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abstracts
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A system for actor-action semantic segmentation.
classification images top-view grid map sequences autonomous driving
2,018
[ "A2D", "KTH", "Okutama-Action", "IMDB-BINARY", "EgoHands", "MoVi" ]
[ "Letter", "USPS" ]
[ { "dkey": "Letter", "dval": "Letter Recognition Data Set is a handwritten digit dataset. The task is to identify each of a large number of black-and-white rectangular pixel displays as one of the 26 capital letters in the English alphabet. The character images were based on 20 different fonts and each letter within these 20 fonts was randomly distorted to produce a file of 20,000 unique stimuli. Each stimulus was converted into 16 primitive numerical attributes (statistical moments and edge counts) which were then scaled to fit into a range of integer values from 0 through 15." }, { "dkey": "USPS", "dval": "USPS is a digit dataset automatically scanned from envelopes by the U.S. Postal Service containing a total of 9,298 16×16 pixel grayscale samples; the images are centered, normalized and show a broad range of font styles." }, { "dkey": "A2D", "dval": "A2D (Actor-Action Dataset) is a dataset for simultaneously inferring actors and actions in videos. A2D has seven actor classes (adult, baby, ball, bird, car, cat, and dog) and eight action classes (climb, crawl, eat, fly, jump, roll, run, and walk) not including the no-action class, which we also consider. The A2D has 3,782 videos with at least 99 instances per valid actor-action tuple and videos are labeled with both pixel-level actors and actions for sampled frames. The A2D dataset serves as a large-scale testbed for various vision problems: video-level single- and multiple-label actor-action recognition, instance-level object segmentation/co-segmentation, as well as pixel-level actor-action semantic segmentation to name a few." }, { "dkey": "KTH", "dval": "The efforts to create a non-trivial and publicly available dataset for action recognition was initiated at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in 2004. The KTH dataset is one of the most standard datasets, which contains six actions: walk, jog, run, box, hand-wave, and hand clap. To account for performance nuance, each action is performed by 25 different individuals, and the setting is systematically altered for each action per actor. Setting variations include: outdoor (s1), outdoor with scale variation (s2), outdoor with different clothes (s3), and indoor (s4). These variations test the ability of each algorithm to identify actions independent of the background, appearance of the actors, and the scale of the actors." }, { "dkey": "Okutama-Action", "dval": "A new video dataset for aerial view concurrent human action detection. It consists of 43 minute-long fully-annotated sequences with 12 action classes. Okutama-Action features many challenges missing in current datasets, including dynamic transition of actions, significant changes in scale and aspect ratio, abrupt camera movement, as well as multi-labeled actors." }, { "dkey": "IMDB-BINARY", "dval": "IMDB-BINARY is a movie collaboration dataset that consists of the ego-networks of 1,000 actors/actresses who played roles in movies in IMDB. In each graph, nodes represent actors/actress, and there is an edge between them if they appear in the same movie. These graphs are derived from the Action and Romance genres." }, { "dkey": "EgoHands", "dval": "The EgoHands dataset contains 48 Google Glass videos of complex, first-person interactions between two people. The main intention of this dataset is to enable better, data-driven approaches to understanding hands in first-person computer vision. The dataset offers\n\n\nhigh quality, pixel-level segmentations of hands\nthe possibility to semantically distinguish between the observer’s hands and someone else’s hands, as well as left and right hands\nvirtually unconstrained hand poses as actors freely engage in a set of joint activities\nlots of data with 15,053 ground-truth labeled hands" }, { "dkey": "MoVi", "dval": "Contains 60 female and 30 male actors performing a collection of 20 predefined everyday actions and sports movements, and one self-chosen movement." } ]
We propose a new framework for the video object segmentation problem that unifies object proposal, tracking,
video object segmentation
2,019
[ "VOT2018", "YouTubeVIS", "UA-DETRAC", "TLP" ]
[ "DAVIS", "COCO" ]
[ { "dkey": "DAVIS", "dval": "The Densely Annotation Video Segmentation dataset (DAVIS) is a high quality and high resolution densely annotated video segmentation dataset under two resolutions, 480p and 1080p. There are 50 video sequences with 3455 densely annotated frames in pixel level. 30 videos with 2079 frames are for training and 20 videos with 1376 frames are for validation." }, { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "VOT2018", "dval": "VOT2018 is a dataset for visual object tracking. It consists of 60 challenging videos collected from real-life datasets." }, { "dkey": "YouTubeVIS", "dval": "YouTubeVIS is a new dataset tailored for tasks like simultaneous detection, segmentation and tracking of object instances in videos and is collected based on the current largest video object segmentation dataset YouTubeVOS." }, { "dkey": "UA-DETRAC", "dval": "Consists of 100 challenging video sequences captured from real-world traffic scenes (over 140,000 frames with rich annotations, including occlusion, weather, vehicle category, truncation, and vehicle bounding boxes) for object detection, object tracking and MOT system." }, { "dkey": "TLP", "dval": "A new long video dataset and benchmark for single object tracking. The dataset consists of 50 HD videos from real world scenarios, encompassing a duration of over 400 minutes (676K frames), making it more than 20 folds larger in average duration per sequence and more than 8 folds larger in terms of total covered duration, as compared to existing generic datasets for visual tracking." } ]
Two large facial expression databases depicting challenging real-world conditions were constructed using a semi-automatic
facial expression recognition images speech
2,012
[ "300W", "RAF-DB", "BP4D", "FRGC", "COFW" ]
[ "MMI", "SFEW", "JAFFE" ]
[ { "dkey": "MMI", "dval": "The MMI Facial Expression Database consists of over 2900 videos and high-resolution still images of 75 subjects. It is fully annotated for the presence of AUs in videos (event coding), and partially coded on frame-level, indicating for each frame whether an AU is in either the neutral, onset, apex or offset phase. A small part was annotated for audio-visual laughters." }, { "dkey": "SFEW", "dval": "The Static Facial Expressions in the Wild (SFEW) dataset is a dataset for facial expression recognition. It was created by selecting static frames from the AFEW database by computing key frames based on facial point clustering. The most commonly used version, SFEW 2.0, was the benchmarking data for the SReco sub-challenge in EmotiW 2015. SFEW 2.0 has been divided into three sets: Train (958 samples), Val (436 samples) and Test (372 samples). Each of the images is assigned to one of seven expression categories, i.e., anger, disgust, fear, neutral, happiness, sadness, and surprise. The expression labels of the training and validation sets are publicly available, whereas those of the testing set are held back by the challenge organizer." }, { "dkey": "JAFFE", "dval": "The JAFFE dataset consists of 213 images of different facial expressions from 10 different Japanese female subjects. Each subject was asked to do 7 facial expressions (6 basic facial expressions and neutral) and the images were annotated with average semantic ratings on each facial expression by 60 annotators." }, { "dkey": "300W", "dval": "The 300-W is a face dataset that consists of 300 Indoor and 300 Outdoor in-the-wild images. It covers a large variation of identity, expression, illumination conditions, pose, occlusion and face size. The images were downloaded from google.com by making queries such as “party”, “conference”, “protests”, “football” and “celebrities”. Compared to the rest of in-the-wild datasets, the 300-W database contains a larger percentage of partially-occluded images and covers more expressions than the common “neutral” or “smile”, such as “surprise” or “scream”.\nImages were annotated with the 68-point mark-up using a semi-automatic methodology. The images of the database were carefully selected so that they represent a characteristic sample of challenging but natural face instances under totally unconstrained conditions. Thus, methods that achieve accurate performance on the 300-W database can demonstrate the same accuracy in most realistic cases.\nMany images of the database contain more than one annotated faces (293 images with 1 face, 53 images with 2 faces and 53 images with [3, 7] faces). Consequently, the database consists of 600 annotated face instances, but 399 unique images. Finally, there is a large variety of face sizes. Specifically, 49.3% of the faces have size in the range [48.6k, 2.0M] and the overall mean size is 85k (about 292 × 292) pixels." }, { "dkey": "RAF-DB", "dval": "The Real-world Affective Faces Database (RAF-DB) is a dataset for facial expression. It contains 29672 facial images tagged with basic or compound expressions by 40 independent taggers. Images in this database are of great variability in subjects' age, gender and ethnicity, head poses, lighting conditions, occlusions, (e.g. glasses, facial hair or self-occlusion), post-processing operations (e.g. various filters and special effects), etc." }, { "dkey": "BP4D", "dval": "The BP4D-Spontaneous dataset is a 3D video database of spontaneous facial expressions in a diverse group of young adults. Well-validated emotion inductions were used to elicit expressions of emotion and paralinguistic communication. Frame-level ground-truth for facial actions was obtained using the Facial Action Coding System. Facial features were tracked in both 2D and 3D domains using both person-specific and generic approaches.\nThe database includes forty-one participants (23 women, 18 men). They were 18 – 29 years of age; 11 were Asian, 6 were African-American, 4 were Hispanic, and 20 were Euro-American. An emotion elicitation protocol was designed to elicit emotions of participants effectively. Eight tasks were covered with an interview process and a series of activities to elicit eight emotions.\nThe database is structured by participants. Each participant is associated with 8 tasks. For each task, there are both 3D and 2D videos. As well, the Metadata include manually annotated action units (FACS AU), automatically tracked head pose, and 2D/3D facial landmarks. The database is in the size of about 2.6TB (without compression)." }, { "dkey": "FRGC", "dval": "The data for FRGC consists of 50,000 recordings divided into training and validation partitions. The training partition is designed for training algorithms and the validation partition is for assessing performance of an approach in a laboratory setting. The validation partition consists of data from 4,003 subject sessions. A subject session is the set of all images of a person taken each time a person's biometric data is collected and consists of four controlled still images, two uncontrolled still images, and one three-dimensional image. The controlled images were taken in a studio setting, are full frontal facial images taken under two lighting conditions and with two facial expressions (smiling and neutral). The uncontrolled images were taken in varying illumination conditions; e.g., hallways, atriums, or outside. Each set of uncontrolled images contains two expressions, smiling and neutral. The 3D image was taken under controlled illumination conditions. The 3D images consist of both a range and a texture image. The 3D images were acquired by a Minolta Vivid 900/910 series sensor." }, { "dkey": "COFW", "dval": "The Caltech Occluded Faces in the Wild (COFW) dataset is designed to present faces in real-world conditions. Faces show large variations in shape and occlusions due to differences in pose, expression, use of accessories such as sunglasses and hats and interactions with objects (e.g. food, hands, microphones,
etc.). All images were hand annotated using the same 29 landmarks as in LFPW. Both the landmark positions as well as their occluded/unoccluded state were annotated. The faces are occluded to different degrees, with large variations in the type of occlusions encountered. COFW has an average occlusion of over 23." } ]
I want to solve the problem of class-distinct and
class-distinct class-mutual image generation images
2,018
[ "LS3D-W", "AQUA-RAT", "SNIPS", "MathQA", "RAVEN" ]
[ "CIFAR-10", "CelebA" ]
[ { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "CelebA", "dval": "CelebFaces Attributes dataset contains 202,599 face images of the size 178×218 from 10,177 celebrities, each annotated with 40 binary labels indicating facial attributes like hair color, gender and age." }, { "dkey": "LS3D-W", "dval": "A 3D facial landmark dataset of around 230,000 images." }, { "dkey": "AQUA-RAT", "dval": "Algebra Question Answering with Rationales (AQUA-RAT) is a dataset that contains algebraic word problems with rationales. The dataset consists of about 100,000 algebraic word problems with natural language rationales. Each problem is a json object consisting of four parts:\n* question - A natural language definition of the problem to solve\n* options - 5 possible options (A, B, C, D and E), among which one is correct\n* rationale - A natural language description of the solution to the problem\n* correct - The correct option" }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "MathQA", "dval": "MathQA significantly enhances the AQuA dataset with fully-specified operational programs." }, { "dkey": "RAVEN", "dval": "RAVEN consists of 1,120,000 images and 70,000 RPM (Raven's Progressive Matrices)\nproblems, equally distributed in 7 distinct figure configurations." } ]
I want to train an unsupervised model for facial attribute generation from a single image.
facial attribute generation images
2,019
[ "FaceForensics", "ConvAI2", "Make3D", "MAFL", "I-HAZE" ]
[ "300W", "CelebA" ]
[ { "dkey": "300W", "dval": "The 300-W is a face dataset that consists of 300 Indoor and 300 Outdoor in-the-wild images. It covers a large variation of identity, expression, illumination conditions, pose, occlusion and face size. The images were downloaded from google.com by making queries such as “party”, “conference”, “protests”, “football” and “celebrities”. Compared to the rest of in-the-wild datasets, the 300-W database contains a larger percentage of partially-occluded images and covers more expressions than the common “neutral” or “smile”, such as “surprise” or “scream”.\nImages were annotated with the 68-point mark-up using a semi-automatic methodology. The images of the database were carefully selected so that they represent a characteristic sample of challenging but natural face instances under totally unconstrained conditions. Thus, methods that achieve accurate performance on the 300-W database can demonstrate the same accuracy in most realistic cases.\nMany images of the database contain more than one annotated faces (293 images with 1 face, 53 images with 2 faces and 53 images with [3, 7] faces). Consequently, the database consists of 600 annotated face instances, but 399 unique images. Finally, there is a large variety of face sizes. Specifically, 49.3% of the faces have size in the range [48.6k, 2.0M] and the overall mean size is 85k (about 292 × 292) pixels." }, { "dkey": "CelebA", "dval": "CelebFaces Attributes dataset contains 202,599 face images of the size 178×218 from 10,177 celebrities, each annotated with 40 binary labels indicating facial attributes like hair color, gender and age." }, { "dkey": "FaceForensics", "dval": "FaceForensics is a video dataset consisting of more than 500,000 frames containing faces from 1004 videos that can be used to study image or video forgeries. All videos are downloaded from Youtube and are cut down to short continuous clips that contain mostly frontal faces. This dataset has two versions:\n\n\n\nSource-to-Target: where the authors reenact over 1000 videos with new facial expressions extracted from other videos, which e.g. can be used to train a classifier to detect fake images or videos.\n\n\n\nSelfreenactment: where the authors use Face2Face to reenact the facial expressions of videos with their own facial expressions as input to get pairs of videos, which e.g. can be used to train supervised generative refinement models." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "Make3D", "dval": "The Make3D dataset is a monocular Depth Estimation dataset that contains 400 single training RGB and depth map pairs, and 134 test samples. The RGB images have high resolution, while the depth maps are provided at low resolution." }, { "dkey": "MAFL", "dval": "The MAFL dataset contains manually annotated facial landmark locations for 19,000 training and 1,000 test images." }, { "dkey": "I-HAZE", "dval": "The I-Haze dataset contains 25 indoor hazy images (size 2833×4657 pixels) training. It has 5 hazy images for validation along with their corresponding ground truth images." } ]
I want to train an unsupervised semantic segmentation system for autonomous driving.
semantic segmentation image top-down map sequences autonomous driving
2,019
[ "A2D2", "IDD", "DeepLoc", "LLAMAS", "SemanticKITTI", "BDD100K", "Drive&Act" ]
[ "ImageNet", "GTA5" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "GTA5", "dval": "The GTA5 dataset contains 24966 synthetic images with pixel level semantic annotation. The images have been rendered using the open-world video game Grand Theft Auto 5 and are all from the car perspective in the streets of American-style virtual cities. There are 19 semantic classes which are compatible with the ones of Cityscapes dataset." }, { "dkey": "A2D2", "dval": "Audi Autonomous Driving Dataset (A2D2) consists of simultaneously recorded images and 3D point clouds, together with 3D bounding boxes, semantic segmentation, instance segmentation, and data extracted from the automotive bus." }, { "dkey": "IDD", "dval": "IDD is a dataset for road scene understanding in unstructured environments used for semantic segmentation and object detection for autonomous driving. It consists of 10,004 images, finely annotated with 34 classes collected from 182 drive sequences on Indian roads." }, { "dkey": "DeepLoc", "dval": "DeepLoc is a large-scale urban outdoor localization dataset. The dataset is currently comprised of one scene spanning an area of 110 x 130 m, that a robot traverses multiple times with different driving patterns. The dataset creators use a LiDAR-based SLAM system with sub-centimeter and sub-degree accuracy to compute the pose labels that provided as groundtruth. Poses in the dataset are approximately spaced by 0.5 m which is twice as dense as other relocalization datasets.\n\nFurthermore, for each image the dataset creators provide pixel-wise semantic segmentation annotations for ten categories: Background, Sky, Road, Sidewalk, Grass, Vegetation, Building, Poles & Fences, Dynamic and Void. The dataset is divided into a train and test splits such that the train set comprises seven loops with alternating driving styles amounting to 2737 images, while the test set comprises three loops with a total of 1173 images. The dataset also contains global GPS/INS data and LiDAR measurements.\n\nThis dataset can be very challenging for vision based applications such as global localization, camera relocalization, semantic segmentation, visual odometry and loop closure detection, as it contains substantial lighting, weather changes, repeating structures, reflective and transparent glass buildings." }, { "dkey": "LLAMAS", "dval": "The unsupervised Labeled Lane MArkerS dataset (LLAMAS) is a dataset for lane detection and segmentation. It contains over 100,000 annotated images, with annotations of over 100 meters at a resolution of 1276 x 717 pixels. The Unsupervised Llamas dataset was annotated by creating high definition maps for automated driving including lane markers based on Lidar. \n\nPaper: Unsupervised Labeled Lane Markers Using Maps" }, { "dkey": "SemanticKITTI", "dval": "SemanticKITTI is a large-scale outdoor-scene dataset for point cloud semantic segmentation. It is derived from the KITTI Vision Odometry Benchmark which it extends with dense point-wise annotations for the complete 360 field-of-view of the employed automotive LiDAR. The dataset consists of 22 sequences. Overall, the dataset provides 23201 point clouds for training and 20351 for testing." }, { "dkey": "BDD100K", "dval": "Datasets drive vision progress, yet existing driving datasets are impoverished in terms of visual content and supported tasks to study multitask learning for autonomous driving. Researchers are usually constrained to study a small set of problems on one dataset, while real-world computer vision applications require performing tasks of various complexities. We construct BDD100K, the largest driving video dataset with 100K videos and 10 tasks to evaluate the exciting progress of image recognition algorithms on autonomous driving. The dataset possesses geographic, environmental, and weather diversity, which is useful for training models that are less likely to be surprised by new conditions. Based on this diverse dataset, we build a benchmark for heterogeneous multitask learning and study how to solve the tasks together. Our experiments show that special training strategies are needed for existing models to perform such heterogeneous tasks. BDD100K opens the door for future studies in this important venue. More detail is at the dataset home page." }, { "dkey": "Drive&Act", "dval": "The Drive&Act dataset is a state of the art multi modal benchmark for driver behavior recognition. The dataset includes 3D skeletons in addition to frame-wise hierarchical labels of 9.6 Million frames captured by 6 different views and 3 modalities (RGB, IR and depth).\n\nIt offers following key features:\n\n\n12h of video data in 29 long sequences\nCalibrated multi view camera system with 5 views\nMulti modal videos: NIR, Depth and Color data\nMarkerless motion capture: 3D Body Pose and Head Pose\nModel of the static interior of the car\n83 manually annotated hierarchical activity labels:\nLevel 1: Long running tasks (12)\nLevel 2: Semantic actions (34)\nLevel 3: Object Interaction tripplets [action|object|location] (6|17|14)" } ]
I want to find a cost function for stereo matching which is more robust against radiometric changes in real
stereo matching images
2,017
[ "SNIPS", "KITTI-Depth", "METU Trademark", "WildDeepfake", "TDIUC", "NAB", "DrivingStereo" ]
[ "Middlebury", "KITTI" ]
[ { "dkey": "Middlebury", "dval": "The Middlebury Stereo dataset consists of high-resolution stereo sequences with complex geometry and pixel-accurate ground-truth disparity data. The ground-truth disparities are acquired using a novel technique that employs structured lighting and does not require the calibration of the light projectors." }, { "dkey": "KITTI", "dval": "KITTI (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Toyota Technological Institute) is one of the most popular datasets for use in mobile robotics and autonomous driving. It consists of hours of traffic scenarios recorded with a variety of sensor modalities, including high-resolution RGB, grayscale stereo cameras, and a 3D laser scanner. Despite its popularity, the dataset itself does not contain ground truth for semantic segmentation. However, various researchers have manually annotated parts of the dataset to fit their necessities. Álvarez et al. generated ground truth for 323 images from the road detection challenge with three classes: road, vertical, and sky. Zhang et al. annotated 252 (140 for training and 112 for testing) acquisitions – RGB and Velodyne scans – from the tracking challenge for ten object categories: building, sky, road, vegetation, sidewalk, car, pedestrian, cyclist, sign/pole, and fence. Ros et al. labeled 170 training images and 46 testing images (from the visual odometry challenge) with 11 classes: building, tree, sky, car, sign, road, pedestrian, fence, pole, sidewalk, and bicyclist." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "KITTI-Depth", "dval": "The KITTI-Depth dataset includes depth maps from projected LiDAR point clouds that were matched against the depth estimation from the stereo cameras. The depth images are highly sparse with only 5% of the pixels available and the rest is missing. The dataset has 86k training images, 7k validation images, and 1k test set images on the benchmark server with no access to the ground truth." }, { "dkey": "METU Trademark", "dval": "The METU Trademark Dataset is a large dataset (the largest publicly available logo dataset as of 2014, and the largest one not requiring any preprocessing as of 2017), which is composed of more than 900K real logos belonging to real companies worldwide. The dataset also includes query sets of varying difficulties, allowing Trademark Retrieval researchers to benchmark their methods against other methods to progress the field." }, { "dkey": "WildDeepfake", "dval": "WildDeepfake is a dataset for real-world deepfakes detection which consists of 7,314 face sequences extracted from 707 deepfake videos that are collected completely from the internet. WildDeepfake is a small dataset that can be used, in addition to existing datasets, to develop more effective detectors against real-world deepfakes." }, { "dkey": "TDIUC", "dval": "Task Directed Image Understanding Challenge (TDIUC) dataset is a Visual Question Answering dataset which consists of 1.6M questions and 170K images sourced from MS COCO and the Visual Genome Dataset. The image-question pairs are split into 12 categories and 4 additional evaluation matrices which help evaluate models’ robustness against answer imbalance and its ability to answer questions that require higher reasoning capability. The TDIUC dataset divides the VQA paradigm into 12 different task directed question types. These include questions that require a simpler task (e.g., object presence, color attribute) and more complex tasks (e.g., counting, positional reasoning). The dataset includes also an “Absurd” question category in which questions are irrelevant to the image contents to help balance the dataset." }, { "dkey": "NAB", "dval": "The First Temporal Benchmark Designed to Evaluate Real-time Anomaly Detectors Benchmark\n\nThe growth of the Internet of Things has created an abundance of streaming data. Finding anomalies in this data can provide valuable insights into opportunities or failures. Yet it’s difficult to achieve, due to the need to process data in real time, continuously learn and make predictions. How do we evaluate and compare various real-time anomaly detection techniques? \n\nThe Numenta Anomaly Benchmark (NAB) provides a standard, open source framework for evaluating real-time anomaly detection algorithms on streaming data. Through a controlled, repeatable environment of open-source tools, NAB rewards detectors that find anomalies as soon as possible, trigger no false alarms, and automatically adapt to any changing statistics. \n\nNAB comprises two main components: a scoring system designed for streaming data and a dataset with labeled, real-world time-series data." }, { "dkey": "DrivingStereo", "dval": "DrivingStereo contains over 180k images covering a diverse set of driving scenarios, which is hundreds of times larger than the KITTI Stereo dataset. High-quality labels of disparity are produced by a model-guided filtering strategy from multi-frame LiDAR points." } ]
I want to train a supervised model for action and object category recognition from video.
