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Sikandar Ali

Sikandar Ali contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

A Conditional U-Net Pipeline with Pre- and Post-Processing for Aerial RGB-to-Thermal Image Translation

Paired RGB-thermal data has shown significant utility across a range of applications, including image fusion, object tracking, and anomaly detection; however, its broader adoption is constrained by the limited availability of aligned RGB-thermal image pairs. RGB-to-thermal (and vice versa) image translation has emerged as a practical solution to this challenge. Prior approaches including conditional generative adversarial networks (cGANs) such as ThermalGAN and Scalable Interpolant Transformer (SiT)-based architectures such as ThermalGen have demonstrated strong potential for aerial-to-thermal image translation. In this work, we explore alternative architectures that prioritize simplicity while maintaining performance. Specifically, we propose a conditional U-Net that incorporates weather data at the bottleneck layer, complemented by targeted preprocessing and post-processing techniques applied within the Pix2Pix GAN architecture. We utilize a training set of 612 paired RGB and thermal images, and evaluate over 5-fold cross-validation, ultimately testing on a held-out test set. Our conditional U-Net model performed best, with a peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) of 14.5485, structural similarity index measure (SSIM) of 0.8095, and learned perceptual image patch similarity (LPIPS) of 0.1666. These results outperformed the base ThermalGen model, which attained PSNR, SSIM, and LPIPS scores of 7.56, 0.2444, and 0.6317 respectively. We find that while saturation boost and contrast enhancement for preprocessing and Gaussian blur for post-processing provide observable improvements, the incorporation of conditioning data was most effective. Our findings cement the potential of integrating auxiliary metadata into thermal image generation, suggesting that such information can serve as a proxy for environmental conditions critical to accurate thermal reconstruction.

preprint2022arXiv

Op2Vec: An Opcode Embedding Technique and Dataset Design for End-to-End Detection of Android Malware

Android is one of the leading operating systems for smart phones in terms of market share and usage. Unfortunately, it is also an appealing target for attackers to compromise its security through malicious applications. To tackle this issue, domain experts and researchers are trying different techniques to stop such attacks. All the attempts of securing Android platform are somewhat successful. However, existing detection techniques have severe shortcomings, including the cumbersome process of feature engineering. Designing representative features require expert domain knowledge. There is a need for minimizing human experts' intervention by circumventing handcrafted feature engineering. Deep learning could be exploited by extracting deep features automatically. Previous work has shown that operational codes (opcodes) of executables provide key information to be used with deep learning models for detection process of malicious applications. The only challenge is to feed opcodes information to deep learning models. Existing techniques use one-hot encoding to tackle the challenge. However, the one-hot encoding scheme has severe limitations. In this paper, we introduce; (1) a novel technique for opcodes embedding, which we name Op2Vec, (2) based on the learned Op2Vec we have developed a dataset for end-to-end detection of android malware. Introducing the end-to-end Android malware detection technique avoids expert-intensive handcrafted features extraction, and ensures automation. Some of the recent deep learning-based techniques showed significantly improved results when tested with the proposed approach and achieved an average detection accuracy of 97.47%, precision of 0.976 and F1 score of 0.979.