QoS-Based Assessment and Classification of Network Conditions Using OSPF and BGP Routing Protocols

Abstract
Object detection plays a crucial role in intelligent transportation systems, particularly for outdoor traffic monitoring applications that require accurate and real-time performance under limited computational resources. Recent developments in YOLO-based architectures have introduced multiple model variants; however, their practical performance under constrained training conditions remains insufficiently explored. This study presents a comparative evaluation of YOLOv5, YOLOv7, and YOLOv8 for outdoor traffic object detection using a real-world dataset and identical experimental settings. The main objective of this research is to analyze the robustness and detection quality of different YOLO variants when trained with a limited number of epochs, reflecting practical deployment scenarios. All models were trained and evaluated using the same dataset, preprocessing pipeline, and hardware configuration to ensure a fair comparison. Performance evaluation was conducted using multiple metrics, including precision, recall, mAP@50, Precision–Recall curves, area under the curve (AUC), and peak F1-score. Experimental results indicate that YOLOv5 outperformed YOLOv7 and YOLOv8 in terms of overall detection stability and robustness. The merged Precision–Recall analysis shows that YOLOv5 achieved a higher effective AUC and superior mAP@50, reflecting better global detection performance. In addition, YOLOv5 exhibited a higher peak F1-score, indicating a more balanced trade-off between precision and recall. In contrast, YOLOv7 and YOLOv8 showed performance degradation under limited training conditions despite their more advanced architectures. These findings suggest that YOLOv5 remains a reliable and efficient solution for outdoor traffic object detection, particularly in resource-constrained environments. The study highlights the importance of comprehensive evaluation metrics and practical experimental settings when selecting object detection models for real-world applications.
Keywords
How to Cite

Achmad, et al. (2026). QoS-Based Assessment and Classification of Network Conditions Using OSPF and BGP Routing Protocols. International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computing, 3(2). https://doi.org/10.62951/ijamc.v3i2.293

Achmad, Refi Riduan; Reza, Muhammad Ali, "QoS-Based Assessment and Classification of Network Conditions Using OSPF and BGP Routing Protocols," International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computing, vol. 3, no. 2, 2026.

Achmad, Refi Riduan; Reza, Muhammad Ali. "QoS-Based Assessment and Classification of Network Conditions Using OSPF and BGP Routing Protocols." International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computing, vol. 3, no. 2, 2026.

Achmad, Refi Riduan; Reza, Muhammad Ali. "QoS-Based Assessment and Classification of Network Conditions Using OSPF and BGP Routing Protocols." International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computing 3, no. 2 (2026).

Achmad, et al. (2026) 'QoS-Based Assessment and Classification of Network Conditions Using OSPF and BGP Routing Protocols', International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computing, 3(2). doi: 10.62951/ijamc.v3i2.293.

Achmad, Refi Riduan; Reza, Muhammad Ali. QoS-Based Assessment and Classification of Network Conditions Using OSPF and BGP Routing Protocols. International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computing. 2026;3(2).

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