action object category recognition video
2,017
[ "Kinetics-600", "EPIC-KITCHENS-100", "HMDB51", "Charades", "NTU RGB+D", "Kinetics" ]
[ "ImageNet", "UCF101", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "UCF101", "dval": "UCF101 dataset is an extension of UCF50 and consists of 13,320 video clips, which are classified into 101 categories. These 101 categories can be classified into 5 types (Body motion, Human-human interactions, Human-object interactions, Playing musical instruments and Sports). The total length of these video clips is over 27 hours. All the videos are collected from YouTube and have a fixed frame rate of 25 FPS with the resolution of 320 × 240." }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "Kinetics-600", "dval": "The Kinetics-600 is a large-scale action recognition dataset which consists of around 480K videos from 600 action categories. The 480K videos are divided into 390K, 30K, 60K for training, validation and test sets, respectively. Each video in the dataset is a 10-second clip of action moment annotated from raw YouTube video. It is an extensions of the Kinetics-400 dataset." }, { "dkey": "EPIC-KITCHENS-100", "dval": "This paper introduces the pipeline to scale the largest dataset in egocentric vision EPIC-KITCHENS. The effort culminates in EPIC-KITCHENS-100, a collection of 100 hours, 20M frames, 90K actions in 700 variable-length videos, capturing long-term unscripted activities in 45 environments, using head-mounted cameras. Compared to its previous version (EPIC-KITCHENS-55), EPIC-KITCHENS-100 has been annotated using a novel pipeline that allows denser (54% more actions per minute) and more complete annotations of fine-grained actions (+128% more action segments). This collection also enables evaluating the \"test of time\" - i.e. whether models trained on data collected in 2018 can generalise to new footage collected under the same hypotheses albeit \"two years on\".\nThe dataset is aligned with 6 challenges: action recognition (full and weak supervision), action detection, action anticipation, cross-modal retrieval (from captions), as well as unsupervised domain adaptation for action recognition. For each challenge, we define the task, provide baselines and evaluation metrics." }, { "dkey": "HMDB51", "dval": "The HMDB51 dataset is a large collection of realistic videos from various sources, including movies and web videos. The dataset is composed of 6,766 video clips from 51 action categories (such as “jump”, “kiss” and “laugh”), with each category containing at least 101 clips. The original evaluation scheme uses three different training/testing splits. In each split, each action class has 70 clips for training and 30 clips for testing. The average accuracy over these three splits is used to measure the final performance." }, { "dkey": "Charades", "dval": "The Charades dataset is composed of 9,848 videos of daily indoors activities with an average length of 30 seconds, involving interactions with 46 objects classes in 15 types of indoor scenes and containing a vocabulary of 30 verbs leading to 157 action classes. Each video in this dataset is annotated by multiple free-text descriptions, action labels, action intervals and classes of interacting objects. 267 different users were presented with a sentence, which includes objects and actions from a fixed vocabulary, and they recorded a video acting out the sentence. In total, the dataset contains 66,500 temporal annotations for 157 action classes, 41,104 labels for 46 object classes, and 27,847 textual descriptions of the videos. In the standard split there are7,986 training video and 1,863 validation video." }, { "dkey": "NTU RGB+D", "dval": "NTU RGB+D is a large-scale dataset for RGB-D human action recognition. It involves 56,880 samples of 60 action classes collected from 40 subjects. The actions can be generally divided into three categories: 40 daily actions (e.g., drinking, eating, reading), nine health-related actions (e.g., sneezing, staggering, falling down), and 11 mutual actions (e.g., punching, kicking, hugging). These actions take place under 17 different scene conditions corresponding to 17 video sequences (i.e., S001–S017). The actions were captured using three cameras with different horizontal imaging viewpoints, namely, −45∘,0∘, and +45∘. Multi-modality information is provided for action characterization, including depth maps, 3D skeleton joint position, RGB frames, and infrared sequences. The performance evaluation is performed by a cross-subject test that split the 40 subjects into training and test groups, and by a cross-view test that employed one camera (+45∘) for testing, and the other two cameras for training." }, { "dkey": "Kinetics", "dval": "The Kinetics dataset is a large-scale, high-quality dataset for human action recognition in videos. The dataset consists of around 500,000 video clips covering 600 human action classes with at least 600 video clips for each action class. Each video clip lasts around 10 seconds and is labeled with a single action class. The videos are collected from YouTube." } ]
We propose a novel attention based deep learning architecture for visual question answering task (V
visual question answering images text paragraph-level
2,015
[ "COG", "30MQA", "VizWiz", "TDIUC", "VisDial", "LEAF-QA", "VQA-HAT" ]
[ "COCO", "DAQUAR" ]
[ { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "DAQUAR", "dval": "DAQUAR (DAtaset for QUestion Answering on Real-world images) is a dataset of human question answer pairs about images." }, { "dkey": "COG", "dval": "A configurable visual question and answer dataset (COG) to parallel experiments in humans and animals. COG is much simpler than the general problem of video analysis, yet it addresses many of the problems relating to visual and logical reasoning and memory -- problems that remain challenging for modern deep learning architectures." }, { "dkey": "30MQA", "dval": "An enormous question answer pair corpus produced by applying a novel neural network architecture on the knowledge base Freebase to transduce facts into natural language questions." }, { "dkey": "VizWiz", "dval": "The VizWiz-VQA dataset originates from a natural visual question answering setting where blind people each took an image and recorded a spoken question about it, together with 10 crowdsourced answers per visual question. The proposed challenge addresses the following two tasks for this dataset: predict the answer to a visual question and (2) predict whether a visual question cannot be answered." }, { "dkey": "TDIUC", "dval": "Task Directed Image Understanding Challenge (TDIUC) dataset is a Visual Question Answering dataset which consists of 1.6M questions and 170K images sourced from MS COCO and the Visual Genome Dataset. The image-question pairs are split into 12 categories and 4 additional evaluation matrices which help evaluate models’ robustness against answer imbalance and its ability to answer questions that require higher reasoning capability. The TDIUC dataset divides the VQA paradigm into 12 different task directed question types. These include questions that require a simpler task (e.g., object presence, color attribute) and more complex tasks (e.g., counting, positional reasoning). The dataset includes also an “Absurd” question category in which questions are irrelevant to the image contents to help balance the dataset." }, { "dkey": "VisDial", "dval": "Visual Dialog (VisDial) dataset contains human annotated questions based on images of MS COCO dataset. This dataset was developed by pairing two subjects on Amazon Mechanical Turk to chat about an image. One person was assigned the job of a ‘questioner’ and the other person acted as an ‘answerer’. The questioner sees only the text description of an image (i.e., an image caption from MS COCO dataset) and the original image remains hidden to the questioner. Their task is to ask questions about this hidden image to “imagine the scene better”. The answerer sees the image, caption and answers the questions asked by the questioner. The two of them can continue the conversation by asking and answering questions for 10 rounds at max.\n\nVisDial v1.0 contains 123K dialogues on MS COCO (2017 training set) for training split, 2K dialogues with validation images for validation split and 8K dialogues on test set for test-standard set. The previously released v0.5 and v0.9 versions of VisDial dataset (corresponding to older splits of MS COCO) are considered deprecated." }, { "dkey": "LEAF-QA", "dval": "LEAF-QA, a comprehensive dataset of 250,000 densely annotated figures/charts, constructed from real-world open data sources, along with ~2 million question-answer (QA) pairs querying the structure and semantics of these charts. LEAF-QA highlights the problem of multimodal QA, which is notably different from conventional visual QA (VQA), and has recently gained interest in the community. Furthermore, LEAF-QA is significantly more complex than previous attempts at chart QA, viz. FigureQA and DVQA, which present only limited variations in chart data. LEAF-QA being constructed from real-world sources, requires a novel architecture to enable question answering." }, { "dkey": "VQA-HAT", "dval": "VQA-HAT (Human ATtention) is a dataset to evaluate the informative regions of an image depending on the question being asked about it. The dataset consists of human visual attention maps over the images in the original VQA dataset. It contains more than 60k attention maps." } ]
I am interested in designing neural network architectures for the [DATASET] classification task.
neural architecture search
2,019
[ "30MQA", "Chickenpox Cases in Hungary", "CODEBRIM", "DuoRC", "ConvAI2" ]
[ "ImageNet", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "30MQA", "dval": "An enormous question answer pair corpus produced by applying a novel neural network architecture on the knowledge base Freebase to transduce facts into natural language questions." }, { "dkey": "Chickenpox Cases in Hungary", "dval": "Chickenpox Cases in Hungary is a spatio-temporal dataset of weekly chickenpox (childhood disease) cases from Hungary. It can be used as a longitudinal dataset for benchmarking the predictive performance of spatiotemporal graph neural network architectures. The dataset consists of a county-level adjacency matrix and time series of the county-level reported cases between 2005 and 2015. There are 2 specific related tasks:\n\n\nCounty level case count prediction.\nNational level case count prediction." }, { "dkey": "CODEBRIM", "dval": "Dataset for multi-target classification of five commonly appearing concrete defects." }, { "dkey": "DuoRC", "dval": "DuoRC contains 186,089 unique question-answer pairs created from a collection of 7680 pairs of movie plots where each pair in the collection reflects two versions of the same movie.\n\nWhy another RC dataset?\n\nDuoRC pushes the NLP community to address challenges on incorporating knowledge and reasoning in neural architectures for reading comprehension. It poses several interesting challenges such as:\n\n\nDuoRC using parallel plots is especially designed to contain a large number of questions with low lexical overlap between questions and their corresponding passages\nIt requires models to go beyond the content of the given passage itself and incorporate world-knowledge, background knowledge, and common-sense knowledge to arrive at the answer\nIt revolves around narrative passages from movie plots describing complex events and therefore naturally require complex reasoning (e.g. temporal reasoning, entailment, long-distance anaphoras, etc.) across multiple sentences to infer the answer to questions\nSeveral of the questions in DuoRC, while seeming relevant, cannot actually be answered from the given passage. This requires the model to detect the unanswerability of questions. This aspect is important for machines to achieve in industrial settings in particular" }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." } ]
We propose a new approach that improves triplet loss to learn more discriminative features.
person re-identification video
2,018
[ "SuperGLUE", "WN18", "Places", "HIGGS Data Set", "DAVIS 2016" ]
[ "Market-1501", "CUHK03" ]
[ { "dkey": "Market-1501", "dval": "Market-1501 is a large-scale public benchmark dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1501 identities which are captured by six different cameras, and 32,668 pedestrian image bounding-boxes obtained using the Deformable Part Models pedestrian detector. Each person has 3.6 images on average at each viewpoint. The dataset is split into two parts: 750 identities are utilized for training and the remaining 751 identities are used for testing. In the official testing protocol 3,368 query images are selected as probe set to find the correct match across 19,732 reference gallery images." }, { "dkey": "CUHK03", "dval": "The CUHK03 consists of 14,097 images of 1,467 different identities, where 6 campus cameras were deployed for image collection and each identity is captured by 2 campus cameras. This dataset provides two types of annotations, one by manually labelled bounding boxes and the other by bounding boxes produced by an automatic detector. The dataset also provides 20 random train/test splits in which 100 identities are selected for testing and the rest for training" }, { "dkey": "SuperGLUE", "dval": "SuperGLUE is a benchmark dataset designed to pose a more rigorous test of language understanding than GLUE. SuperGLUE has the same high-level motivation as GLUE: to provide a simple, hard-to-game measure of progress toward general-purpose language understanding technologies for English. SuperGLUE follows the basic design of GLUE: It consists of a public leaderboard built around eight language understanding tasks, drawing on existing data, accompanied by a single-number\nperformance metric, and an analysis toolkit. However, it improves upon GLUE in several ways:\n\n\nMore challenging tasks: SuperGLUE retains the two hardest tasks in GLUE. The remaining tasks were identified from those submitted to an open call for task proposals and were selected based on difficulty for current NLP approaches.\nMore diverse task formats: The task formats in GLUE are limited to sentence- and sentence-pair classification. The authors expand the set of task formats in SuperGLUE to include\ncoreference resolution and question answering (QA).\nComprehensive human baselines: the authors include human performance estimates for all benchmark tasks, which verify that substantial headroom exists between a strong BERT-based baseline and human performance.\nImproved code support: SuperGLUE is distributed with a new, modular toolkit for work on pretraining, multi-task learning, and transfer learning in NLP, built around standard tools including PyTorch (Paszke et al., 2017) and AllenNLP (Gardner et al., 2017).\nRefined usage rules: The conditions for inclusion on the SuperGLUE leaderboard were revamped to ensure fair competition, an informative leaderboard, and full credit\nassignment to data and task creators." }, { "dkey": "WN18", "dval": "The WN18 dataset has 18 relations scraped from WordNet for roughly 41,000 synsets, resulting in 141,442 triplets. It was found out that a large number of the test triplets can be found in the training set with another relation or the inverse relation. Therefore, a new version of the dataset WN18RR has been proposed to address this issue." }, { "dkey": "Places", "dval": "The Places dataset is proposed for scene recognition and contains more than 2.5 million images covering more than 205 scene categories with more than 5,000 images per category." }, { "dkey": "HIGGS Data Set", "dval": "The data has been produced using Monte Carlo simulations. The first 21 features (columns 2-22) are kinematic properties measured by the particle detectors in the accelerator. The last seven features are functions of the first 21 features; these are high-level features derived by physicists to help discriminate between the two classes. There is an interest in using deep learning methods to obviate the need for physicists to manually develop such features. Benchmark results using Bayesian Decision Trees from a standard physics package and 5-layer neural networks are presented in the original paper. The last 500,000 examples are used as a test set." }, { "dkey": "DAVIS 2016", "dval": "DAVIS16 is a dataset for video object segmentation which consists of 50 videos in total (30 videos for training and 20 for testing). Per-frame pixel-wise annotations are offered." } ]
A robust facial landmark detection model that is more robust to noise and occlusion.
facial landmark detection image
2,019
[ "SoF", "LaPa", "AFLW2000-3D", "OccludedPASCAL3D+", "RAF-DB", "UTKFace" ]
[ "WFLW", "300W", "AFLW" ]
[ { "dkey": "WFLW", "dval": "The Wider Facial Landmarks in the Wild or WFLW database contains 10000 faces (7500 for training and 2500 for testing) with 98 annotated landmarks. This database also features rich attribute annotations in terms of occlusion, head pose, make-up, illumination, blur and expressions." }, { "dkey": "300W", "dval": "The 300-W is a face dataset that consists of 300 Indoor and 300 Outdoor in-the-wild images. It covers a large variation of identity, expression, illumination conditions, pose, occlusion and face size. The images were downloaded from google.com by making queries such as “party”, “conference”, “protests”, “football” and “celebrities”. Compared to the rest of in-the-wild datasets, the 300-W database contains a larger percentage of partially-occluded images and covers more expressions than the common “neutral” or “smile”, such as “surprise” or “scream”.\nImages were annotated with the 68-point mark-up using a semi-automatic methodology. The images of the database were carefully selected so that they represent a characteristic sample of challenging but natural face instances under totally unconstrained conditions. Thus, methods that achieve accurate performance on the 300-W database can demonstrate the same accuracy in most realistic cases.\nMany images of the database contain more than one annotated faces (293 images with 1 face, 53 images with 2 faces and 53 images with [3, 7] faces). Consequently, the database consists of 600 annotated face instances, but 399 unique images. Finally, there is a large variety of face sizes. Specifically, 49.3% of the faces have size in the range [48.6k, 2.0M] and the overall mean size is 85k (about 292 × 292) pixels." }, { "dkey": "AFLW", "dval": "The Annotated Facial Landmarks in the Wild (AFLW) is a large-scale collection of annotated face images gathered from Flickr, exhibiting a large variety in appearance (e.g., pose, expression, ethnicity, age, gender) as well as general imaging and environmental conditions. In total about 25K faces are annotated with up to 21 landmarks per image." }, { "dkey": "SoF", "dval": "The Specs on Faces (SoF) dataset, a collection of 42,592 (2,662×16) images for 112 persons (66 males and 46 females) who wear glasses under different illumination conditions. The dataset is FREE for reasonable academic fair use. The dataset presents a new challenge regarding face detection and recognition. It is focused on two challenges: harsh illumination environments and face occlusions, which highly affect face detection, recognition, and classification. The glasses are the common natural occlusion in all images of the dataset. However, there are two more synthetic occlusions (nose and mouth) added to each image. Moreover, three image filters, that may evade face detectors and facial recognition systems, were applied to each image. All generated images are categorized into three levels of difficulty (easy, medium, and hard). That enlarges the number of images to be 42,592 images (26,112 male images and 16,480 female images). There is metadata for each image that contains many information such as: the subject ID, facial landmarks, face and glasses rectangles, gender and age labels, year that the photo was taken, facial emotion, glasses type, and more." }, { "dkey": "LaPa", "dval": "A large-scale Landmark guided face Parsing dataset (LaPa) for face parsing. It consists of more than 22,000 facial images with abundant variations in expression, pose and occlusion, and each image of LaPa is provided with a 11-category pixel-level label map and 106-point landmarks." }, { "dkey": "AFLW2000-3D", "dval": "AFLW2000-3D is a dataset of 2000 images that have been annotated with image-level 68-point 3D facial landmarks. This dataset is used for evaluation of 3D facial landmark detection models. The head poses are very diverse and often hard to be detected by a CNN-based face detector." }, { "dkey": "OccludedPASCAL3D+", "dval": "The OccludedPASCAL3D+ is a dataset is designed to evaluate the robustness to occlusion for a number of computer vision tasks, such as object detection, keypoint detection and pose estimation. In the OccludedPASCAL3D+ dataset, we simulate partial occlusion by superimposing objects cropped from the MS-COCO dataset on top of objects from the PASCAL3D+ dataset. We only use ImageNet subset in PASCAL3D+, which has 10812 testing images." }, { "dkey": "RAF-DB", "dval": "The Real-world Affective Faces Database (RAF-DB) is a dataset for facial expression. It contains 29672 facial images tagged with basic or compound expressions by 40 independent taggers. Images in this database are of great variability in subjects' age, gender and ethnicity, head poses, lighting conditions, occlusions, (e.g. glasses, facial hair or self-occlusion), post-processing operations (e.g. various filters and special effects), etc." }, { "dkey": "UTKFace", "dval": "The UTKFace dataset is a large-scale face dataset with long age span (range from 0 to 116 years old). The dataset consists of over 20,000 face images with annotations of age, gender, and ethnicity. The images cover large variation in pose, facial expression, illumination, occlusion, resolution, etc. This dataset could be used on a variety of tasks, e.g., face detection, age estimation, age progression/regression, landmark localization, etc." } ]
A system that can predict accurate saliency maps by incorporating neural attentive mechanisms.
