learning models: Inception-v3 and MobileNet. The experimental results demonstrate notable improvement in train and validation accuracy by using the refined version of images of both the networks, however, the Inception-v3 network was able to achieve better validation accuracy thus it was finally selected to evaluate it on test data. The final test accuracy using state of art Inception-v3 network was 86%.

preprint2020arXiv

Automatic Lesion Detection System (ALDS) for Skin Cancer Classification Using SVM and Neural Classifiers

Technology aided platforms provide reliable tools in almost every field these days. These tools being supported by computational power are significant for applications that need sensitive and precise data analysis. One such important application in the medical field is Automatic Lesion Detection System (ALDS) for skin cancer classification. Computer aided diagnosis helps physicians and dermatologists to obtain a second opinion for proper analysis and treatment of skin cancer. Precise segmentation of the cancerous mole along with surrounding area is essential for proper analysis and diagnosis. This paper is focused towards the development of improved ALDS framework based on probabilistic approach that initially utilizes active contours and watershed merged mask for segmenting out the mole and later SVM and Neural Classifier are applied for the classification of the segmented mole. After lesion segmentation, the selected features are classified to ascertain that whether the case under consideration is melanoma or non-melanoma. The approach is tested for varying datasets and comparative analysis is performed that reflects the effectiveness of the proposed system.

preprint2020arXiv

Generating Thermal Image Data Samples using 3D Facial Modelling Techniques and Deep Learning Methodologies

Methods for generating synthetic data have become of increasing importance to build large datasets required for Convolution Neural Networks (CNN) based deep learning techniques for a wide range of computer vision applications. In this work, we extend existing methodologies to show how 2D thermal facial data can be mapped to provide 3D facial models. For the proposed research work we have used tufts datasets for generating 3D varying face poses by using a single frontal face pose. The system works by refining the existing image quality by performing fusion based image preprocessing operations. The refined outputs have better contrast adjustments, decreased noise level and higher exposedness of the dark regions. It makes the facial landmarks and temperature patterns on the human face more discernible and visible when compared to original raw data. Different image quality metrics are used to compare the refined version of images with original images. In the next phase of the proposed study, the refined version of images is used to create 3D facial geometry structures by using Convolution Neural Networks (CNN). The generated outputs are then imported in blender software to finally extract the 3D thermal facial outputs of both males and females. The same technique is also used on our thermal face data acquired using prototype thermal camera (developed under Heliaus EU project) in an indoor lab environment which is then used for generating synthetic 3D face data along with varying yaw face angles and lastly facial depth map is generated.

preprint2020arXiv

Performance Evaluation of Advanced Deep Learning Architectures for Offline Handwritten Character Recognition

This paper presents a hand-written character recognition comparison and performance evaluation for robust and precise classification of different hand-written characters. The system utilizes advanced multilayer deep neural network by collecting features from raw pixel values. The hidden layers stack deep hierarchies of non-linear features since learning complex features from conventional neural networks is very challenging. Two state of the art deep learning architectures were used which includes Caffe AlexNet and GoogleNet models in NVIDIA DIGITS.The frameworks were trained and tested on two different datasets for incorporating diversity and complexity. One of them is the publicly available dataset i.e. Chars74K comprising of 7705 characters and has upper and lowercase English alphabets, along with numerical digits. While the other dataset created locally consists of 4320 characters. The local dataset consists of 62 classes and was created by 40 subjects. It also consists upper and lowercase English alphabets, along with numerical digits. The overall dataset is divided in the ratio of 80% for training and 20% for testing phase. The time required for training phase is approximately 90 minutes. For validation part, the results obtained were compared with the groundtruth. The accuracy level achieved with AlexNet was 77.77% and 88.89% with Google Net. The higher accuracy level of GoogleNet is due to its unique combination of inception modules, each including pooling, convolutions at various scales and concatenation procedures.