saliency prediction images
2,016
[ "PadChest", "CoSal2015", "GVGAI", "VOT2016", "ECSSD" ]
[ "CAT2000", "SALICON" ]
[ { "dkey": "CAT2000", "dval": "Includes 4000 images; 200 from each of 20 categories covering different types of scenes such as Cartoons, Art, Objects, Low resolution images, Indoor, Outdoor, Jumbled, Random, and Line drawings." }, { "dkey": "SALICON", "dval": "The SALIency in CONtext (SALICON) dataset contains 10,000 training images, 5,000 validation images and 5,000 test images for saliency prediction. This dataset has been created by annotating saliency in images from MS COCO.\nThe ground-truth saliency annotations include fixations generated from mouse trajectories. To improve the data quality, isolated fixations with low local density have been excluded.\nThe training and validation sets, provided with ground truth, contain the following data fields: image, resolution and gaze.\nThe testing data contains only the image and resolution fields." }, { "dkey": "PadChest", "dval": "PadChest is a labeled large-scale, high resolution chest x-ray dataset for the automated exploration\nof medical images along with their associated reports. This dataset includes more than 160,000\nimages obtained from 67,000 patients that were interpreted and reported by radiologists at Hospital\nSan Juan Hospital (Spain) from 2009 to 2017, covering six different position views and additional\ninformation on image acquisition and patient demography. The reports were labeled with 174 different\nradiographic findings, 19 differential diagnoses and 104 anatomic locations organized as a hierarchical\ntaxonomy and mapped onto standard Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) terminology. Of\nthese reports, 27% were manually annotated by trained physicians and the remaining set was labeled\nusing a supervised method based on a recurrent neural network with attention mechanisms. The labels\ngenerated were then validated in an independent test set achieving a 0.93 Micro-F1 score." }, { "dkey": "CoSal2015", "dval": "Cosal2015 is a large-scale dataset for co-saliency detection which consists of 2,015 images of 50 categories, and each group suffers from various challenging factors such as complex environments, occlusion issues, target appearance variations and background clutters, etc. All these increase the difficulty for accurate co-saliency detection." }, { "dkey": "GVGAI", "dval": "The General Video Game AI (GVGAI) framework is widely used in research which features a corpus of over 100 single-player games and 60 two-player games. These are fairly small games, each focusing on specific mechanics or skills the players should be able to demonstrate, including clones of classic arcade games such as Space Invaders, puzzle games like Sokoban, adventure games like Zelda or game-theory problems such as the Iterative Prisoners Dilemma. All games are real-time and require players to make decisions in only 40ms at every game tick, although not all games explicitly reward or require fast reactions; in fact, some of the best game-playing approaches add up the time in the beginning of the game to run Breadth-First Search in puzzle games in order to find an accurate solution. However, given the large variety of games (many of which are stochastic and difficult to predict accurately), scoring systems and termination conditions, all unknown to the players, highly-adaptive general methods are needed to tackle the diverse challenges proposed." }, { "dkey": "VOT2016", "dval": "VOT2016 is a video dataset for visual object tracking. It contains 60 video clips and 21,646 corresponding ground truth maps with pixel-wise annotation of salient objects." }, { "dkey": "ECSSD", "dval": "The Extended Complex Scene Saliency Dataset (ECSSD) is comprised of complex scenes, presenting textures and structures common to real-world images. ECSSD contains 1,000 intricate images and respective ground-truth saliency maps, created as an average of the labeling of five human participants." } ]
Future action forecasting is the task of predicting future symbolic action sequence that is required to accomplish the
future action forecasting rgb video
2,019
[ "TITAN", "Argoverse", "FPL", "BABEL", "ProPara", "Moral Stories" ]
[ "Charades", "Breakfast" ]
[ { "dkey": "Charades", "dval": "The Charades dataset is composed of 9,848 videos of daily indoors activities with an average length of 30 seconds, involving interactions with 46 objects classes in 15 types of indoor scenes and containing a vocabulary of 30 verbs leading to 157 action classes. Each video in this dataset is annotated by multiple free-text descriptions, action labels, action intervals and classes of interacting objects. 267 different users were presented with a sentence, which includes objects and actions from a fixed vocabulary, and they recorded a video acting out the sentence. In total, the dataset contains 66,500 temporal annotations for 157 action classes, 41,104 labels for 46 object classes, and 27,847 textual descriptions of the videos. In the standard split there are7,986 training video and 1,863 validation video." }, { "dkey": "Breakfast", "dval": "The Breakfast Actions Dataset comprises of 10 actions related to breakfast preparation, performed by 52 different individuals in 18 different kitchens. The dataset is one of the largest fully annotated datasets available. The actions are recorded “in the wild” as opposed to a single controlled lab environment. It consists of over 77 hours of video recordings." }, { "dkey": "TITAN", "dval": "TITAN consists of 700 labeled video-clips (with odometry) captured from a moving vehicle on highly interactive urban traffic scenes in Tokyo. The dataset includes 50 labels including vehicle states and actions, pedestrian age groups, and targeted pedestrian action attributes that are organized hierarchically corresponding to atomic, simple/complex-contextual, transportive, and communicative actions." }, { "dkey": "Argoverse", "dval": "Argoverse is a tracking benchmark with over 30K scenarios collected in Pittsburgh and Miami. Each scenario is a sequence of frames sampled at 10 HZ. Each sequence has an interesting object called “agent”, and the task is to predict the future locations of agents in a 3 seconds future horizon. The sequences are split into training, validation and test sets, which have 205,942, 39,472 and 78,143 sequences respectively. These splits have no geographical overlap." }, { "dkey": "FPL", "dval": "Supports new task that predicts future locations of people observed in first-person videos." }, { "dkey": "BABEL", "dval": "BABEL is a large dataset with language labels describing the actions being performed in mocap sequences. BABEL consists of action labels for about 43 hours of mocap sequences from AMASS. Action labels are at two levels of abstraction -- sequence labels describe the overall action in the sequence, and frame labels describe all actions in every frame of the sequence. Each frame label is precisely aligned with the duration of the corresponding action in the mocap sequence, and multiple actions can overlap. There are over 28k sequence labels, and 63k frame labels in BABEL, which belong to over 250 unique action categories. Labels from BABEL can be leveraged for tasks like action recognition, temporal action localization, motion synthesis, etc." }, { "dkey": "ProPara", "dval": "The ProPara dataset is designed to train and test comprehension of simple paragraphs describing processes (e.g., photosynthesis), designed for the task of predicting, tracking, and answering questions about how entities change during the process.\n\nProPara aims to promote the research in natural language understanding in the context of procedural text. This requires identifying the actions described in the paragraph and tracking state changes happening to the entities involved. The comprehension task is treated as that of predicting, tracking, and answering questions about how entities change during the procedure. The dataset contains 488 paragraphs and 3,300 sentences. Each paragraph is richly annotated with the existence and locations of all the main entities (the “participants”) at every time step (sentence) throughout the procedure (~81,000 annotations).\n\nProPara paragraphs are natural (authored by crowdsourcing) rather than synthetic (e.g., in bAbI). Workers were given a prompt (e.g., “What happens during photosynthesis?”) and then asked to author a series of sentences describing the sequence of events in the procedure. From these sentences, participant entities and their existence and locations were identified. The goal of the challenge is to predict the existence and location of each participant, based on sentences in the paragraph." }, { "dkey": "Moral Stories", "dval": "Moral Stories is a crowd-sourced dataset of structured narratives that describe normative and norm-divergent actions taken by individuals to accomplish certain intentions in concrete situations, and their respective consequences." } ]
I want to train a supervised model for image question answering.
image question answering images
2,016
[ "CommonsenseQA", "TVQA", "VQA-CP", "iVQA", "OpenBookQA", "RecipeQA" ]
[ "COCO", "DAQUAR" ]
[ { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "DAQUAR", "dval": "DAQUAR (DAtaset for QUestion Answering on Real-world images) is a dataset of human question answer pairs about images." }, { "dkey": "CommonsenseQA", "dval": "The CommonsenseQA is a dataset for commonsense question answering task. The dataset consists of 12,247 questions with 5 choices each.\nThe dataset was generated by Amazon Mechanical Turk workers in the following process (an example is provided in parentheses):\n\n\na crowd worker observes a source concept from ConceptNet (“River”) and three target concepts (“Waterfall”, “Bridge”, “Valley”) that are all related by the same ConceptNet relation (“AtLocation”),\nthe worker authors three questions, one per target concept, such that only that particular target concept is the answer, while the other two distractor concepts are not, (“Where on a river can you hold a cup upright to catch water on a sunny day?”, “Where can I stand on a river to see water falling without getting wet?”, “I’m crossing the river, my feet are wet but my body is dry, where am I?”)\nfor each question, another worker chooses one additional distractor from Concept Net (“pebble”, “stream”, “bank”), and the author another distractor (“mountain”, “bottom”, “island”) manually." }, { "dkey": "TVQA", "dval": "The TVQA dataset is a large-scale vido dataset for video question answering. It is based on 6 popular TV shows (Friends, The Big Bang Theory, How I Met Your Mother, House M.D., Grey's Anatomy, Castle). It includes 152,545 QA pairs from 21,793 TV show clips. The QA pairs are split into the ratio of 8:1:1 for training, validation, and test sets. The TVQA dataset provides the sequence of video frames extracted at 3 FPS, the corresponding subtitles with the video clips, and the query consisting of a question and four answer candidates. Among the four answer candidates, there is only one correct answer." }, { "dkey": "VQA-CP", "dval": "The VQA-CP dataset was constructed by reorganizing VQA v2 such that the correlation between the question type and correct answer differs in the training and test splits. For example, the most common answer to questions starting with What sport… is tennis in the training set, but skiing in the test set. A model that guesses an answer primarily from the question will perform poorly." }, { "dkey": "iVQA", "dval": "An open-ended VideoQA benchmark that aims to: i) provide a well-defined evaluation by including five correct answer annotations per question and ii) avoid questions which can be answered without the video. \n\niVQA contains 10,000 video clips with one question and five corresponding answers per clip. Moreover, we manually reduce the language bias by excluding questions that could be answered without watching the video." }, { "dkey": "OpenBookQA", "dval": "OpenBookQA is a new kind of question-answering dataset modeled after open book exams for assessing human understanding of a subject. It consists of 5,957 multiple-choice elementary-level science questions (4,957 train, 500 dev, 500 test), which probe the understanding of a small “book” of 1,326 core science facts and the application of these facts to novel situations. For training, the dataset includes a mapping from each question to the core science fact it was designed to probe. Answering OpenBookQA questions requires additional broad common knowledge, not contained in the book. The questions, by design, are answered incorrectly by both a retrieval-based algorithm and a word co-occurrence algorithm.\nAdditionally, the dataset includes a collection of 5,167 crowd-sourced common knowledge facts, and an expanded version of the train/dev/test questions where each question is associated with its originating core fact, a human accuracy score, a clarity score, and an anonymized crowd-worker ID." }, { "dkey": "RecipeQA", "dval": "RecipeQA is a dataset for multimodal comprehension of cooking recipes. It consists of over 36K question-answer pairs automatically generated from approximately 20K unique recipes with step-by-step instructions and images. Each question in RecipeQA involves multiple modalities such as titles, descriptions or images, and working towards an answer requires (i) joint understanding of images and text, (ii) capturing the temporal flow of events, and (iii) making sense of procedural knowledge." } ]
ABCNN, an attention based convolutional neural network, which is able to capture interdependent sentence representations for
answer selection text
2,016
[ "MLFP", "ObjectNet", "TUM-GAID", "AIDS" ]
[ "WikiQA", "SICK" ]
[ { "dkey": "WikiQA", "dval": "The WikiQA corpus is a publicly available set of question and sentence pairs, collected and annotated for research on open-domain question answering. In order to reflect the true information need of general users, Bing query logs were used as the question source. Each question is linked to a Wikipedia page that potentially has the answer. Because the summary section of a Wikipedia page provides the basic and usually most important information about the topic, sentences in this section were used as the candidate answers. The corpus includes 3,047 questions and 29,258 sentences, where 1,473 sentences were labeled as answer sentences to their corresponding questions." }, { "dkey": "SICK", "dval": "The Sentences Involving Compositional Knowledge (SICK) dataset is a dataset for compositional distributional semantics. It includes a large number of sentence pairs that are rich in the lexical, syntactic and semantic phenomena. Each pair of sentences is annotated in two dimensions: relatedness and entailment. The relatedness score ranges from 1 to 5, and Pearson’s r is used for evaluation; the entailment relation is categorical, consisting of entailment, contradiction, and neutral. There are 4439 pairs in the train split, 495 in the trial split used for development and 4906 in the test split. The sentence pairs are generated from image and video caption datasets before being paired up using some algorithm." }, { "dkey": "MLFP", "dval": "The MLFP dataset consists of face presentation attacks captured with seven 3D latex masks and three 2D print attacks. The dataset contains videos captured from color, thermal and infrared channels." }, { "dkey": "ObjectNet", "dval": "ObjectNet is a test set of images collected directly using crowd-sourcing. ObjectNet is unique as the objects are captured at unusual poses in cluttered, natural scenes, which can severely degrade recognition performance. There are 50,000 images in the test set which controls for rotation, background and viewpoint. There are 313 object classes with 113 overlapping ImageNet." }, { "dkey": "TUM-GAID", "dval": "TUM-GAID (TUM Gait from Audio, Image and Depth) collects 305 subjects performing two walking trajectories in an indoor environment. The first trajectory is traversed from left to right and the second one from right to left. Two recording sessions were performed, one in January, where subjects wore heavy jackets and mostly winter boots, and another one in April, where subjects wore lighter clothes. The action is captured by a Microsoft Kinect sensor which provides a video stream with a resolution of 640×480 pixels and a frame rate around 30 FPS." }, { "dkey": "AIDS", "dval": "AIDS is a graph dataset. It consists of 2000 graphs representing molecular compounds which are constructed from the AIDS Antiviral Screen Database of Active Compounds. It contains 4395 chemical compounds, of which 423 belong to class CA, 1081 to CM, and the remaining compounds to CI." } ]
I want to train a model for robust natural language inference.
natural language inference text
2,019
[ "IMPPRES", "SNIPS", "Violin", "SherLIiC", "e-SNLI", "XNLI", "SNLI-VE" ]
[ "SNLI", "MultiNLI" ]
[ { "dkey": "SNLI", "dval": "The SNLI dataset (Stanford Natural Language Inference) consists of 570k sentence-pairs manually labeled as entailment, contradiction, and neutral. Premises are image captions from Flickr30k, while hypotheses were generated by crowd-sourced annotators who were shown a premise and asked to generate entailing, contradicting, and neutral sentences. Annotators were instructed to judge the relation between sentences given that they describe the same event. Each pair is labeled as “entailment”, “neutral”, “contradiction” or “-”, where “-” indicates that an agreement could not be reached." }, { "dkey": "MultiNLI", "dval": "The Multi-Genre Natural Language Inference (MultiNLI) dataset has 433K sentence pairs. Its size and mode of collection are modeled closely like SNLI. MultiNLI offers ten distinct genres (Face-to-face, Telephone, 9/11, Travel, Letters, Oxford University Press, Slate, Verbatim, Goverment and Fiction) of written and spoken English data. There are matched dev/test sets which are derived from the same sources as those in the training set, and mismatched sets which do not closely resemble any seen at training time." }, { "dkey": "IMPPRES", "dval": "An IMPlicature and PRESupposition diagnostic dataset (IMPPRES), consisting of >25k semiautomatically generated sentence pairs illustrating well-studied pragmatic inference types." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "Violin", "dval": "Video-and-Language Inference is the task of joint multimodal understanding of video and text. Given a video clip with aligned subtitles as premise, paired with a natural language hypothesis based on the video content, a model needs to infer whether the hypothesis is entailed or contradicted by the given video clip. The Violin dataset is a dataset for this task which consists of 95,322 video-hypothesis pairs from 15,887 video clips, spanning over 582 hours of video. These video clips contain rich content with diverse temporal dynamics, event shifts, and people interactions, collected from two sources: (i) popular TV shows, and (ii) movie clips from YouTube channels." }, { "dkey": "SherLIiC", "dval": "SherLIiC is a testbed for lexical inference in context (LIiC), consisting of 3985 manually annotated inference rule candidates (InfCands), accompanied by (i) ~960k unlabeled InfCands, and (ii) ~190k typed textual relations between Freebase entities extracted from the large entity-linked corpus ClueWeb09. Each InfCand consists of one of these relations, expressed as a lemmatized dependency path, and two argument placeholders, each linked to one or more Freebase types." }, { "dkey": "e-SNLI", "dval": "e-SNLI is used for various goals, such as obtaining full sentence justifications of a model's decisions, improving universal sentence representations and transferring to out-of-domain NLI datasets." }, { "dkey": "XNLI", "dval": "The Cross-lingual Natural Language Inference (XNLI) corpus is the extension of the Multi-Genre NLI (MultiNLI) corpus to 15 languages. The dataset was created by manually translating the validation and test sets of MultiNLI into each of those 15 languages. The English training set was machine translated for all languages. The dataset is composed of 122k train, 2490 validation and 5010 test examples." }, { "dkey": "SNLI-VE", "dval": "Visual Entailment (VE) consists of image-sentence pairs whereby a premise is defined by an image, rather than a natural language sentence as in traditional Textual Entailment tasks. The goal of a trained VE model is to predict whether the image semantically entails the text. SNLI-VE is a dataset for VE which is based on the Stanford Natural Language Inference corpus and Flickr30k dataset." } ]
I want to compare the performance of multi-task BERT fine-tuning with single-task and multi
glue benchmark text
2,019
[ "SuperGLUE", "Drive&Act", "BUCC", "ANLI", "DWIE", "OLID" ]
[ "MRPC", "GLUE" ]
[ { "dkey": "MRPC", "dval": "Microsoft Research Paraphrase Corpus (MRPC) is a corpus consists of 5,801 sentence pairs collected from newswire articles. Each pair is labelled if it is a paraphrase or not by human annotators. The whole set is divided into a training subset (4,076 sentence pairs of which 2,753 are paraphrases) and a test subset (1,725 pairs of which 1,147 are paraphrases)." }, { "dkey": "GLUE", "dval": "General Language Understanding Evaluation (GLUE) benchmark is a collection of nine natural language understanding tasks, including single-sentence tasks CoLA and SST-2, similarity and paraphrasing tasks MRPC, STS-B and QQP, and natural language inference tasks MNLI, QNLI, RTE and WNLI." }, { "dkey": "SuperGLUE", "dval": "SuperGLUE is a benchmark dataset designed to pose a more rigorous test of language understanding than GLUE. SuperGLUE has the same high-level motivation as GLUE: to provide a simple, hard-to-game measure of progress toward general-purpose language understanding technologies for English. SuperGLUE follows the basic design of GLUE: It consists of a public leaderboard built around eight language understanding tasks, drawing on existing data, accompanied by a single-number\nperformance metric, and an analysis toolkit. However, it improves upon GLUE in several ways:\n\n\nMore challenging tasks: SuperGLUE retains the two hardest tasks in GLUE. The remaining tasks were identified from those submitted to an open call for task proposals and were selected based on difficulty for current NLP approaches.\nMore diverse task formats: The task formats in GLUE are limited to sentence- and sentence-pair classification. The authors expand the set of task formats in SuperGLUE to include\ncoreference resolution and question answering (QA).\nComprehensive human baselines: the authors include human performance estimates for all benchmark tasks, which verify that substantial headroom exists between a strong BERT-based baseline and human performance.\nImproved code support: SuperGLUE is distributed with a new, modular toolkit for work on pretraining, multi-task learning, and transfer learning in NLP, built around standard tools including PyTorch (Paszke et al., 2017) and AllenNLP (Gardner et al., 2017).\nRefined usage rules: The conditions for inclusion on the SuperGLUE leaderboard were revamped to ensure fair competition, an informative leaderboard, and full credit\nassignment to data and task creators." }, { "dkey": "Drive&Act", "dval": "The Drive&Act dataset is a state of the art multi modal benchmark for driver behavior recognition. The dataset includes 3D skeletons in addition to frame-wise hierarchical labels of 9.6 Million frames captured by 6 different views and 3 modalities (RGB, IR and depth).\n\nIt offers following key features:\n\n\n12h of video data in 29 long sequences\nCalibrated multi view camera system with 5 views\nMulti modal videos: NIR, Depth and Color data\nMarkerless motion capture: 3D Body Pose and Head Pose\nModel of the static interior of the car\n83 manually annotated hierarchical activity labels:\nLevel 1: Long running tasks (12)\nLevel 2: Semantic actions (34)\nLevel 3: Object Interaction tripplets [action|object|location] (6|17|14)" }, { "dkey": "BUCC", "dval": "The BUCC mining task is a shared task on parallel sentence extraction from two monolingual corpora with a subset of them assumed to be parallel, and that has been available since 2016. For each language pair, the shared task provides a monolingual corpus for each language and a gold mapping list containing true translation pairs. These pairs are the ground truth. The task is to construct a list of translation pairs from the monolingual corpora. The constructed list is compared to the ground truth, and evaluated in terms of the F1 measure." }, { "dkey": "ANLI", "dval": "The Adversarial Natural Language Inference (ANLI, Nie et al.) is a new large-scale NLI benchmark dataset, collected via an iterative, adversarial human-and-model-in-the-loop procedure. Particular, the data is selected to be difficult to the state-of-the-art models, including BERT and RoBERTa." }, { "dkey": "DWIE", "dval": "The 'Deutsche Welle corpus for Information Extraction' (DWIE) is a multi-task dataset that combines four main Information Extraction (IE) annotation sub-tasks: (i) Named Entity Recognition (NER), (ii) Coreference Resolution, (iii) Relation Extraction (RE), and (iv) Entity Linking. DWIE is conceived as an entity-centric dataset that describes interactions and properties of conceptual entities on the level of the complete document." }, { "dkey": "OLID", "dval": "The OLID is a hierarchical dataset to identify the type and the target of offensive texts in social media. The dataset is collected on Twitter and publicly available. There are 14,100 tweets in total, in which 13,240 are in the training set, and 860 are in the test set. For each tweet, there are three levels of labels: (A) Offensive/Not-Offensive, (B) Targeted-Insult/Untargeted, (C) Individual/Group/Other. The relationship between them is hierarchical. If a tweet is offensive, it can have a target or no target. If it is offensive to a specific target, the target can be an individual, a group, or some other objects. This dataset is used in the OffensEval-2019 competition in SemEval-2019." } ]
A class-balanced loss to address the long-tailed data distribution problem.
long-tailed recognition
2,019
[ "Places-LT", "ImageNet-LT", "IP102", "CLEVR-Hans", "Million-AID", "LVIS", "Flickr30k" ]
[ "ImageNet", "iNaturalist", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "iNaturalist", "dval": "The iNaturalist 2017 dataset (iNat) contains 675,170 training and validation images from 5,089 natural fine-grained categories. Those categories belong to 13 super-categories including Plantae (Plant), Insecta (Insect), Aves (Bird), Mammalia (Mammal), and so on. The iNat dataset is highly imbalanced with dramatically different number of images per category. For example, the largest super-category “Plantae (Plant)” has 196,613 images from 2,101 categories; whereas the smallest super-category “Protozoa” only has 381 images from 4 categories." }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "Places-LT", "dval": "Places-LT has an imbalanced training set with 62,500 images for 365 classes from Places-2. The class frequencies follow a natural power law distribution with a maximum number of 4,980 images per class and a minimum number of 5 images per class. The validation and testing sets are balanced and contain 20 and 100 images per class respectively." }, { "dkey": "ImageNet-LT", "dval": "ImageNet Long-Tailed is a subset of /dataset/imagenet dataset consisting of 115.8K images from 1000 categories, with maximally 1280 images per class and minimally 5 images per class. The additional classes of images in ImageNet-2010 are used as the open set." }, { "dkey": "IP102", "dval": "IP102 contains more than 75,000 images belonging to 102 categories, which exhibit a natural long-tailed distribution." }, { "dkey": "CLEVR-Hans", "dval": "The CLEVR-Hans data set is a novel confounded visual scene data set, which captures complex compositions of different objects. This data set consists of CLEVR images divided into several classes. \n\nThe membership of a class is based on combinations of objects’ attributes and relations. Additionally, certain classes within the data set are confounded. Thus, within the data set, consisting of train, validation, and test splits, all train, and validation images of confounded classes will be confounded with a specific attribute or combination of attributes.\n\nEach class is represented by 3000 training images, 750 validation images, and 750 test images. The training, validation, and test set splits contain 9000, 2250, and 2250 samples, respectively, for CLEVR-Hans3 and 21000, 5250, and 5250 samples for CLEVR-Hans7. The class distribution is balanced for all data splits.\n\nFor CLEVR-Hans classes for which class rules contain more than three objects, the number of objects to be placed per scene was randomly chosen between the minimal required number of objects for that class and ten, rather than between three and ten, as in the original CLEVR data set.\n\nFinally, the images were created such that the exact combinations of the class rules did not occur in images of other classes. It is possible that a subset of objects from one class rule occur in an image of another class. However, it is not possible that more than one complete class rule is contained in an image." }, { "dkey": "Million-AID", "dval": "Million-AID is a large-scale benchmark dataset containing a million instances for RS scene classification. There are 51 semantic scene categories in Million-AID. And the scene categories are customized to match the land-use classification standards, which greatly enhance the practicability of the constructed Million-AID. Different form the existing scene classification datasets of which categories are organized with parallel or uncertain relationships, scene categories in Million-AID are organized with systematic relationship architecture, giving it superiority in management and scalability. Specifically, the scene categories in Million-AID are organized by the hierarchical category network of a three-level tree: 51 leaf nodes fall into 28 parent nodes at the second level which are grouped into 8 nodes at the first level, representing the 8 underlying scene categories of agriculture land, commercial land, industrial land, public service land, residential land, transportation land, unutilized land, and water area. The scene category network provides the dataset with excellent organization of relationship among different scene categories and also the property of scalability. The number of images in each scene category ranges from 2,000 to 45,000, endowing the dataset with the property of long tail distribution. Besides, Million-AID has superiorities over the existing scene classification datasets owing to its high spatial resolution, large scale, and global distribution." }, { "dkey": "LVIS", "dval": "LVIS is a dataset for long tail instance segmentation. It has annotations for over 1000 object categories in 164k images." }, { "dkey": "Flickr30k", "dval": "The Flickr30k dataset contains 31,000 images collected from Flickr, together with 5 reference sentences provided by human annotators." } ]
I want to develop a method for automatically removing irrelevant pixels in auto-detected bounding boxes.
identity alignment images
2,017
[ "Funcom", "Syn2Real", "ImageNet", "FAT" ]
[ "Market-1501", "CUHK03" ]
[ { "dkey": "Market-1501", "dval": "Market-1501 is a large-scale public benchmark dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1501 identities which are captured by six different cameras, and 32,668 pedestrian image bounding-boxes obtained using the Deformable Part Models pedestrian detector. Each person has 3.6 images on average at each viewpoint. The dataset is split into two parts: 750 identities are utilized for training and the remaining 751 identities are used for testing. In the official testing protocol 3,368 query images are selected as probe set to find the correct match across 19,732 reference gallery images." }, { "dkey": "CUHK03", "dval": "The CUHK03 consists of 14,097 images of 1,467 different identities, where 6 campus cameras were deployed for image collection and each identity is captured by 2 campus cameras. This dataset provides two types of annotations, one by manually labelled bounding boxes and the other by bounding boxes produced by an automatic detector. The dataset also provides 20 random train/test splits in which 100 identities are selected for testing and the rest for training" }, { "dkey": "Funcom", "dval": "Funcom is a collection of ~2.1 million Java methods and their associated Javadoc comments. This data set was derived from a set of 51 million Java methods and only includes methods that have an associated comment, comments that are in the English language, and has had auto-generated files removed. Each method/comment pair also has an associated method_uid and project_uid so that it is easy to group methods by their parent project.\n\nThis dataset of function pairs is used for source code summarisation." }, { "dkey": "Syn2Real", "dval": "Syn2Real, a synthetic-to-real visual domain adaptation benchmark meant to encourage further development of robust domain transfer methods. The goal is to train a model on a synthetic \"source\" domain and then update it so that its performance improves on a real \"target\" domain, without using any target annotations. It includes three tasks, illustrated in figures above: the more traditional closed-set classification task with a known set of categories; the less studied open-set classification task with unknown object categories in the target domain; and the object detection task, which involves localizing instances of objects by predicting their bounding boxes and corresponding class labels." }, { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "FAT", "dval": "Falling Things (FAT) is a dataset for advancing the state-of-the-art in object detection and 3D pose estimation in the context of robotics. It consists of generated photorealistic images with accurate 3D pose annotations for all objects in 60k images.\n\nThe 60k annotated photos of 21 household objects are taken from the YCB objects set. For each image, the dataset contains the 3D poses, per-pixel class segmentation, and 2D/3D bounding box coordinates for all objects." } ]
An end-to-end algorithm for unsupervised domain adaptation that leverages image-to-image translation.
unsupervised domain adaptation images
2,019
[ "Libri-Adapt", "MuST-C", "EMNIST", "CASIA V2", "Office-Home" ]
[ "GTA5", "KITTI" ]
[ { "dkey": "GTA5", "dval": "The GTA5 dataset contains 24966 synthetic images with pixel level semantic annotation. The images have been rendered using the open-world video game Grand Theft Auto 5 and are all from the car perspective in the streets of American-style virtual cities. There are 19 semantic classes which are compatible with the ones of Cityscapes dataset." }, { "dkey": "KITTI", "dval": "KITTI (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Toyota Technological Institute) is one of the most popular datasets for use in mobile robotics and autonomous driving. It consists of hours of traffic scenarios recorded with a variety of sensor modalities, including high-resolution RGB, grayscale stereo cameras, and a 3D laser scanner. Despite its popularity, the dataset itself does not contain ground truth for semantic segmentation. However, various researchers have manually annotated parts of the dataset to fit their necessities. Álvarez et al. generated ground truth for 323 images from the road detection challenge with three classes: road, vertical, and sky. Zhang et al. annotated 252 (140 for training and 112 for testing) acquisitions – RGB and Velodyne scans – from the tracking challenge for ten object categories: building, sky, road, vegetation, sidewalk, car, pedestrian, cyclist, sign/pole, and fence. Ros et al. labeled 170 training images and 46 testing images (from the visual odometry challenge) with 11 classes: building, tree, sky, car, sign, road, pedestrian, fence, pole, sidewalk, and bicyclist." }, { "dkey": "Libri-Adapt", "dval": "Libri-Adapt aims to support unsupervised domain adaptation research on speech recognition models." }, { "dkey": "MuST-C", "dval": "MuST-C currently represents the largest publicly available multilingual corpus (one-to-many) for speech translation. It covers eight language directions, from English to German, Spanish, French, Italian, Dutch, Portuguese, Romanian and Russian. The corpus consists of audio, transcriptions and translations of English TED talks, and it comes with a predefined training, validation and test split." }, { "dkey": "EMNIST", "dval": "EMNIST (extended MNIST) has 4 times more data than MNIST. It is a set of handwritten digits with a 28 x 28 format." }, { "dkey": "CASIA V2", "dval": "CASIA V2 is a dataset for forgery classification. It contains 4795 images, 1701 authentic and 3274 forged." }, { "dkey": "Office-Home", "dval": "Office-Home is a benchmark dataset for domain adaptation which contains 4 domains where each domain consists of 65 categories. The four domains are: Art – artistic images in the form of sketches, paintings, ornamentation, etc.; Clipart – collection of clipart images; Product – images of objects without a background and Real-World – images of objects captured with a regular camera. It contains 15,500 images, with an average of around 70 images per class and a maximum of 99 images in a class." } ]
We propose a bidirectional LSTM model for learning general sentence representations. The proposed model is a general method
sentence modeling
2,018
[ "GLUE", "IMPPRES", "ABC Dataset", "INTERACTION Dataset", "Penn Treebank" ]
[ "SNLI", "MultiNLI", "SentEval", "SST" ]
[ { "dkey": "SNLI", "dval": "The SNLI dataset (Stanford Natural Language Inference) consists of 570k sentence-pairs manually labeled as entailment, contradiction, and neutral. Premises are image captions from Flickr30k, while hypotheses were generated by crowd-sourced annotators who were shown a premise and asked to generate entailing, contradicting, and neutral sentences. Annotators were instructed to judge the relation between sentences given that they describe the same event. Each pair is labeled as “entailment”, “neutral”, “contradiction” or “-”, where “-” indicates that an agreement could not be reached." }, { "dkey": "MultiNLI", "dval": "The Multi-Genre Natural Language Inference (MultiNLI) dataset has 433K sentence pairs. Its size and mode of collection are modeled closely like SNLI. MultiNLI offers ten distinct genres (Face-to-face, Telephone, 9/11, Travel, Letters, Oxford University Press, Slate, Verbatim, Goverment and Fiction) of written and spoken English data. There are matched dev/test sets which are derived from the same sources as those in the training set, and mismatched sets which do not closely resemble any seen at training time." }, { "dkey": "SentEval", "dval": "SentEval is a toolkit for evaluating the quality of universal sentence representations. SentEval encompasses a variety of tasks, including binary and multi-class classification, natural language inference and sentence similarity. The set of tasks was selected based on what appears to be the community consensus regarding the appropriate evaluations for universal sentence representations. The toolkit comes with scripts to download and preprocess datasets, and an easy interface to evaluate sentence encoders." }, { "dkey": "SST", "dval": "The Stanford Sentiment Treebank is a corpus with fully labeled parse trees that allows for a\ncomplete analysis of the compositional effects of\nsentiment in language. The corpus is based on\nthe dataset introduced by Pang and Lee (2005) and\nconsists of 11,855 single sentences extracted from\nmovie reviews. It was parsed with the Stanford\nparser and includes a total of 215,154 unique phrases\nfrom those parse trees, each annotated by 3 human judges.\n\nEach phrase is labelled as either negative, somewhat negative, neutral, somewhat positive or positive.\nThe corpus with all 5 labels is referred to as SST-5 or SST fine-grained. Binary classification experiments on full sentences (negative or somewhat negative vs somewhat positive or positive with neutral sentences discarded) refer to the dataset as SST-2 or SST binary." }, { "dkey": "GLUE", "dval": "General Language Understanding Evaluation (GLUE) benchmark is a collection of nine natural language understanding tasks, including single-sentence tasks CoLA and SST-2, similarity and paraphrasing tasks MRPC, STS-B and QQP, and natural language inference tasks MNLI, QNLI, RTE and WNLI." }, { "dkey": "IMPPRES", "dval": "An IMPlicature and PRESupposition diagnostic dataset (IMPPRES), consisting of >25k semiautomatically generated sentence pairs illustrating well-studied pragmatic inference types." }, { "dkey": "ABC Dataset", "dval": "The ABC Dataset is a collection of one million Computer-Aided Design (CAD) models for research of geometric deep learning methods and applications. Each model is a collection of explicitly parametrized curves and surfaces, providing ground truth for differential quantities, patch segmentation, geometric feature detection, and shape reconstruction. Sampling the parametric descriptions of surfaces and curves allows generating data in different formats and resolutions, enabling fair comparisons for a wide range of geometric learning algorithms." }, { "dkey": "INTERACTION Dataset", "dval": "The INTERACTION dataset contains naturalistic motions of various traffic participants in a variety of highly interactive driving scenarios from different countries. The dataset can serve for many behavior-related research areas, such as \n\n\n1) intention/behavior/motion prediction, \n2) behavior cloning and imitation learning,\n3) behavior analysis and modeling,\n4) motion pattern and representation learning,\n5) interactive behavior extraction and categorization,\n6) social and human-like behavior generation,\n7) decision-making and planning algorithm development and verification,\n8) driving scenario/case generation, etc." }, { "dkey": "Penn Treebank", "dval": "The English Penn Treebank (PTB) corpus, and in particular the section of the corpus corresponding to the articles of Wall Street Journal (WSJ), is one of the most known and used corpus for the evaluation of models for sequence labelling. The task consists of annotating each word with its Part-of-Speech tag. In the most common split of this corpus, sections from 0 to 18 are used for training (38 219 sentences, 912 344 tokens), sections from 19 to 21 are used for validation (5 527 sentences, 131 768 tokens), and sections from 22 to 24 are used for testing (5 462 sentences, 129 654 tokens).\nThe corpus is also commonly used for character-level and word-level Language Modelling." } ]
I want to use EML-NET to train a supervised model for saliency detection.
saliency detection images
2,018
[ "DUTS", "Lytro Illum", "SCUT-HEAD", "UCO-LAEO", "LFSD", "SNIPS" ]
[ "SALICON", "CAT2000", "COCO" ]
[ { "dkey": "SALICON", "dval": "The SALIency in CONtext (SALICON) dataset contains 10,000 training images, 5,000 validation images and 5,000 test images for saliency prediction. This dataset has been created by annotating saliency in images from MS COCO.\nThe ground-truth saliency annotations include fixations generated from mouse trajectories. To improve the data quality, isolated fixations with low local density have been excluded.\nThe training and validation sets, provided with ground truth, contain the following data fields: image, resolution and gaze.\nThe testing data contains only the image and resolution fields." }, { "dkey": "CAT2000", "dval": "Includes 4000 images; 200 from each of 20 categories covering different types of scenes such as Cartoons, Art, Objects, Low resolution images, Indoor, Outdoor, Jumbled, Random, and Line drawings." }, { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "DUTS", "dval": "DUTS is a saliency detection dataset containing 10,553 training images and 5,019 test images. All training images are collected from the ImageNet DET training/val sets, while test images are collected from the ImageNet DET test set and the SUN data set. Both the training and test set contain very challenging scenarios for saliency detection. Accurate pixel-level ground truths are manually annotated by 50 subjects." }, { "dkey": "Lytro Illum", "dval": "Lytro Illum is a new light field dataset using a Lytro Illum camera. 640 light fields are collected with significant variations in terms of size, textureness, background clutter and illumination, etc. Micro-lens image arrays and central viewing images are generated, and corresponding ground-truth maps are produced." }, { "dkey": "SCUT-HEAD", "dval": "Includes 4405 images with 111251 heads annotated." }, { "dkey": "UCO-LAEO", "dval": "A dataset for building models that detect people Looking At Each Other (LAEO) in video sequences." }, { "dkey": "LFSD", "dval": "The Light Field Saliency Database (LFSD) contains 100 light fields with 360×360 spatial resolution. A rough focal stack and an all-focus image are provided for each light field. The images in this dataset usually have one salient foreground object and a background with good color contrast." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." } ]
I want to learn complementary features to improve person re-identification results using saliency and
person re-identification video image
2,018
[ "CUHK02", "P-DESTRE", "PRID2011", "Airport", "SYSU-MM01" ]
[ "LIP", "CUHK03" ]
[ { "dkey": "LIP", "dval": "The LIP (Look into Person) dataset is a large-scale dataset focusing on semantic understanding of a person. It contains 50,000 images with elaborated pixel-wise annotations of 19 semantic human part labels and 2D human poses with 16 key points. The images are collected from real-world scenarios and the subjects appear with challenging poses and view, heavy occlusions, various appearances and low resolution." }, { "dkey": "CUHK03", "dval": "The CUHK03 consists of 14,097 images of 1,467 different identities, where 6 campus cameras were deployed for image collection and each identity is captured by 2 campus cameras. This dataset provides two types of annotations, one by manually labelled bounding boxes and the other by bounding boxes produced by an automatic detector. The dataset also provides 20 random train/test splits in which 100 identities are selected for testing and the rest for training" }, { "dkey": "CUHK02", "dval": "CUHK02 is a dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1,816 identities from two disjoint camera views. Each identity has two samples per camera view making a total of 7,264 images. It is used for Person Re-identification." }, { "dkey": "P-DESTRE", "dval": "Provides consistent ID annotations across multiple days, making it suitable for the extremely challenging problem of person search, i.e., where no clothing information can be reliably used. Apart this feature, the P-DESTRE annotations enable the research on UAV-based pedestrian detection, tracking, re-identification and soft biometric solutions." }, { "dkey": "PRID2011", "dval": "PRID 2011 is a person reidentification dataset that provides multiple person trajectories recorded from two different static surveillance cameras, monitoring crosswalks and sidewalks. The dataset shows a clean background, and the people in the dataset are rarely occluded. In the dataset, 200 people appear in both views. Among the 200 people, 178 people have more than 20 appearances" }, { "dkey": "Airport", "dval": "The Airport dataset is a dataset for person re-identification which consists of 39,902 images and 9,651 identities across six cameras." }, { "dkey": "SYSU-MM01", "dval": "The SYSU-MM01 is a dataset collected for the Visible-Infrared Re-identification problem. The images in the dataset were obtained from 491 different persons by recording them using 4 RGB and 2 infrared cameras. Within the dataset, the persons are divided into 3 fixed splits to create training, validation and test sets. In the training set, there are 20284 RGB and 9929 infrared images of 296 persons. The validation set contains 1974 RGB and 1980 infrared images of 99 persons. The testing set consists of the images of 96 persons where 3803 infrared images are used as query and 301 randomly selected RGB images are used as gallery." } ]
We propose a multimodal image retrieval pipeline. We show that our approach outperforms the state of the
multimodal image retrieval images text
2,019
[ "Localized Narratives", "THEODORE", "UASOL", "TVR", "EPIC-KITCHENS-100", "BDD100K" ]
[ "ImageNet", "WebVision" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "WebVision", "dval": "The WebVision dataset is designed to facilitate the research on learning visual representation from noisy web data. It is a large scale web images dataset that contains more than 2.4 million of images crawled from the Flickr website and Google Images search. \n\nThe same 1,000 concepts as the ILSVRC 2012 dataset are used for querying images, such that a bunch of existing approaches can be directly investigated and compared to the models trained from the ILSVRC 2012 dataset, and also makes it possible to study the dataset bias issue in the large scale scenario. The textual information accompanied with those images (e.g., caption, user tags, or description) are also provided as additional meta information. A validation set contains 50,000 images (50 images per category) is provided to facilitate the algorithmic development." }, { "dkey": "Localized Narratives", "dval": "We propose Localized Narratives, a new form of multimodal image annotations connecting vision and language. We ask annotators to describe an image with their voice while simultaneously hovering their mouse over the region they are describing. Since the voice and the mouse pointer are synchronized, we can localize every single word in the description. This dense visual grounding takes the form of a mouse trace segment per word and is unique to our data. We annotated 849k images with Localized Narratives: the whole COCO, Flickr30k, and ADE20K datasets, and 671k images of Open Images, all of which we make publicly available. We provide an extensive analysis of these annotations showing they are diverse, accurate, and efficient to produce. We also demonstrate their utility on the application of controlled image captioning." }, { "dkey": "THEODORE", "dval": "Recent work about synthetic indoor datasets from perspective views has shown significant improvements of object detection results with Convolutional Neural Networks(CNNs). In this paper, we introduce THEODORE: a novel, large-scale indoor dataset containing 100,000 high- resolution diversified fisheye images with 14 classes. To this end, we create 3D virtual environments of living rooms, different human characters and interior textures. Beside capturing fisheye images from virtual environments we create annotations for semantic segmentation, instance masks and bounding boxes for object detection tasks. We compare our synthetic dataset to state of the art real-world datasets for omnidirectional images. Based on MS COCO weights, we show that our dataset is well suited for fine-tuning CNNs for object detection. Through a high generalization of our models by means of image synthesis and domain randomization we reach an AP up to 0.84 for class person on High-Definition Analytics dataset." }, { "dkey": "UASOL", "dval": "The UASOL an RGB-D stereo dataset, that contains 160902 frames, filmed at 33 different scenes, each with between 2 k and 10 k frames. The frames show different paths from the perspective of a pedestrian, including sidewalks, trails, roads, etc. The images were extracted from video files with 15 fps at HD2K resolution with a size of 2280 × 1282 pixels. The dataset also provides a GPS geolocalization tag for each second of the sequences and reflects different climatological conditions. It also involved up to 4 different persons filming the dataset at different moments of the day.\n\nWe propose a train, validation and test split to train the network. \nAdditionally, we introduce a subset of 676 pairs of RGB Stereo images and their respective depth, which we extracted randomly from the entire dataset. This given test set is introduced to make comparability possible between the different methods trained with the dataset." }, { "dkey": "TVR", "dval": "A new multimodal retrieval dataset. TVR requires systems to understand both videos and their associated subtitle (dialogue) texts, making it more realistic. The dataset contains 109K queries collected on 21.8K videos from 6 TV shows of diverse genres, where each query is associated with a tight temporal window." }, { "dkey": "EPIC-KITCHENS-100", "dval": "This paper introduces the pipeline to scale the largest dataset in egocentric vision EPIC-KITCHENS. The effort culminates in EPIC-KITCHENS-100, a collection of 100 hours, 20M frames, 90K actions in 700 variable-length videos, capturing long-term unscripted activities in 45 environments, using head-mounted cameras. Compared to its previous version (EPIC-KITCHENS-55), EPIC-KITCHENS-100 has been annotated using a novel pipeline that allows denser (54% more actions per minute) and more complete annotations of fine-grained actions (+128% more action segments). This collection also enables evaluating the \"test of time\" - i.e. whether models trained on data collected in 2018 can generalise to new footage collected under the same hypotheses albeit \"two years on\".\nThe dataset is aligned with 6 challenges: action recognition (full and weak supervision), action detection, action anticipation, cross-modal retrieval (from captions), as well as unsupervised domain adaptation for action recognition. For each challenge, we define the task, provide baselines and evaluation metrics." }, { "dkey": "BDD100K", "dval": "Datasets drive vision progress, yet existing driving datasets are impoverished in terms of visual content and supported tasks to study multitask learning for autonomous driving. Researchers are usually constrained to study a small set of problems on one dataset, while real-world computer vision applications require performing tasks of various complexities. We construct BDD100K, the largest driving video dataset with 100K videos and 10 tasks to evaluate the exciting progress of image recognition algorithms on autonomous driving. The dataset possesses geographic, environmental, and weather diversity, which is useful for training models that are less likely to be surprised by new conditions. Based on this diverse dataset, we build a benchmark for heterogeneous multitask learning and study how to solve the tasks together. Our experiments show that special training strategies are needed for existing models to perform such heterogeneous tasks. BDD100K opens the door for future studies in this important venue. More detail is at the dataset home page." } ]
The paper presents a multi-scale convolutional neural network for 3D object detection from
3d object detection images
2,019
[ "MLFP", "NVGesture", "THEODORE", "GoPro", "VOT2016" ]
[ "CARLA", "KITTI" ]
[ { "dkey": "CARLA", "dval": "CARLA (CAR Learning to Act) is an open simulator for urban driving, developed as an open-source layer over Unreal Engine 4. Technically, it operates similarly to, as an open source layer over Unreal Engine 4 that provides sensors in the form of RGB cameras (with customizable positions), ground truth depth maps, ground truth semantic segmentation maps with 12 semantic classes designed for driving (road, lane marking, traffic sign, sidewalk and so on), bounding boxes for dynamic objects in the environment, and measurements of the agent itself (vehicle location and orientation)." }, { "dkey": "KITTI", "dval": "KITTI (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Toyota Technological Institute) is one of the most popular datasets for use in mobile robotics and autonomous driving. It consists of hours of traffic scenarios recorded with a variety of sensor modalities, including high-resolution RGB, grayscale stereo cameras, and a 3D laser scanner. Despite its popularity, the dataset itself does not contain ground truth for semantic segmentation. However, various researchers have manually annotated parts of the dataset to fit their necessities. Álvarez et al. generated ground truth for 323 images from the road detection challenge with three classes: road, vertical, and sky. Zhang et al. annotated 252 (140 for training and 112 for testing) acquisitions – RGB and Velodyne scans – from the tracking challenge for ten object categories: building, sky, road, vegetation, sidewalk, car, pedestrian, cyclist, sign/pole, and fence. Ros et al. labeled 170 training images and 46 testing images (from the visual odometry challenge) with 11 classes: building, tree, sky, car, sign, road, pedestrian, fence, pole, sidewalk, and bicyclist." }, { "dkey": "MLFP", "dval": "The MLFP dataset consists of face presentation attacks captured with seven 3D latex masks and three 2D print attacks. The dataset contains videos captured from color, thermal and infrared channels." }, { "dkey": "NVGesture", "dval": "The NVGesture dataset focuses on touchless driver controlling. It contains 1532 dynamic gestures fallen into 25 classes. It includes 1050 samples for training and 482 for testing. The videos are recorded with three modalities (RGB, depth, and infrared)." }, { "dkey": "THEODORE", "dval": "Recent work about synthetic indoor datasets from perspective views has shown significant improvements of object detection results with Convolutional Neural Networks(CNNs). In this paper, we introduce THEODORE: a novel, large-scale indoor dataset containing 100,000 high- resolution diversified fisheye images with 14 classes. To this end, we create 3D virtual environments of living rooms, different human characters and interior textures. Beside capturing fisheye images from virtual environments we create annotations for semantic segmentation, instance masks and bounding boxes for object detection tasks. We compare our synthetic dataset to state of the art real-world datasets for omnidirectional images. Based on MS COCO weights, we show that our dataset is well suited for fine-tuning CNNs for object detection. Through a high generalization of our models by means of image synthesis and domain randomization we reach an AP up to 0.84 for class person on High-Definition Analytics dataset." }, { "dkey": "GoPro", "dval": "The GoPro dataset for deblurring consists of 3,214 blurred images with the size of 1,280×720 that are divided into 2,103 training images and 1,111 test images. The dataset consists of pairs of a realistic blurry image and the corresponding ground truth shapr image that are obtained by a high-speed camera." }, { "dkey": "VOT2016", "dval": "VOT2016 is a video dataset for visual object tracking. It contains 60 video clips and 21,646 corresponding ground truth maps with pixel-wise annotation of salient objects." } ]
We propose an unsupervised video object segmentation method which only uses unlabeled videos for training. The proposed method adopts
video object segmentation
2,019
[ "UASOL", "MVTecAD", "GVGAI", "DeeperForensics-1.0", "MECCANO" ]
[ "DAVIS 2017", "DAVIS 2016" ]
[ { "dkey": "DAVIS 2017", "dval": "DAVIS17 is a dataset for video object segmentation. It contains a total of 150 videos - 60 for training, 30 for validation, 60 for testing" }, { "dkey": "DAVIS 2016", "dval": "DAVIS16 is a dataset for video object segmentation which consists of 50 videos in total (30 videos for training and 20 for testing). Per-frame pixel-wise annotations are offered." }, { "dkey": "UASOL", "dval": "The UASOL an RGB-D stereo dataset, that contains 160902 frames, filmed at 33 different scenes, each with between 2 k and 10 k frames. The frames show different paths from the perspective of a pedestrian, including sidewalks, trails, roads, etc. The images were extracted from video files with 15 fps at HD2K resolution with a size of 2280 × 1282 pixels. The dataset also provides a GPS geolocalization tag for each second of the sequences and reflects different climatological conditions. It also involved up to 4 different persons filming the dataset at different moments of the day.\n\nWe propose a train, validation and test split to train the network. \nAdditionally, we introduce a subset of 676 pairs of RGB Stereo images and their respective depth, which we extracted randomly from the entire dataset. This given test set is introduced to make comparability possible between the different methods trained with the dataset." }, { "dkey": "MVTecAD", "dval": "MVTec AD is a dataset for benchmarking anomaly detection methods with a focus on industrial inspection. It contains over 5000 high-resolution images divided into fifteen different object and texture categories. Each category comprises a set of defect-free training images and a test set of images with various kinds of defects as well as images without defects.\n\nThere are two common metrics: Detection AUROC and Segmentation (or pixelwise) AUROC\n\nDetection (or, classification) methods output single float (anomaly score) per input test image. \n\nSegmentation methods output anomaly probability for each pixel. \n\"To assess segmentation performance, we evaluate the relative per-region overlap of the segmentation with the ground truth. To get an additional performance measure that is independent of the determined threshold, we compute the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC AUC). We define the true positive rate as the percentage of pixels that were correctly classified as anomalous\" [1]\nLater segmentation metric was improved to balance regions with small and large area, see PRO-AUC and other in [2]\n\n[1] Paul Bergmann et al, \"MVTec AD — A Comprehensive Real-World Dataset for Unsupervised Anomaly Detection\"\n[2] Bergmann, P., Batzner, K., Fauser, M. et al. The MVTec Anomaly Detection Dataset: A Comprehensive Real-World Dataset for Unsupervised Anomaly Detection. Int J Comput Vis (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11263-020-01400-4" }, { "dkey": "GVGAI", "dval": "The General Video Game AI (GVGAI) framework is widely used in research which features a corpus of over 100 single-player games and 60 two-player games. These are fairly small games, each focusing on specific mechanics or skills the players should be able to demonstrate, including clones of classic arcade games such as Space Invaders, puzzle games like Sokoban, adventure games like Zelda or game-theory problems such as the Iterative Prisoners Dilemma. All games are real-time and require players to make decisions in only 40ms at every game tick, although not all games explicitly reward or require fast reactions; in fact, some of the best game-playing approaches add up the time in the beginning of the game to run Breadth-First Search in puzzle games in order to find an accurate solution. However, given the large variety of games (many of which are stochastic and difficult to predict accurately), scoring systems and termination conditions, all unknown to the players, highly-adaptive general methods are needed to tackle the diverse challenges proposed." }, { "dkey": "DeeperForensics-1.0", "dval": "DeeperForensics-1.0 represents the largest face forgery detection dataset by far, with 60,000 videos constituted by a total of 17.6 million frames, 10 times larger than existing datasets of the same kind. The full dataset includes 48,475 source videos and 11,000 manipulated videos. The source videos are collected on 100 paid and consented actors from 26 countries, and the manipulated videos are generated by a newly proposed many-to-many end-to-end face swapping method, DF-VAE. 7 types of real-world perturbations at 5 intensity levels are employed to ensure a larger scale and higher diversity." }, { "dkey": "MECCANO", "dval": "The MECCANO dataset is the first dataset of egocentric videos to study human-object interactions in industrial-like settings.\nThe MECCANO dataset has been acquired in an industrial-like scenario in which subjects built a toy model of a motorbike. We considered 20 object classes which include the 16 classes categorizing the 49 components, the two tools (screwdriver and wrench), the instructions booklet and a partial_model class.\n\nAdditional details related to the MECCANO:\n\n20 different subjects in 2 countries (IT, U.K.)\nVideo Acquisition: 1920x1080 at 12.00 fps\n11 training videos and 9 validation/test videos\n8857 video segments temporally annotated indicating the verbs which describe the actions performed\n64349 active objects annotated with bounding boxes\n12 verb classes, 20 objects classes and 61 action classes" } ]
I want to train an unsupervised system for content-based event retrieval from
content-based event retrieval unconstrained web videos
2,016
[ "Lakh MIDI Dataset", "Violin", "SNIPS", "Event-Camera Dataset", "Oxford5k" ]
[ "ImageNet", "UCF101" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "UCF101", "dval": "UCF101 dataset is an extension of UCF50 and consists of 13,320 video clips, which are classified into 101 categories. These 101 categories can be classified into 5 types (Body motion, Human-human interactions, Human-object interactions, Playing musical instruments and Sports). The total length of these video clips is over 27 hours. All the videos are collected from YouTube and have a fixed frame rate of 25 FPS with the resolution of 320 × 240." }, { "dkey": "Lakh MIDI Dataset", "dval": "The Lakh MIDI dataset is a collection of 176,581 unique MIDI files, 45,129 of which have been matched and aligned to entries in the Million Song Dataset. Its goal is to facilitate large-scale music information retrieval, both symbolic (using the MIDI files alone) and audio content-based (using information extracted from the MIDI files as annotations for the matched audio files). Around 10% of all MIDI files include timestamped lyrics events with lyrics are often transcribed at the word, syllable or character level.\n\nLMD-full denotes the whole dataset. LMD-matched is the subset of LMD-full that consists of MIDI files matched with the Million Song Dataset entries. LMD-aligned contains all the files of LMD-matched, aligned to preview MP3s from the Million Song Dataset.\n\nA lakh is a unit of measure used in the Indian number system which signifies 100,000." }, { "dkey": "Violin", "dval": "Video-and-Language Inference is the task of joint multimodal understanding of video and text. Given a video clip with aligned subtitles as premise, paired with a natural language hypothesis based on the video content, a model needs to infer whether the hypothesis is entailed or contradicted by the given video clip. The Violin dataset is a dataset for this task which consists of 95,322 video-hypothesis pairs from 15,887 video clips, spanning over 582 hours of video. These video clips contain rich content with diverse temporal dynamics, event shifts, and people interactions, collected from two sources: (i) popular TV shows, and (ii) movie clips from YouTube channels." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "Event-Camera Dataset", "dval": "The Event-Camera Dataset is a collection of datasets with an event-based camera for high-speed robotics. The data also include intensity images, inertial measurements, and ground truth from a motion-capture system. An event-based camera is a revolutionary vision sensor with three key advantages: a measurement rate that is almost 1 million times faster than standard cameras, a latency of 1 microsecond, and a high dynamic range of 130 decibels (standard cameras only have 60 dB). These properties enable the design of a new class of algorithms for high-speed robotics, where standard cameras suffer from motion blur and high latency. All the data are released both as text files and binary (i.e., rosbag) files." }, { "dkey": "Oxford5k", "dval": "Oxford5K is the Oxford Buildings Dataset, which contains 5062 images collected from Flickr. It offers a set of 55 queries for 11 landmark buildings, five for each landmark." } ]
This paper presents a novel joint head and human detection network, JointDet, which effectively detects
head human detection images
2,019
[ "THEODORE", "JTA", "WGISD", "SCUT-HEAD", "MLFP", "Watch-n-Patch", "WinoGrande" ]
[ "CrowdHuman", "CityPersons" ]
[ { "dkey": "CrowdHuman", "dval": "CrowdHuman is a large and rich-annotated human detection dataset, which contains 15,000, 4,370 and 5,000 images collected from the Internet for training, validation and testing respectively. The number is more than 10× boosted compared with previous challenging pedestrian detection dataset like CityPersons. The total number of persons is also noticeably larger than the others with ∼340k person and ∼99k ignore region annotations in the CrowdHuman training subset." }, { "dkey": "CityPersons", "dval": "The CityPersons dataset is a subset of Cityscapes which only consists of person annotations. There are 2975 images for training, 500 and 1575 images for validation and testing. The average of the number of pedestrians in an image is 7. The visible-region and full-body annotations are provided." }, { "dkey": "THEODORE", "dval": "Recent work about synthetic indoor datasets from perspective views has shown significant improvements of object detection results with Convolutional Neural Networks(CNNs). In this paper, we introduce THEODORE: a novel, large-scale indoor dataset containing 100,000 high- resolution diversified fisheye images with 14 classes. To this end, we create 3D virtual environments of living rooms, different human characters and interior textures. Beside capturing fisheye images from virtual environments we create annotations for semantic segmentation, instance masks and bounding boxes for object detection tasks. We compare our synthetic dataset to state of the art real-world datasets for omnidirectional images. Based on MS COCO weights, we show that our dataset is well suited for fine-tuning CNNs for object detection. Through a high generalization of our models by means of image synthesis and domain randomization we reach an AP up to 0.84 for class person on High-Definition Analytics dataset." }, { "dkey": "JTA", "dval": "JTA is a dataset for people tracking in urban scenarios by exploiting a photorealistic videogame. It is up to now the vastest dataset (about 500.000 frames, almost 10 million body poses) of human body parts for people tracking in urban scenarios." }, { "dkey": "WGISD", "dval": "Embrapa Wine Grape Instance Segmentation Dataset (WGISD) contains grape clusters properly annotated in 300 images and a novel annotation methodology for segmentation of complex objects in natural images." }, { "dkey": "SCUT-HEAD", "dval": "Includes 4405 images with 111251 heads annotated." }, { "dkey": "MLFP", "dval": "The MLFP dataset consists of face presentation attacks captured with seven 3D latex masks and three 2D print attacks. The dataset contains videos captured from color, thermal and infrared channels." }, { "dkey": "Watch-n-Patch", "dval": "The Watch-n-Patch dataset was created with the focus on modeling human activities, comprising multiple actions in a completely unsupervised setting. It is collected with Microsoft Kinect One sensor for a total length of about 230 minutes, divided in 458 videos. 7 subjects perform human daily activities in 8 offices and 5 kitchens with complex backgrounds. Moreover, skeleton data are provided as ground truth annotations." }, { "dkey": "WinoGrande", "dval": "WinoGrande is a large-scale dataset of 44k problems, inspired by the original WSC design, but adjusted to improve both the scale and the hardness of the dataset. The key steps of the dataset construction consist of (1) a carefully designed crowdsourcing procedure, followed by (2) systematic bias reduction using a novel AfLite algorithm that generalizes human-detectable word associations to machine-detectable embedding associations." } ]
Probing the quality of sentence embeddings.
linguistic feature probing text
2,018
[ "PARANMT-50M", "VeRi-Wild", "NumerSense", "CCMatrix", "GenericsKB" ]
[ "MultiNLI", "SentEval" ]
[ { "dkey": "MultiNLI", "dval": "The Multi-Genre Natural Language Inference (MultiNLI) dataset has 433K sentence pairs. Its size and mode of collection are modeled closely like SNLI. MultiNLI offers ten distinct genres (Face-to-face, Telephone, 9/11, Travel, Letters, Oxford University Press, Slate, Verbatim, Goverment and Fiction) of written and spoken English data. There are matched dev/test sets which are derived from the same sources as those in the training set, and mismatched sets which do not closely resemble any seen at training time." }, { "dkey": "SentEval", "dval": "SentEval is a toolkit for evaluating the quality of universal sentence representations. SentEval encompasses a variety of tasks, including binary and multi-class classification, natural language inference and sentence similarity. The set of tasks was selected based on what appears to be the community consensus regarding the appropriate evaluations for universal sentence representations. The toolkit comes with scripts to download and preprocess datasets, and an easy interface to evaluate sentence encoders." }, { "dkey": "PARANMT-50M", "dval": "PARANMT-50M is a dataset for training paraphrastic sentence embeddings. It consists of more than 50 million English-English sentential paraphrase pairs." }, { "dkey": "VeRi-Wild", "dval": "Veri-Wild is the largest vehicle re-identification dataset (as of CVPR 2019). The dataset is captured from a large CCTV surveillance system consisting of 174 cameras across one month (30× 24h) under unconstrained scenarios. This dataset comprises 416,314 vehicle images of 40,671 identities. Evaluation on this dataset is split across three subsets: small, medium and large; comprising 3000, 5000 and 10,000 identities respectively (in probe and gallery sets)." }, { "dkey": "NumerSense", "dval": "Contains 13.6k masked-word-prediction probes, 10.5k for fine-tuning and 3.1k for testing." }, { "dkey": "CCMatrix", "dval": "CCMatrix uses ten snapshots of a curated common crawl corpus (Wenzek et al., 2019) totalling 32.7 billion unique sentences." }, { "dkey": "GenericsKB", "dval": "The GenericsKB contains 3.4M+ generic sentences about the world, i.e., sentences expressing general truths such as \"Dogs bark,\" and \"Trees remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.\" Generics are potentially useful as a knowledge source for AI systems requiring general world knowledge. The GenericsKB is the first large-scale resource containing naturally occurring generic sentences (as opposed to extracted or crowdsourced triples), and is rich in high-quality, general, semantically complete statements. Generics were primarily extracted from three large text sources, namely the Waterloo Corpus, selected parts of Simple Wikipedia, and the ARC Corpus. A filtered, high-quality subset is also available in GenericsKB-Best, containing 1,020,868 sentences." } ]
Relation-aware global attention (RGA) can improve the feature representation power and help
person re-identification images
2,019
[ "arXiv Summarization Dataset", "Visual Genome", "DICM", "DUT-OMRON", "ISIA Food-500" ]
[ "Cityscapes", "CIFAR-10", "CUHK03" ]
[ { "dkey": "Cityscapes", "dval": "Cityscapes is a large-scale database which focuses on semantic understanding of urban street scenes. It provides semantic, instance-wise, and dense pixel annotations for 30 classes grouped into 8 categories (flat surfaces, humans, vehicles, constructions, objects, nature, sky, and void). The dataset consists of around 5000 fine annotated images and 20000 coarse annotated ones. Data was captured in 50 cities during several months, daytimes, and good weather conditions. It was originally recorded as video so the frames were manually selected to have the following features: large number of dynamic objects, varying scene layout, and varying background." }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "CUHK03", "dval": "The CUHK03 consists of 14,097 images of 1,467 different identities, where 6 campus cameras were deployed for image collection and each identity is captured by 2 campus cameras. This dataset provides two types of annotations, one by manually labelled bounding boxes and the other by bounding boxes produced by an automatic detector. The dataset also provides 20 random train/test splits in which 100 identities are selected for testing and the rest for training" }, { "dkey": "arXiv Summarization Dataset", "dval": "This is a dataset for evaluating summarisation methods for research papers." }, { "dkey": "Visual Genome", "dval": "Visual Genome contains Visual Question Answering data in a multi-choice setting. It consists of 101,174 images from MSCOCO with 1.7 million QA pairs, 17 questions per image on average. Compared to the Visual Question Answering dataset, Visual Genome represents a more balanced distribution over 6 question types: What, Where, When, Who, Why and How. The Visual Genome dataset also presents 108K images with densely annotated objects, attributes and relationships." }, { "dkey": "DICM", "dval": "DICM is a dataset for low-light enhancement which consists of 69 images collected with commercial digital cameras." }, { "dkey": "DUT-OMRON", "dval": "The DUT-OMRON dataset is used for evaluation of Salient Object Detection task and it contains 5,168 high quality images. The images have one or more salient objects and relatively cluttered background." }, { "dkey": "ISIA Food-500", "dval": "Includes 500 categories from the list in the Wikipedia and 399,726 images, a more comprehensive food dataset that surpasses existing popular benchmark datasets by category coverage and data volume." } ]
I want to combine embedding and rule learning for knowledge graph completion.
knowledge graph completion text
2,019
[ "MutualFriends", "SNIPS", "CLEVR-Hans", "FrameNet" ]
[ "FB15k", "WN18" ]
[ { "dkey": "FB15k", "dval": "The FB15k dataset contains knowledge base relation triples and textual mentions of Freebase entity pairs. It has a total of 592,213 triplets with 14,951 entities and 1,345 relationships. FB15K-237 is a variant of the original dataset where inverse relations are removed, since it was found that a large number of test triplets could be obtained by inverting triplets in the training set." }, { "dkey": "WN18", "dval": "The WN18 dataset has 18 relations scraped from WordNet for roughly 41,000 synsets, resulting in 141,442 triplets. It was found out that a large number of the test triplets can be found in the training set with another relation or the inverse relation. Therefore, a new version of the dataset WN18RR has been proposed to address this issue." }, { "dkey": "MutualFriends", "dval": "In MutualFriends, two agents, A and B, each have a private knowledge base, which contains a list of friends with multiple attributes (e.g., name, school, major, etc.). The agents must chat with each other to find their unique mutual friend." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "CLEVR-Hans", "dval": "The CLEVR-Hans data set is a novel confounded visual scene data set, which captures complex compositions of different objects. This data set consists of CLEVR images divided into several classes. \n\nThe membership of a class is based on combinations of objects’ attributes and relations. Additionally, certain classes within the data set are confounded. Thus, within the data set, consisting of train, validation, and test splits, all train, and validation images of confounded classes will be confounded with a specific attribute or combination of attributes.\n\nEach class is represented by 3000 training images, 750 validation images, and 750 test images. The training, validation, and test set splits contain 9000, 2250, and 2250 samples, respectively, for CLEVR-Hans3 and 21000, 5250, and 5250 samples for CLEVR-Hans7. The class distribution is balanced for all data splits.\n\nFor CLEVR-Hans classes for which class rules contain more than three objects, the number of objects to be placed per scene was randomly chosen between the minimal required number of objects for that class and ten, rather than between three and ten, as in the original CLEVR data set.\n\nFinally, the images were created such that the exact combinations of the class rules did not occur in images of other classes. It is possible that a subset of objects from one class rule occur in an image of another class. However, it is not possible that more than one complete class rule is contained in an image." }, { "dkey": "FrameNet", "dval": "FrameNet is a linguistic knowledge graph containing information about lexical and predicate argument semantics of the English language. FrameNet contains two distinct entity classes: frames and lexical units, where a frame is a meaning and a lexical unit is a single meaning for a word." } ]
A novel consistency loss to train the depth/normal pair jointly for stereo depth estimation.
stereo depth estimation images
2,019
[ "KITTI-Depth", "MVSEC", "Make3D", "DIODE", "BlendedMVS", "ITOP" ]
[ "SUN3D", "ScanNet" ]
[ { "dkey": "SUN3D", "dval": "SUN3D contains a large-scale RGB-D video database, with 8 annotated sequences. Each frame has a semantic segmentation of the objects in the scene and information about the camera pose. It is composed by 415 sequences captured in 254 different spaces, in 41 different buildings. Moreover, some places have been captured multiple times at different moments of the day." }, { "dkey": "ScanNet", "dval": "ScanNet is an instance-level indoor RGB-D dataset that includes both 2D and 3D data. It is a collection of labeled voxels rather than points or objects. Up to now, ScanNet v2, the newest version of ScanNet, has collected 1513 annotated scans with an approximate 90% surface coverage. In the semantic segmentation task, this dataset is marked in 20 classes of annotated 3D voxelized objects." }, { "dkey": "KITTI-Depth", "dval": "The KITTI-Depth dataset includes depth maps from projected LiDAR point clouds that were matched against the depth estimation from the stereo cameras. The depth images are highly sparse with only 5% of the pixels available and the rest is missing. The dataset has 86k training images, 7k validation images, and 1k test set images on the benchmark server with no access to the ground truth." }, { "dkey": "MVSEC", "dval": "The Multi Vehicle Stereo Event Camera (MVSEC) dataset is a collection of data designed for the development of novel 3D perception algorithms for event based cameras. Stereo event data is collected from car, motorbike, hexacopter and handheld data, and fused with lidar, IMU, motion capture and GPS to provide ground truth pose and depth images." }, { "dkey": "Make3D", "dval": "The Make3D dataset is a monocular Depth Estimation dataset that contains 400 single training RGB and depth map pairs, and 134 test samples. The RGB images have high resolution, while the depth maps are provided at low resolution." }, { "dkey": "DIODE", "dval": "Diode Dense Indoor/Outdoor DEpth (DIODE) is the first standard dataset for monocular depth estimation comprising diverse indoor and outdoor scenes acquired with the same hardware setup. The training set consists of 8574 indoor and 16884 outdoor samples from 20 scans each. The validation set contains 325 indoor and 446 outdoor samples with each set from 10 different scans. The ground truth density for the indoor training and validation splits are approximately 99.54% and 99%, respectively. The density of the outdoor sets are naturally lower with 67.19% for training and 78.33% for validation subsets. The indoor and outdoor ranges for the dataset are 50m and 300m, respectively." }, { "dkey": "BlendedMVS", "dval": "BlendedMVS is a novel large-scale dataset, to provide sufficient training ground truth for learning-based MVS. The dataset was created by applying a 3D reconstruction pipeline to recover high-quality textured meshes from images of well-selected scenes. Then, these mesh models were rendered to color images and depth maps." }, { "dkey": "ITOP", "dval": "The ITOP dataset consists of 40K training and 10K testing depth images for each of the front-view and top-view tracks. This dataset contains depth images with 20 actors who perform 15 sequences each and is recorded by two Asus Xtion Pro cameras. The ground-truth of this dataset is the 3D coordinates of 15 body joints." } ]
I want to train a supervised model for person re-identification.
person re-identification images
2,018
[ "SYSU-MM01", "Airport", "Partial-iLIDS", "CUHK02", "P-DESTRE" ]
[ "Market-1501", "CUHK03" ]
[ { "dkey": "Market-1501", "dval": "Market-1501 is a large-scale public benchmark dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1501 identities which are captured by six different cameras, and 32,668 pedestrian image bounding-boxes obtained using the Deformable Part Models pedestrian detector. Each person has 3.6 images on average at each viewpoint. The dataset is split into two parts: 750 identities are utilized for training and the remaining 751 identities are used for testing. In the official testing protocol 3,368 query images are selected as probe set to find the correct match across 19,732 reference gallery images." }, { "dkey": "CUHK03", "dval": "The CUHK03 consists of 14,097 images of 1,467 different identities, where 6 campus cameras were deployed for image collection and each identity is captured by 2 campus cameras. This dataset provides two types of annotations, one by manually labelled bounding boxes and the other by bounding boxes produced by an automatic detector. The dataset also provides 20 random train/test splits in which 100 identities are selected for testing and the rest for training" }, { "dkey": "SYSU-MM01", "dval": "The SYSU-MM01 is a dataset collected for the Visible-Infrared Re-identification problem. The images in the dataset were obtained from 491 different persons by recording them using 4 RGB and 2 infrared cameras. Within the dataset, the persons are divided into 3 fixed splits to create training, validation and test sets. In the training set, there are 20284 RGB and 9929 infrared images of 296 persons. The validation set contains 1974 RGB and 1980 infrared images of 99 persons. The testing set consists of the images of 96 persons where 3803 infrared images are used as query and 301 randomly selected RGB images are used as gallery." }, { "dkey": "Airport", "dval": "The Airport dataset is a dataset for person re-identification which consists of 39,902 images and 9,651 identities across six cameras." }, { "dkey": "Partial-iLIDS", "dval": "Partial iLIDS is a dataset for occluded person person re-identification. It contains a total of 476 images of 119 people captured by 4 non-overlapping cameras. Some images contain people occluded by other individuals or luggage." }, { "dkey": "CUHK02", "dval": "CUHK02 is a dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1,816 identities from two disjoint camera views. Each identity has two samples per camera view making a total of 7,264 images. It is used for Person Re-identification." }, { "dkey": "P-DESTRE", "dval": "Provides consistent ID annotations across multiple days, making it suitable for the extremely challenging problem of person search, i.e., where no clothing information can be reliably used. Apart this feature, the P-DESTRE annotations enable the research on UAV-based pedestrian detection, tracking, re-identification and soft biometric solutions." } ]
I want to train a model for cross-domain few-shot learning.
cross-domain few-shot learning images
2,019
[ "Meta-Dataset", "FewRel 2.0", "FC100", "PASCAL-5i", "SGD", "FewRel", "FSOD" ]
[ "ImageNet", "EuroSAT" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "EuroSAT", "dval": "Eurosat is a dataset and deep learning benchmark for land use and land cover classification. The dataset is based on Sentinel-2 satellite images covering 13 spectral bands and consisting out of 10 classes with in total 27,000 labeled and geo-referenced images." }, { "dkey": "Meta-Dataset", "dval": "The Meta-Dataset benchmark is a large few-shot learning benchmark and consists of multiple datasets of different data distributions. It does not restrict few-shot tasks to have fixed ways and shots, thus representing a more realistic scenario. It consists of 10 datasets from diverse domains: \n\n\nILSVRC-2012 (the ImageNet dataset, consisting of natural images with 1000 categories)\nOmniglot (hand-written characters, 1623 classes)\nAircraft (dataset of aircraft images, 100 classes)\nCUB-200-2011 (dataset of Birds, 200 classes)\nDescribable Textures (different kinds of texture images with 43 categories)\nQuick Draw (black and white sketches of 345 different categories)\nFungi (a large dataset of mushrooms with 1500 categories)\nVGG Flower (dataset of flower images with 102 categories), \nTraffic Signs (German traffic sign images with 43 classes)\nMSCOCO (images collected from Flickr, 80 classes). \n\nAll datasets except Traffic signs and MSCOCO have a training, validation and test split (proportioned roughly into 70%, 15%, 15%). The datasets Traffic Signs and MSCOCO are reserved for testing only." }, { "dkey": "FewRel 2.0", "dval": "A more challenging task to investigate two aspects of few-shot relation classification models: (1) Can they adapt to a new domain with only a handful of instances? (2) Can they detect none-of-the-above (NOTA) relations?" }, { "dkey": "FC100", "dval": "The FC100 dataset (Fewshot-CIFAR100) is a newly split dataset based on CIFAR-100 for few-shot learning. It contains 20 high-level categories which are divided into 12, 4, 4 categories for training, validation and test. There are 60, 20, 20 low-level classes in the corresponding split containing 600 images of size 32 × 32 per class. Smaller image size makes it more challenging for few-shot learning." }, { "dkey": "PASCAL-5i", "dval": "PASCAL-5i is a dataset used to evaluate few-shot segmentation. The dataset is sub-divided into 4 folds each containing 5 classes. A fold contains labelled samples from 5 classes that are used for evaluating the few-shot learning method. The rest 15 classes are used for training." }, { "dkey": "SGD", "dval": "The Schema-Guided Dialogue (SGD) dataset consists of over 20k annotated multi-domain, task-oriented conversations between a human and a virtual assistant. These conversations involve interactions with services and APIs spanning 20 domains, ranging from banks and events to media, calendar, travel, and weather. For most of these domains, the dataset contains multiple different APIs, many of which have overlapping functionalities but different interfaces, which reflects common real-world scenarios. The wide range of available annotations can be used for intent prediction, slot filling, dialogue state tracking, policy imitation learning, language generation, user simulation learning, among other tasks in large-scale virtual assistants. Besides these, the dataset has unseen domains and services in the evaluation set to quantify the performance in zero-shot or few shot settings." }, { "dkey": "FewRel", "dval": "The FewRel (Few-Shot Relation Classification Dataset) contains 100 relations and 70,000 instances from Wikipedia. The dataset is divided into three subsets: training set (64 relations), validation set (16 relations) and test set (20 relations)." }, { "dkey": "FSOD", "dval": "Few-Shot Object Detection Dataset (FSOD) is a high-diverse dataset specifically designed for few-shot object detection and intrinsically designed to evaluate thegenerality of a model on novel categories." } ]
I want to train an unsupervised model for image segmentation from images.
image segmentation images
2,020
[ "LLAMAS", "MVTecAD", "ConvAI2", "DAVIS 2016", "SNIPS", "STL-10" ]
[ "ImageNet", "UCF101" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "UCF101", "dval": "UCF101 dataset is an extension of UCF50 and consists of 13,320 video clips, which are classified into 101 categories. These 101 categories can be classified into 5 types (Body motion, Human-human interactions, Human-object interactions, Playing musical instruments and Sports). The total length of these video clips is over 27 hours. All the videos are collected from YouTube and have a fixed frame rate of 25 FPS with the resolution of 320 × 240." }, { "dkey": "LLAMAS", "dval": "The unsupervised Labeled Lane MArkerS dataset (LLAMAS) is a dataset for lane detection and segmentation. It contains over 100,000 annotated images, with annotations of over 100 meters at a resolution of 1276 x 717 pixels. The Unsupervised Llamas dataset was annotated by creating high definition maps for automated driving including lane markers based on Lidar. \n\nPaper: Unsupervised Labeled Lane Markers Using Maps" }, { "dkey": "MVTecAD", "dval": "MVTec AD is a dataset for benchmarking anomaly detection methods with a focus on industrial inspection. It contains over 5000 high-resolution images divided into fifteen different object and texture categories. Each category comprises a set of defect-free training images and a test set of images with various kinds of defects as well as images without defects.\n\nThere are two common metrics: Detection AUROC and Segmentation (or pixelwise) AUROC\n\nDetection (or, classification) methods output single float (anomaly score) per input test image. \n\nSegmentation methods output anomaly probability for each pixel. \n\"To assess segmentation performance, we evaluate the relative per-region overlap of the segmentation with the ground truth. To get an additional performance measure that is independent of the determined threshold, we compute the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC AUC). We define the true positive rate as the percentage of pixels that were correctly classified as anomalous\" [1]\nLater segmentation metric was improved to balance regions with small and large area, see PRO-AUC and other in [2]\n\n[1] Paul Bergmann et al, \"MVTec AD — A Comprehensive Real-World Dataset for Unsupervised Anomaly Detection\"\n[2] Bergmann, P., Batzner, K., Fauser, M. et al. The MVTec Anomaly Detection Dataset: A Comprehensive Real-World Dataset for Unsupervised Anomaly Detection. Int J Comput Vis (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11263-020-01400-4" }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "DAVIS 2016", "dval": "DAVIS16 is a dataset for video object segmentation which consists of 50 videos in total (30 videos for training and 20 for testing). Per-frame pixel-wise annotations are offered." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "STL-10", "dval": "The STL-10 is an image dataset derived from ImageNet and popularly used to evaluate algorithms of unsupervised feature learning or self-taught learning. Besides 100,000 unlabeled images, it contains 13,000 labeled images from 10 object classes (such as birds, cats, trucks), among which 5,000 images are partitioned for training while the remaining 8,000 images for testing. All the images are color images with 96×96 pixels in size." } ]
We propose a simple, deep residual learning framework for ImageNet classification. The network architecture is composed of several
imagenet classification images
2,016
[ "Multi Task Crowd", "COWC", "REDS", "Indian Pines" ]
[ "COCO", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "Multi Task Crowd", "dval": "Multi Task Crowd is a new 100 image dataset fully annotated for crowd counting, violent behaviour detection and density level classification." }, { "dkey": "COWC", "dval": "The Cars Overhead With Context (COWC) data set is a large set of annotated cars from overhead. It is useful for training a device such as a deep neural network to learn to detect and/or count cars." }, { "dkey": "REDS", "dval": "The realistic and dynamic scenes (REDS) dataset was proposed in the NTIRE19 Challenge. The dataset is composed of 300 video sequences with resolution of 720×1,280, and each video has 100 frames, where the training set, the validation set and the testing set have 240, 30 and 30 videos, respectively" }, { "dkey": "Indian Pines", "dval": "Indian Pines is a Hyperspectral image segmentation dataset. The input data consists of hyperspectral bands over a single landscape in Indiana, US, (Indian Pines data set) with 145×145 pixels. For each pixel, the data set contains 220 spectral reflectance bands which represent different portions of the electromagnetic spectrum in the wavelength range 0.4−2.5⋅10−6." } ]
A system for generating faces from text descriptions.
face generation text
2,019
[ "Multi-Modal CelebA-HQ", "ToTTo", "CommonGen", "DART", "CNN/Daily Mail", "Spoken-SQuAD", "C&Z" ]
[ "COCO", "CelebA" ]
[ { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "CelebA", "dval": "CelebFaces Attributes dataset contains 202,599 face images of the size 178×218 from 10,177 celebrities, each annotated with 40 binary labels indicating facial attributes like hair color, gender and age." }, { "dkey": "Multi-Modal CelebA-HQ", "dval": "Multi-Modal-CelebA-HQ is a large-scale face image dataset that has 30,000 high-resolution face images selected from the CelebA dataset by following CelebA-HQ. Each image has high-quality segmentation mask, sketch, descriptive text, and image with transparent background.\n\nMulti-Modal-CelebA-HQ can be used to train and evaluate algorithms of text-to-image-generation, text-guided image manipulation, sketch-to-image generation, and GANs for face generation and editing." }, { "dkey": "ToTTo", "dval": "ToTTo is an open-domain English table-to-text dataset with over 120,000 training examples that proposes a controlled generation task: given a Wikipedia table and a set of highlighted table cells, produce a one-sentence description.\n\nDuring the dataset creation process, tables from English Wikipedia are matched with (noisy) descriptions. Each table cell mentioned in the description is highlighted and the descriptions are iteratively cleaned and corrected to faithfully reflect the content of the highlighted cells." }, { "dkey": "CommonGen", "dval": "CommonGen is constructed through a combination of crowdsourced and existing caption corpora, consists of 79k commonsense descriptions over 35k unique concept-sets." }, { "dkey": "DART", "dval": "DART is a large dataset for open-domain structured data record to text generation. DART consists of 82,191 examples across different domains with each input being a semantic RDF triple set derived from data records in tables and the tree ontology of the schema, annotated with sentence descriptions that cover all facts in the triple set." }, { "dkey": "CNN/Daily Mail", "dval": "CNN/Daily Mail is a dataset for text summarization. Human generated abstractive summary bullets were generated from news stories in CNN and Daily Mail websites as questions (with one of the entities hidden), and stories as the corresponding passages from which the system is expected to answer the fill-in the-blank question. The authors released the scripts that crawl, extract and generate pairs of passages and questions from these websites.\n\nIn all, the corpus has 286,817 training pairs, 13,368 validation pairs and 11,487 test pairs, as defined by their scripts. The source documents in the training set have 766 words spanning 29.74 sentences on an average while the summaries consist of 53 words and 3.72 sentences." }, { "dkey": "Spoken-SQuAD", "dval": "In SpokenSQuAD, the document is in spoken form, the input question is in the form of text and the answer to each question is always a span in the document. The following procedures were used to generate spoken documents from the original SQuAD dataset. First, the Google text-to-speech system was used to generate the spoken version of the articles in SQuAD. Then CMU Sphinx was sued to generate the corresponding ASR transcriptions. The SQuAD training set was used to generate the training set of Spoken SQuAD, and SQuAD development set was used to generate the testing set for Spoken SQuAD. If the answer of a question did not exist in the ASR transcriptions of the associated article, the question-answer pair was removed from the dataset because these examples are too difficult for listening comprehension machine at this stage." }, { "dkey": "C&Z", "dval": "One of the first datasets (if not the first) to highlight the importance of bias and diversity in the community, which started a revolution afterwards. Introduced in 2014 as integral part of a thesis of Master of Science [1,2] at Carnegie Mellon and City University of Hong Kong. It was later expanded by adding synthetic images generated by a GAN architecture at ETH Zürich (in HDCGAN by Curtó et al. 2017). Being then not only the pioneer of talking about the importance of balanced datasets for learning and vision but also for being the first GAN augmented dataset of faces. \n\nThe original description goes as follows:\n\nA bias-free dataset, containing human faces from different ethnical groups in a wide variety of illumination conditions and image resolutions. C&Z is enhanced with HDCGAN synthetic images, thus being the first GAN augmented dataset of faces.\n\nDataset: https://github.com/curto2/c\n\nSupplement (with scripts to handle the labels): https://github.com/curto2/graphics\n\n[1] https://www.curto.hk/c/decurto.pdf\n\n[2] https://www.zarza.hk/z/dezarza.pdf" } ]
I want to train a fully supervised model for keypoint localization in video.
keypoint localization video
2,016
[ "AVE", "UMDFaces", "YouTube-8M", "DiDeMo", "SNIPS", "FaceForensics", "ACDC" ]
[ "MPII", "AFLW", "COFW" ]
[ { "dkey": "MPII", "dval": "The MPII Human Pose Dataset for single person pose estimation is composed of about 25K images of which 15K are training samples, 3K are validation samples and 7K are testing samples (which labels are withheld by the authors). The images are taken from YouTube videos covering 410 different human activities and the poses are manually annotated with up to 16 body joints." }, { "dkey": "AFLW", "dval": "The Annotated Facial Landmarks in the Wild (AFLW) is a large-scale collection of annotated face images gathered from Flickr, exhibiting a large variety in appearance (e.g., pose, expression, ethnicity, age, gender) as well as general imaging and environmental conditions. In total about 25K faces are annotated with up to 21 landmarks per image." }, { "dkey": "COFW", "dval": "The Caltech Occluded Faces in the Wild (COFW) dataset is designed to present faces in real-world conditions. Faces show large variations in shape and occlusions due to differences in pose, expression, use of accessories such as sunglasses and hats and interactions with objects (e.g. food, hands, microphones,
etc.). All images were hand annotated using the same 29 landmarks as in LFPW. Both the landmark positions as well as their occluded/unoccluded state were annotated. The faces are occluded to different degrees, with large variations in the type of occlusions encountered. COFW has an average occlusion of over 23." }, { "dkey": "AVE", "dval": "To investigate three temporal localization tasks: supervised and weakly-supervised audio-visual event localization, and cross-modality localization." }, { "dkey": "UMDFaces", "dval": "UMDFaces is a face dataset divided into two parts:\n\n\nStill Images - 367,888 face annotations for 8,277 subjects.\nVideo Frames - Over 3.7 million annotated video frames from over 22,000 videos of 3100 subjects.\n\nPart 1 - Still Images\n\nThe dataset contains 367,888 face annotations for 8,277 subjects divided into 3 batches. The annotations contain human curated bounding boxes for faces and estimated pose (yaw, pitch, and roll), locations of twenty-one keypoints, and gender information generated by a pre-trained neural network.\n\nPart 2 - Video Frames\n\nThe second part contains 3,735,476 annotated video frames extracted from a total of 22,075 for 3,107 subjects. The annotations contain the estimated pose (yaw, pitch, and roll), locations of twenty-one keypoints, and gender information generated by a pre-trained neural network." }, { "dkey": "YouTube-8M", "dval": "The YouTube-8M dataset is a large scale video dataset, which includes more than 7 million videos with 4716 classes labeled by the annotation system. The dataset consists of three parts: training set, validate set, and test set. In the training set, each class contains at least 100 training videos. Features of these videos are extracted by the state-of-the-art popular pre-trained models and released for public use. Each video contains audio and visual modality. Based on the visual information, videos are divided into 24 topics, such as sports, game, arts & entertainment, etc" }, { "dkey": "DiDeMo", "dval": "The Distinct Describable Moments (DiDeMo) dataset is one of the largest and most diverse datasets for the temporal localization of events in videos given natural language descriptions. The videos are collected from Flickr and each video is trimmed to a maximum of 30 seconds. The videos in the dataset are divided into 5-second segments to reduce the complexity of annotation. The dataset is split into training, validation and test sets containing 8,395, 1,065 and 1,004 videos respectively. The dataset contains a total of 26,892 moments and one moment could be associated with descriptions from multiple annotators. The descriptions in DiDeMo dataset are detailed and contain camera movement, temporal transition indicators, and activities. Moreover, the descriptions in DiDeMo are verified so that each description refers to a single moment." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "FaceForensics", "dval": "FaceForensics is a video dataset consisting of more than 500,000 frames containing faces from 1004 videos that can be used to study image or video forgeries. All videos are downloaded from Youtube and are cut down to short continuous clips that contain mostly frontal faces. This dataset has two versions:\n\n\n\nSource-to-Target: where the authors reenact over 1000 videos with new facial expressions extracted from other videos, which e.g. can be used to train a classifier to detect fake images or videos.\n\n\n\nSelfreenactment: where the authors use Face2Face to reenact the facial expressions of videos with their own facial expressions as input to get pairs of videos, which e.g. can be used to train supervised generative refinement models." }, { "dkey": "ACDC", "dval": "The goal of the Automated Cardiac Diagnosis Challenge (ACDC) challenge is to:\n\n\ncompare the performance of automatic methods on the segmentation of the left ventricular endocardium and epicardium as the right ventricular endocardium for both end diastolic and end systolic phase instances;\ncompare the performance of automatic methods for the classification of the examinations in five classes (normal case, heart failure with infarction, dilated cardiomyopathy, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, abnormal right ventricle).\n\nThe overall ACDC dataset was created from real clinical exams acquired at the University Hospital of Dijon. Acquired data were fully anonymized and handled within the regulations set by the local ethical committee of the Hospital of Dijon (France). Our dataset covers several well-defined pathologies with enough cases to (1) properly train machine learning methods and (2) clearly assess the variations of the main physiological parameters obtained from cine-MRI (in particular diastolic volume and ejection fraction). The dataset is composed of 150 exams (all from different patients) divided into 5 evenly distributed subgroups (4 pathological plus 1 healthy subject groups) as described below. Furthermore, each patient comes with the following additional information : weight, height, as well as the diastolic and systolic phase instants.\n\nThe database is made available to participants through two datasets from the dedicated online evaluation website after a personal registration: i) a training dataset of 100 patients along with the corresponding manual references based on the analysis of one clinical expert; ii) a testing dataset composed of 50 new patients, without manual annotations but with the patient information given above. The raw input images are provided through the Nifti format." } ]
We propose a semi-supervised framework for person re-identification. It utilizes the correlations
person re-identification images
2,018
[ "SYSU-MM01", "Airport", "Partial-iLIDS", "CUHK02", "CUHK-PEDES", "P-DESTRE" ]
[ "VIPeR", "Market-1501", "CUHK03" ]
[ { "dkey": "VIPeR", "dval": "The Viewpoint Invariant Pedestrian Recognition (VIPeR) dataset includes 632 people and two outdoor cameras under different viewpoints and light conditions. Each person has one image per camera and each image has been scaled to be 128×48 pixels. It provides the pose angle of each person as 0° (front), 45°, 90° (right), 135°, and 180° (back)." }, { "dkey": "Market-1501", "dval": "Market-1501 is a large-scale public benchmark dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1501 identities which are captured by six different cameras, and 32,668 pedestrian image bounding-boxes obtained using the Deformable Part Models pedestrian detector. Each person has 3.6 images on average at each viewpoint. The dataset is split into two parts: 750 identities are utilized for training and the remaining 751 identities are used for testing. In the official testing protocol 3,368 query images are selected as probe set to find the correct match across 19,732 reference gallery images." }, { "dkey": "CUHK03", "dval": "The CUHK03 consists of 14,097 images of 1,467 different identities, where 6 campus cameras were deployed for image collection and each identity is captured by 2 campus cameras. This dataset provides two types of annotations, one by manually labelled bounding boxes and the other by bounding boxes produced by an automatic detector. The dataset also provides 20 random train/test splits in which 100 identities are selected for testing and the rest for training" }, { "dkey": "SYSU-MM01", "dval": "The SYSU-MM01 is a dataset collected for the Visible-Infrared Re-identification problem. The images in the dataset were obtained from 491 different persons by recording them using 4 RGB and 2 infrared cameras. Within the dataset, the persons are divided into 3 fixed splits to create training, validation and test sets. In the training set, there are 20284 RGB and 9929 infrared images of 296 persons. The validation set contains 1974 RGB and 1980 infrared images of 99 persons. The testing set consists of the images of 96 persons where 3803 infrared images are used as query and 301 randomly selected RGB images are used as gallery." }, { "dkey": "Airport", "dval": "The Airport dataset is a dataset for person re-identification which consists of 39,902 images and 9,651 identities across six cameras." }, { "dkey": "Partial-iLIDS", "dval": "Partial iLIDS is a dataset for occluded person person re-identification. It contains a total of 476 images of 119 people captured by 4 non-overlapping cameras. Some images contain people occluded by other individuals or luggage." }, { "dkey": "CUHK02", "dval": "CUHK02 is a dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1,816 identities from two disjoint camera views. Each identity has two samples per camera view making a total of 7,264 images. It is used for Person Re-identification." }, { "dkey": "CUHK-PEDES", "dval": "The CUHK-PEDES dataset is a caption-annotated pedestrian dataset. It contains 40,206 images over 13,003 persons. Images are collected from five existing person re-identification datasets, CUHK03, Market-1501, SSM, VIPER, and CUHK01 while each image is annotated with 2 text descriptions by crowd-sourcing workers. Sentences incorporate rich details about person appearances, actions, poses." }, { "dkey": "P-DESTRE", "dval": "Provides consistent ID annotations across multiple days, making it suitable for the extremely challenging problem of person search, i.e., where no clothing information can be reliably used. Apart this feature, the P-DESTRE annotations enable the research on UAV-based pedestrian detection, tracking, re-identification and soft biometric solutions." } ]
I want to train a fully supervised model for cooperative 3D object detection
cooperative 3d object detection point clouds
2,019
[ "UAVA", "DCASE 2014", "Virtual KITTI", "BSDS500", "COCO-Tasks", "SNIPS" ]
[ "CARLA", "KITTI" ]
[ { "dkey": "CARLA", "dval": "CARLA (CAR Learning to Act) is an open simulator for urban driving, developed as an open-source layer over Unreal Engine 4. Technically, it operates similarly to, as an open source layer over Unreal Engine 4 that provides sensors in the form of RGB cameras (with customizable positions), ground truth depth maps, ground truth semantic segmentation maps with 12 semantic classes designed for driving (road, lane marking, traffic sign, sidewalk and so on), bounding boxes for dynamic objects in the environment, and measurements of the agent itself (vehicle location and orientation)." }, { "dkey": "KITTI", "dval": "KITTI (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Toyota Technological Institute) is one of the most popular datasets for use in mobile robotics and autonomous driving. It consists of hours of traffic scenarios recorded with a variety of sensor modalities, including high-resolution RGB, grayscale stereo cameras, and a 3D laser scanner. Despite its popularity, the dataset itself does not contain ground truth for semantic segmentation. However, various researchers have manually annotated parts of the dataset to fit their necessities. Álvarez et al. generated ground truth for 323 images from the road detection challenge with three classes: road, vertical, and sky. Zhang et al. annotated 252 (140 for training and 112 for testing) acquisitions – RGB and Velodyne scans – from the tracking challenge for ten object categories: building, sky, road, vegetation, sidewalk, car, pedestrian, cyclist, sign/pole, and fence. Ros et al. labeled 170 training images and 46 testing images (from the visual odometry challenge) with 11 classes: building, tree, sky, car, sign, road, pedestrian, fence, pole, sidewalk, and bicyclist." }, { "dkey": "UAVA", "dval": "The UAVA,<i>UAV-Assistant</i>, dataset is specifically designed for fostering applications which consider UAVs and humans as cooperative agents.\nWe employ a real-world 3D scanned dataset (<a href=\"https://niessner.github.io/Matterport/\">Matterport3D</a>), physically-based rendering, a gamified simulator for realistic drone navigation trajectory collection, to generate realistic multimodal data both from the user’s exocentric view of the drone, as well as the drone’s egocentric view." }, { "dkey": "DCASE 2014", "dval": "DCASE2014 is an audio classification benchmark." }, { "dkey": "Virtual KITTI", "dval": "Virtual KITTI is a photo-realistic synthetic video dataset designed to learn and evaluate computer vision models for several video understanding tasks: object detection and multi-object tracking, scene-level and instance-level semantic segmentation, optical flow, and depth estimation.\n\nVirtual KITTI contains 50 high-resolution monocular videos (21,260 frames) generated from five different virtual worlds in urban settings under different imaging and weather conditions. These worlds were created using the Unity game engine and a novel real-to-virtual cloning method. These photo-realistic synthetic videos are automatically, exactly, and fully annotated for 2D and 3D multi-object tracking and at the pixel level with category, instance, flow, and depth labels (cf. below for download links)." }, { "dkey": "BSDS500", "dval": "Berkeley Segmentation Data Set 500 (BSDS500) is a standard benchmark for contour detection. This dataset is designed for evaluating natural edge detection that includes not only object contours but also object interior boundaries and background boundaries. It includes 500 natural images with carefully annotated boundaries collected from multiple users. The dataset is divided into three parts: 200 for training, 100 for validation and the rest 200 for test." }, { "dkey": "COCO-Tasks", "dval": "Comprises about 40,000 images where the most suitable objects for 14 tasks have been annotated." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." } ]
I want to train a deep learning model for visual artifact analysis from images.
visual artifact analysis images
2,019
[ "COG", "Flightmare Simulator", "MNIST-1D", "SNIPS", "Washington RGB-D", "CUB-200-2011" ]
[ "COCO", "UCF101", "MARS" ]
[ { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "UCF101", "dval": "UCF101 dataset is an extension of UCF50 and consists of 13,320 video clips, which are classified into 101 categories. These 101 categories can be classified into 5 types (Body motion, Human-human interactions, Human-object interactions, Playing musical instruments and Sports). The total length of these video clips is over 27 hours. All the videos are collected from YouTube and have a fixed frame rate of 25 FPS with the resolution of 320 × 240." }, { "dkey": "MARS", "dval": "MARS (Motion Analysis and Re-identification Set) is a large scale video based person reidentification dataset, an extension of the Market-1501 dataset. It has been collected from six near-synchronized cameras. It consists of 1,261 different pedestrians, who are captured by at least 2 cameras. The variations in poses, colors and illuminations of pedestrians, as well as the poor image quality, make it very difficult to yield high matching accuracy. Moreover, the dataset contains 3,248 distractors in order to make it more realistic. Deformable Part Model and GMMCP tracker were used to automatically generate the tracklets (mostly 25-50 frames long)." }, { "dkey": "COG", "dval": "A configurable visual question and answer dataset (COG) to parallel experiments in humans and animals. COG is much simpler than the general problem of video analysis, yet it addresses many of the problems relating to visual and logical reasoning and memory -- problems that remain challenging for modern deep learning architectures." }, { "dkey": "Flightmare Simulator", "dval": "Flightmare is composed of two main components: a configurable rendering engine built on Unity and a flexible physics engine for dynamics simulation. Those two components are totally decoupled and can run independently from each other. Flightmare comes with several desirable features: (i) a large multi-modal sensor suite, including an interface to extract the 3D point-cloud of the scene; (ii) an API for reinforcement learning which can simulate hundreds of quadrotors in parallel; and (iii) an integration with a virtual-reality headset for interaction with the simulated environment. Flightmare can be used for various applications, including path-planning, reinforcement learning, visual-inertial odometry, deep learning, human-robot interaction, etc." }, { "dkey": "MNIST-1D", "dval": "A minimalist, low-memory, and low-compute alternative to classic deep learning benchmarks. The training examples are 20 times smaller than MNIST examples yet they differentiate more clearly between linear, nonlinear, and convolutional models which attain 32, 68, and 94% accuracy respectively (these models obtain 94, 99+, and 99+% on MNIST)." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "Washington RGB-D", "dval": "Washington RGB-D is a widely used testbed in the robotic community, consisting of 41,877 RGB-D images organized into 300 instances divided in 51 classes of common indoor objects (e.g. scissors, cereal box, keyboard etc). Each object instance was positioned on a turntable and captured from three different viewpoints while rotating." }, { "dkey": "CUB-200-2011", "dval": "The Caltech-UCSD Birds-200-2011 (CUB-200-2011) dataset is the most widely-used dataset for fine-grained visual categorization task. It contains 11,788 images of 200 subcategories belonging to birds, 5,994 for training and 5,794 for testing. Each image has detailed annotations: 1 subcategory label, 15 part locations, 312 binary attributes and 1 bounding box. The textual information comes from Reed et al.. They expand the CUB-200-2011 dataset by collecting fine-grained natural language descriptions. Ten single-sentence descriptions are collected for each image. The natural language descriptions are collected through the Amazon Mechanical Turk (AMT) platform, and are required at least 10 words, without any information of subcategories and actions." } ]
I want to improve calibration for image classification models, and more generally, for probabilistic models.
multiclass calibration image classification
2,019
[ "ConvAI2", "Syn2Real", "Houston", "Multi-PIE", "IntrA" ]
[ "ImageNet", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "Syn2Real", "dval": "Syn2Real, a synthetic-to-real visual domain adaptation benchmark meant to encourage further development of robust domain transfer methods. The goal is to train a model on a synthetic \"source\" domain and then update it so that its performance improves on a real \"target\" domain, without using any target annotations. It includes three tasks, illustrated in figures above: the more traditional closed-set classification task with a known set of categories; the less studied open-set classification task with unknown object categories in the target domain; and the object detection task, which involves localizing instances of objects by predicting their bounding boxes and corresponding class labels." }, { "dkey": "Houston", "dval": "Houston is a hyperspectral image classification dataset. The hyperspectral imagery consists of 144 spectral bands in the 380 nm to 1050 nm region and has been calibrated to at-sensor spectral radiance units, SRU =$ \\mu \\text{W} /( \\text{cm}^2 \\text{ sr nm})$. The corresponding co-registered DSM consists of elevation in meters above sea level (per the Geoid 2012A model)." }, { "dkey": "Multi-PIE", "dval": "The Multi-PIE (Multi Pose, Illumination, Expressions) dataset consists of face images of 337 subjects taken under different pose, illumination and expressions. The pose range contains 15 discrete views, capturing a face profile-to-profile. Illumination changes were modeled using 19 flashlights located in different places of the room." }, { "dkey": "IntrA", "dval": "IntrA is an open-access 3D intracranial aneurysm dataset that makes the application of points-based and mesh-based classification and segmentation models available. This dataset can be used to diagnose intracranial aneurysms and to extract the neck for a clipping operation in medicine and other areas of deep learning, such as normal estimation and surface reconstruction.\n\n103 3D models of entire brain vessels are collected by reconstructing scanned 2D MRA images of patients (the raw 2D MRA images are not published due to medical ethics).\n1909 blood vessel segments are generated automatically from the complete models, including 1694 healthy vessel segments and 215 aneurysm segments for diagnosis.\n116 aneurysm segments are divided and annotated manually by medical experts; the scale of each aneurysm segment is based on the need for a preoperative examination.\nGeodesic distance matrices are computed and included for each annotated 3D segment, because the expression of the geodesic distance is more accurate than Euclidean distance according to the shape of vessels." } ]
An adaptive learning rate for actor-action semantic segmentation.
actor-action semantic segmentation video
2,019
[ "A2D", "GTA5", "CREMA-D", "KTH", "EPIC-KITCHENS-100" ]
[ "ImageNet", "COCO", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "A2D", "dval": "A2D (Actor-Action Dataset) is a dataset for simultaneously inferring actors and actions in videos. A2D has seven actor classes (adult, baby, ball, bird, car, cat, and dog) and eight action classes (climb, crawl, eat, fly, jump, roll, run, and walk) not including the no-action class, which we also consider. The A2D has 3,782 videos with at least 99 instances per valid actor-action tuple and videos are labeled with both pixel-level actors and actions for sampled frames. The A2D dataset serves as a large-scale testbed for various vision problems: video-level single- and multiple-label actor-action recognition, instance-level object segmentation/co-segmentation, as well as pixel-level actor-action semantic segmentation to name a few." }, { "dkey": "GTA5", "dval": "The GTA5 dataset contains 24966 synthetic images with pixel level semantic annotation. The images have been rendered using the open-world video game Grand Theft Auto 5 and are all from the car perspective in the streets of American-style virtual cities. There are 19 semantic classes which are compatible with the ones of Cityscapes dataset." }, { "dkey": "CREMA-D", "dval": "CREMA-D is an emotional multimodal actor data set of 7,442 original clips from 91 actors. These clips were from 48 male and 43 female actors between the ages of 20 and 74 coming from a variety of races and ethnicities (African America, Asian, Caucasian, Hispanic, and Unspecified).\n\nActors spoke from a selection of 12 sentences. The sentences were presented using one of six different emotions (Anger, Disgust, Fear, Happy, Neutral, and Sad) and four different emotion levels (Low, Medium, High, and Unspecified).\n\nParticipants rated the emotion and emotion levels based on the combined audiovisual presentation, the video alone, and the audio alone. Due to the large number of ratings needed, this effort was crowd-sourced and a total of 2443 participants each rated 90 unique clips, 30 audio, 30 visual, and 30 audio-visual. 95% of the clips have more than 7 ratings." }, { "dkey": "KTH", "dval": "The efforts to create a non-trivial and publicly available dataset for action recognition was initiated at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in 2004. The KTH dataset is one of the most standard datasets, which contains six actions: walk, jog, run, box, hand-wave, and hand clap. To account for performance nuance, each action is performed by 25 different individuals, and the setting is systematically altered for each action per actor. Setting variations include: outdoor (s1), outdoor with scale variation (s2), outdoor with different clothes (s3), and indoor (s4). These variations test the ability of each algorithm to identify actions independent of the background, appearance of the actors, and the scale of the actors." }, { "dkey": "EPIC-KITCHENS-100", "dval": "This paper introduces the pipeline to scale the largest dataset in egocentric vision EPIC-KITCHENS. The effort culminates in EPIC-KITCHENS-100, a collection of 100 hours, 20M frames, 90K actions in 700 variable-length videos, capturing long-term unscripted activities in 45 environments, using head-mounted cameras. Compared to its previous version (EPIC-KITCHENS-55), EPIC-KITCHENS-100 has been annotated using a novel pipeline that allows denser (54% more actions per minute) and more complete annotations of fine-grained actions (+128% more action segments). This collection also enables evaluating the \"test of time\" - i.e. whether models trained on data collected in 2018 can generalise to new footage collected under the same hypotheses albeit \"two years on\".\nThe dataset is aligned with 6 challenges: action recognition (full and weak supervision), action detection, action anticipation, cross-modal retrieval (from captions), as well as unsupervised domain adaptation for action recognition. For each challenge, we define the task, provide baselines and evaluation metrics." } ]
A model that compares and aggregates words in two sentences for the task of machine comprehension.
machine comprehension text
2,016
[ "ReCAM", "MultiRC", "CLUE", "BiPaR", "LAMBADA", "HotpotQA" ]
[ "WikiQA", "SNLI", "MovieQA" ]
[ { "dkey": "WikiQA", "dval": "The WikiQA corpus is a publicly available set of question and sentence pairs, collected and annotated for research on open-domain question answering. In order to reflect the true information need of general users, Bing query logs were used as the question source. Each question is linked to a Wikipedia page that potentially has the answer. Because the summary section of a Wikipedia page provides the basic and usually most important information about the topic, sentences in this section were used as the candidate answers. The corpus includes 3,047 questions and 29,258 sentences, where 1,473 sentences were labeled as answer sentences to their corresponding questions." }, { "dkey": "SNLI", "dval": "The SNLI dataset (Stanford Natural Language Inference) consists of 570k sentence-pairs manually labeled as entailment, contradiction, and neutral. Premises are image captions from Flickr30k, while hypotheses were generated by crowd-sourced annotators who were shown a premise and asked to generate entailing, contradicting, and neutral sentences. Annotators were instructed to judge the relation between sentences given that they describe the same event. Each pair is labeled as “entailment”, “neutral”, “contradiction” or “-”, where “-” indicates that an agreement could not be reached." }, { "dkey": "MovieQA", "dval": "The MovieQA dataset is a dataset for movie question answering. to evaluate automatic story comprehension from both video and text. The data set consists of almost 15,000 multiple choice question answers obtained from over 400 movies and features high semantic diversity. Each question comes with a set of five highly plausible answers; only one of which is correct. The questions can be answered using multiple sources of information: movie clips, plots, subtitles, and for a subset scripts and DVS." }, { "dkey": "ReCAM", "dval": "Tasks\nOur shared task has three subtasks. Subtask 1 and 2 focus on evaluating machine learning models' performance with regard to two definitions of abstractness (Spreen and Schulz, 1966; Changizi, 2008), which we call imperceptibility and nonspecificity, respectively. Subtask 3 aims to provide some insights to their relationships.\n\n• Subtask 1: ReCAM-Imperceptibility\n\nConcrete words refer to things, events, and properties that we can perceive directly with our senses (Spreen and Schulz, 1966; Coltheart 1981; Turney et al., 2011), e.g., donut, trees, and red. In contrast, abstract words refer to ideas and concepts that are distant from immediate perception. Examples include objective, culture, and economy. In subtask 1, the participanting systems are required to perform reading comprehension of abstract meaning for imperceptible concepts.\n\nBelow is an example. Given a passage and a question, your model needs to choose from the five candidates the best one for replacing @placeholder.\n\n• Subtask 2: ReCAM-Nonspecificity\n\nSubtask 2 focuses on a different type of definition. Compared to concrete concepts like groundhog and whale, hypernyms such as vertebrate are regarded as more abstract (Changizi, 2008). \n\n• Subtask 3: ReCAM-Intersection\nSubtask 3 aims to provide more insights to the relationship of the two views on abstractness, In this subtask, we test the performance of a system that is trained on one definition and evaluted on the other." }, { "dkey": "MultiRC", "dval": "MultiRC (Multi-Sentence Reading Comprehension) is a dataset of short paragraphs and multi-sentence questions, i.e., questions that can be answered by combining information from multiple sentences of the paragraph.\nThe dataset was designed with three key challenges in mind:\n* The number of correct answer-options for each question is not pre-specified. This removes the over-reliance on answer-options and forces them to decide on the correctness of each candidate answer independently of others. In other words, the task is not to simply identify the best answer-option, but to evaluate the correctness of each answer-option individually.\n* The correct answer(s) is not required to be a span in the text.\n* The paragraphs in the dataset have diverse provenance by being extracted from 7 different domains such as news, fiction, historical text etc., and hence are expected to be more diverse in their contents as compared to single-domain datasets.\nThe entire corpus consists of around 10K questions (including about 6K multiple-sentence questions). The 60% of the data is released as training and development data. The rest of the data is saved for evaluation and every few months a new unseen additional data is included for evaluation to prevent unintentional overfitting over time." }, { "dkey": "CLUE", "dval": "CLUE is a Chinese Language Understanding Evaluation benchmark. It consists of different NLU datasets. It is a community-driven project that brings together 9 tasks spanning several well-established single-sentence/sentence-pair classification tasks, as well as machine reading comprehension, all on original Chinese text." }, { "dkey": "BiPaR", "dval": "BiPaR is a manually annotated bilingual parallel novel-style machine reading comprehension (MRC) dataset, developed to support monolingual, multilingual and cross-lingual reading comprehension on novels. The biggest difference between BiPaR and existing reading comprehension datasets is that each triple (Passage, Question, Answer) in BiPaR is written in parallel in two languages. BiPaR is diverse in prefixes of questions, answer types and relationships between questions and passages. Answering the questions requires reading comprehension skills of coreference resolution, multi-sentence reasoning, and understanding of implicit causality." }, { "dkey": "LAMBADA", "dval": "The LAMBADA (LAnguage Modeling Broadened to Account for Discourse Aspects) benchmark is an open-ended cloze task which consists of about 10,000 passages from BooksCorpus where a missing target word is predicted in the last sentence of each passage. The missing word is constrained to always be the last word of the last sentence and there are no candidate words to choose from. Examples were filtered by humans to ensure they were possible to guess given the context, i.e., the sentences in the passage leading up to the last sentence. Examples were further filtered to ensure that missing words could not be guessed without the context, ensuring that models attempting the dataset would need to reason over the entire paragraph to answer questions." }, { "dkey": "HotpotQA", "dval": "HotpotQA is a question answering dataset collected on the English Wikipedia, containing about 113K crowd-sourced questions that are constructed to require the introduction paragraphs of two Wikipedia articles to answer. Each question in the dataset comes with the two gold paragraphs, as well as a list of sentences in these paragraphs that crowdworkers identify as supporting facts necessary to answer the question. \n\nA diverse range of reasoning strategies are featured in HotpotQA, including questions involving missing entities in the question, intersection questions (What satisfies property A and property B?), and comparison questions, where two entities are compared by a common attribute, among others. In the few-document distractor setting, the QA models are given ten paragraphs in which the gold paragraphs are guaranteed to be found; in the open-domain fullwiki setting, the models are only given the question and the entire Wikipedia. Models are evaluated on their answer accuracy and explainability, where the former is measured as overlap between the predicted and gold answers with exact match (EM) and unigram F1, and the latter concerns how well the predicted supporting fact sentences match human annotation (Supporting Fact EM/F1). A joint metric is also reported on this dataset, which encourages systems to perform well on both tasks simultaneously." } ]
A simple strategy to combine the real-time capabilities of Siamese trackers and the state-of
visual object tracking images
2,019
[ "Oxford RobotCar Dataset", "CDTB", "CraigslistBargains", "NEWSROOM" ]
[ "DAVIS", "DAVIS 2017", "VOT2016" ]
[ { "dkey": "DAVIS", "dval": "The Densely Annotation Video Segmentation dataset (DAVIS) is a high quality and high resolution densely annotated video segmentation dataset under two resolutions, 480p and 1080p. There are 50 video sequences with 3455 densely annotated frames in pixel level. 30 videos with 2079 frames are for training and 20 videos with 1376 frames are for validation." }, { "dkey": "DAVIS 2017", "dval": "DAVIS17 is a dataset for video object segmentation. It contains a total of 150 videos - 60 for training, 30 for validation, 60 for testing" }, { "dkey": "VOT2016", "dval": "VOT2016 is a video dataset for visual object tracking. It contains 60 video clips and 21,646 corresponding ground truth maps with pixel-wise annotation of salient objects." }, { "dkey": "Oxford RobotCar Dataset", "dval": "The Oxford RobotCar Dataset contains over 100 repetitions of a consistent route through Oxford, UK, captured over a period of over a year. The dataset captures many different combinations of weather, traffic and pedestrians, along with longer term changes such as construction and roadworks." }, { "dkey": "CDTB", "dval": "dataset is recorded by several passive and active RGB-D setups and contains indoor as well as outdoor sequences acquired in direct sunlight. The sequences were recorded to contain significant object pose change, clutter, occlusion, and periods of long-term target absence to enable tracker evaluation under realistic conditions. Sequences are per-frame annotated with 13 visual attributes for detailed analysis. It contains around 100,000 samples.)" }, { "dkey": "CraigslistBargains", "dval": "A richer dataset based on real items on Craigslist." }, { "dkey": "NEWSROOM", "dval": "CORNELL NEWSROOM is a large dataset for training and evaluating summarization systems. It contains 1.3 million articles and summaries written by authors and editors in the newsrooms of 38 major publications. The summaries are obtained from search and social metadata between 1998 and 2017 and use a variety of summarization strategies combining extraction and abstraction." } ]
I want to train an unsupervised model for activity recognition from videos.
activity recognition videos
2,017
[ "EPIC-KITCHENS-100", "ActivityNet", "Watch-n-Patch", "JIGSAWS", "SNIPS", "Charades", "Volleyball" ]
[ "UCF101", "HMDB51" ]
[ { "dkey": "UCF101", "dval": "UCF101 dataset is an extension of UCF50 and consists of 13,320 video clips, which are classified into 101 categories. These 101 categories can be classified into 5 types (Body motion, Human-human interactions, Human-object interactions, Playing musical instruments and Sports). The total length of these video clips is over 27 hours. All the videos are collected from YouTube and have a fixed frame rate of 25 FPS with the resolution of 320 × 240." }, { "dkey": "HMDB51", "dval": "The HMDB51 dataset is a large collection of realistic videos from various sources, including movies and web videos. The dataset is composed of 6,766 video clips from 51 action categories (such as “jump”, “kiss” and “laugh”), with each category containing at least 101 clips. The original evaluation scheme uses three different training/testing splits. In each split, each action class has 70 clips for training and 30 clips for testing. The average accuracy over these three splits is used to measure the final performance." }, { "dkey": "EPIC-KITCHENS-100", "dval": "This paper introduces the pipeline to scale the largest dataset in egocentric vision EPIC-KITCHENS. The effort culminates in EPIC-KITCHENS-100, a collection of 100 hours, 20M frames, 90K actions in 700 variable-length videos, capturing long-term unscripted activities in 45 environments, using head-mounted cameras. Compared to its previous version (EPIC-KITCHENS-55), EPIC-KITCHENS-100 has been annotated using a novel pipeline that allows denser (54% more actions per minute) and more complete annotations of fine-grained actions (+128% more action segments). This collection also enables evaluating the \"test of time\" - i.e. whether models trained on data collected in 2018 can generalise to new footage collected under the same hypotheses albeit \"two years on\".\nThe dataset is aligned with 6 challenges: action recognition (full and weak supervision), action detection, action anticipation, cross-modal retrieval (from captions), as well as unsupervised domain adaptation for action recognition. For each challenge, we define the task, provide baselines and evaluation metrics." }, { "dkey": "ActivityNet", "dval": "The ActivityNet dataset contains 200 different types of activities and a total of 849 hours of videos collected from YouTube. ActivityNet is the largest benchmark for temporal activity detection to date in terms of both the number of activity categories and number of videos, making the task particularly challenging. Version 1.3 of the dataset contains 19994 untrimmed videos in total and is divided into three disjoint subsets, training, validation, and testing by a ratio of 2:1:1. On average, each activity category has 137 untrimmed videos. Each video on average has 1.41 activities which are annotated with temporal boundaries. The ground-truth annotations of test videos are not public." }, { "dkey": "Watch-n-Patch", "dval": "The Watch-n-Patch dataset was created with the focus on modeling human activities, comprising multiple actions in a completely unsupervised setting. It is collected with Microsoft Kinect One sensor for a total length of about 230 minutes, divided in 458 videos. 7 subjects perform human daily activities in 8 offices and 5 kitchens with complex backgrounds. Moreover, skeleton data are provided as ground truth annotations." }, { "dkey": "JIGSAWS", "dval": "The JHU-ISI Gesture and Skill Assessment Working Set (JIGSAWS) is a surgical activity dataset for human motion modeling. The data was collected through a collaboration between The Johns Hopkins University (JHU) and Intuitive Surgical, Inc. (Sunnyvale, CA. ISI) within an IRB-approved study. The release of this dataset has been approved by the Johns Hopkins University IRB. The dataset was captured using the da Vinci Surgical System from eight surgeons with different levels of skill performing five repetitions of three elementary surgical tasks on a bench-top model: suturing, knot-tying and needle-passing, which are standard components of most surgical skills training curricula. The JIGSAWS dataset consists of three components:\n\n\nkinematic data: Cartesian positions, orientations, velocities, angular velocities and gripper angle describing the motion of the manipulators.\nvideo data: stereo video captured from the endoscopic camera. Sample videos of the JIGSAWS tasks can be downloaded from the official webpage.\nmanual annotations including:\ngesture (atomic surgical activity segment labels).\nskill (global rating score using modified objective structured assessments of technical skills).\nexperimental setup: a standardized cross-validation experimental setup that can be used to evaluate automatic surgical gesture recognition and skill assessment methods." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "Charades", "dval": "The Charades dataset is composed of 9,848 videos of daily indoors activities with an average length of 30 seconds, involving interactions with 46 objects classes in 15 types of indoor scenes and containing a vocabulary of 30 verbs leading to 157 action classes. Each video in this dataset is annotated by multiple free-text descriptions, action labels, action intervals and classes of interacting objects. 267 different users were presented with a sentence, which includes objects and actions from a fixed vocabulary, and they recorded a video acting out the sentence. In total, the dataset contains 66,500 temporal annotations for 157 action classes, 41,104 labels for 46 object classes, and 27,847 textual descriptions of the videos. In the standard split there are7,986 training video and 1,863 validation video." }, { "dkey": "Volleyball", "dval": "Volleyball is a video action recognition dataset. It has 4830 annotated frames that were handpicked from 55 videos with 9 player action labels and 8 team activity labels. It contains group activity annotations as well as individual activity annotations." } ]
I want to train a supervised model for monocular depth estimation from video.
monocular depth estimation video
2,019
[ "DIODE", "Make3D", "Virtual KITTI", "DENSE", "DDAD", "MVSEC" ]
[ "DAVIS", "KITTI", "MegaDepth" ]
[ { "dkey": "DAVIS", "dval": "The Densely Annotation Video Segmentation dataset (DAVIS) is a high quality and high resolution densely annotated video segmentation dataset under two resolutions, 480p and 1080p. There are 50 video sequences with 3455 densely annotated frames in pixel level. 30 videos with 2079 frames are for training and 20 videos with 1376 frames are for validation." }, { "dkey": "KITTI", "dval": "KITTI (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Toyota Technological Institute) is one of the most popular datasets for use in mobile robotics and autonomous driving. It consists of hours of traffic scenarios recorded with a variety of sensor modalities, including high-resolution RGB, grayscale stereo cameras, and a 3D laser scanner. Despite its popularity, the dataset itself does not contain ground truth for semantic segmentation. However, various researchers have manually annotated parts of the dataset to fit their necessities. Álvarez et al. generated ground truth for 323 images from the road detection challenge with three classes: road, vertical, and sky. Zhang et al. annotated 252 (140 for training and 112 for testing) acquisitions – RGB and Velodyne scans – from the tracking challenge for ten object categories: building, sky, road, vegetation, sidewalk, car, pedestrian, cyclist, sign/pole, and fence. Ros et al. labeled 170 training images and 46 testing images (from the visual odometry challenge) with 11 classes: building, tree, sky, car, sign, road, pedestrian, fence, pole, sidewalk, and bicyclist." }, { "dkey": "MegaDepth", "dval": "The MegaDepth dataset is a dataset for single-view depth prediction that includes 196 different locations reconstructed from COLMAP SfM/MVS." }, { "dkey": "DIODE", "dval": "Diode Dense Indoor/Outdoor DEpth (DIODE) is the first standard dataset for monocular depth estimation comprising diverse indoor and outdoor scenes acquired with the same hardware setup. The training set consists of 8574 indoor and 16884 outdoor samples from 20 scans each. The validation set contains 325 indoor and 446 outdoor samples with each set from 10 different scans. The ground truth density for the indoor training and validation splits are approximately 99.54% and 99%, respectively. The density of the outdoor sets are naturally lower with 67.19% for training and 78.33% for validation subsets. The indoor and outdoor ranges for the dataset are 50m and 300m, respectively." }, { "dkey": "Make3D", "dval": "The Make3D dataset is a monocular Depth Estimation dataset that contains 400 single training RGB and depth map pairs, and 134 test samples. The RGB images have high resolution, while the depth maps are provided at low resolution." }, { "dkey": "Virtual KITTI", "dval": "Virtual KITTI is a photo-realistic synthetic video dataset designed to learn and evaluate computer vision models for several video understanding tasks: object detection and multi-object tracking, scene-level and instance-level semantic segmentation, optical flow, and depth estimation.\n\nVirtual KITTI contains 50 high-resolution monocular videos (21,260 frames) generated from five different virtual worlds in urban settings under different imaging and weather conditions. These worlds were created using the Unity game engine and a novel real-to-virtual cloning method. These photo-realistic synthetic videos are automatically, exactly, and fully annotated for 2D and 3D multi-object tracking and at the pixel level with category, instance, flow, and depth labels (cf. below for download links)." }, { "dkey": "DENSE", "dval": "DENSE (Depth Estimation oN Synthetic Events) is a new dataset with synthetic events and perfect ground truth." }, { "dkey": "DDAD", "dval": "DDAD is a new autonomous driving benchmark from TRI (Toyota Research Institute) for long range (up to 250m) and dense depth estimation in challenging and diverse urban conditions. It contains monocular videos and accurate ground-truth depth (across a full 360 degree field of view) generated from high-density LiDARs mounted on a fleet of self-driving cars operating in a cross-continental setting. DDAD contains scenes from urban settings in the United States (San Francisco, Bay Area, Cambridge, Detroit, Ann Arbor) and Japan (Tokyo, Odaiba)." }, { "dkey": "MVSEC", "dval": "The Multi Vehicle Stereo Event Camera (MVSEC) dataset is a collection of data designed for the development of novel 3D perception algorithms for event based cameras. Stereo event data is collected from car, motorbike, hexacopter and handheld data, and fused with lidar, IMU, motion capture and GPS to provide ground truth pose and depth images." } ]
I want to train a supervised model for planning.
planning
2,020
[ "SNIPS", "ConvAI2", "CLUECorpus2020", "Flightmare Simulator", "YouTube-8M", "Word Sense Disambiguation: a Unified Evaluation Framework and Empirical Comparison", "I-HAZE" ]
[ "CARLA", "KITTI" ]
[ { "dkey": "CARLA", "dval": "CARLA (CAR Learning to Act) is an open simulator for urban driving, developed as an open-source layer over Unreal Engine 4. Technically, it operates similarly to, as an open source layer over Unreal Engine 4 that provides sensors in the form of RGB cameras (with customizable positions), ground truth depth maps, ground truth semantic segmentation maps with 12 semantic classes designed for driving (road, lane marking, traffic sign, sidewalk and so on), bounding boxes for dynamic objects in the environment, and measurements of the agent itself (vehicle location and orientation)." }, { "dkey": "KITTI", "dval": "KITTI (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Toyota Technological Institute) is one of the most popular datasets for use in mobile robotics and autonomous driving. It consists of hours of traffic scenarios recorded with a variety of sensor modalities, including high-resolution RGB, grayscale stereo cameras, and a 3D laser scanner. Despite its popularity, the dataset itself does not contain ground truth for semantic segmentation. However, various researchers have manually annotated parts of the dataset to fit their necessities. Álvarez et al. generated ground truth for 323 images from the road detection challenge with three classes: road, vertical, and sky. Zhang et al. annotated 252 (140 for training and 112 for testing) acquisitions – RGB and Velodyne scans – from the tracking challenge for ten object categories: building, sky, road, vegetation, sidewalk, car, pedestrian, cyclist, sign/pole, and fence. Ros et al. labeled 170 training images and 46 testing images (from the visual odometry challenge) with 11 classes: building, tree, sky, car, sign, road, pedestrian, fence, pole, sidewalk, and bicyclist." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "CLUECorpus2020", "dval": "CLUECorpus2020 is a large-scale corpus that can be used directly for self-supervised learning such as pre-training of a language model, or language generation. It has 100G raw corpus with 35 billion Chinese characters, which is retrieved from Common Crawl." }, { "dkey": "Flightmare Simulator", "dval": "Flightmare is composed of two main components: a configurable rendering engine built on Unity and a flexible physics engine for dynamics simulation. Those two components are totally decoupled and can run independently from each other. Flightmare comes with several desirable features: (i) a large multi-modal sensor suite, including an interface to extract the 3D point-cloud of the scene; (ii) an API for reinforcement learning which can simulate hundreds of quadrotors in parallel; and (iii) an integration with a virtual-reality headset for interaction with the simulated environment. Flightmare can be used for various applications, including path-planning, reinforcement learning, visual-inertial odometry, deep learning, human-robot interaction, etc." }, { "dkey": "YouTube-8M", "dval": "The YouTube-8M dataset is a large scale video dataset, which includes more than 7 million videos with 4716 classes labeled by the annotation system. The dataset consists of three parts: training set, validate set, and test set. In the training set, each class contains at least 100 training videos. Features of these videos are extracted by the state-of-the-art popular pre-trained models and released for public use. Each video contains audio and visual modality. Based on the visual information, videos are divided into 24 topics, such as sports, game, arts & entertainment, etc" }, { "dkey": "Word Sense Disambiguation: a Unified Evaluation Framework and Empirical Comparison", "dval": "The Evaluation framework of Raganato et al. 2017 includes two training sets (SemCor-Miller et al., 1993- and OMSTI-Taghipour and Ng, 2015-) and five test sets from the Senseval/SemEval series (Edmonds and Cotton, 2001; Snyder and Palmer, 2004; Pradhan et al., 2007; Navigli et al., 2013; Moro and Navigli, 2015), standardized to the same format and sense inventory (i.e. WordNet 3.0).\n\nTypically, there are two kinds of approach for WSD: supervised (which make use of sense-annotated training data) and knowledge-based (which make use of the properties of lexical resources).\n\nSupervised: The most widely used training corpus used is SemCor, with 226,036 sense annotations from 352 documents manually annotated. All supervised systems in the evaluation table are trained on SemCor. Some supervised methods, particularly neural architectures, usually employ the SemEval 2007 dataset as development set (marked by *). The most usual baseline is the Most Frequent Sense (MFS) heuristic, which selects for each target word the most frequent sense in the training data.\n\nKnowledge-based: Knowledge-based systems usually exploit WordNet or BabelNet as semantic network. The first sense given by the underlying sense inventory (i.e. WordNet 3.0) is included as a baseline.\n\nDescription from NLP Progress" }, { "dkey": "I-HAZE", "dval": "The I-Haze dataset contains 25 indoor hazy images (size 2833×4657 pixels) training. It has 5 hazy images for validation along with their corresponding ground truth images." } ]
This is the first work to unify the two popular tasks of semantic segmentation and instance segmentation in
panoptic segmentation images
2,019
[ "MSeg", "Cityscapes-VPS", "ScanNet", "ISBDA", "THEODORE" ]
[ "COCO", "Cityscapes" ]
[ { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "Cityscapes", "dval": "Cityscapes is a large-scale database which focuses on semantic understanding of urban street scenes. It provides semantic, instance-wise, and dense pixel annotations for 30 classes grouped into 8 categories (flat surfaces, humans, vehicles, constructions, objects, nature, sky, and void). The dataset consists of around 5000 fine annotated images and 20000 coarse annotated ones. Data was captured in 50 cities during several months, daytimes, and good weather conditions. It was originally recorded as video so the frames were manually selected to have the following features: large number of dynamic objects, varying scene layout, and varying background." }, { "dkey": "MSeg", "dval": "A composite dataset that unifies semantic segmentation datasets from different domains." }, { "dkey": "Cityscapes-VPS", "dval": "Cityscapes-VPS is a video extension of the Cityscapes validation split. It provides 2500-frame panoptic labels that temporally extend the 500 Cityscapes image-panoptic labels. There are total 3000-frame panoptic labels which correspond to 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, and 30th frames of each 500 videos, where all instance ids are associated over time. It not only supports video panoptic segmentation (VPS) task, but also provides super-set annotations for video semantic segmentation (VSS) and video instance segmentation (VIS) tasks." }, { "dkey": "ScanNet", "dval": "ScanNet is an instance-level indoor RGB-D dataset that includes both 2D and 3D data. It is a collection of labeled voxels rather than points or objects. Up to now, ScanNet v2, the newest version of ScanNet, has collected 1513 annotated scans with an approximate 90% surface coverage. In the semantic segmentation task, this dataset is marked in 20 classes of annotated 3D voxelized objects." }, { "dkey": "ISBDA", "dval": "Consists of user-generated aerial videos from social media with annotations of instance-level building damage masks. This provides the first benchmark for quantitative evaluation of models to assess building damage using aerial videos." }, { "dkey": "THEODORE", "dval": "Recent work about synthetic indoor datasets from perspective views has shown significant improvements of object detection results with Convolutional Neural Networks(CNNs). In this paper, we introduce THEODORE: a novel, large-scale indoor dataset containing 100,000 high- resolution diversified fisheye images with 14 classes. To this end, we create 3D virtual environments of living rooms, different human characters and interior textures. Beside capturing fisheye images from virtual environments we create annotations for semantic segmentation, instance masks and bounding boxes for object detection tasks. We compare our synthetic dataset to state of the art real-world datasets for omnidirectional images. Based on MS COCO weights, we show that our dataset is well suited for fine-tuning CNNs for object detection. Through a high generalization of our models by means of image synthesis and domain randomization we reach an AP up to 0.84 for class person on High-Definition Analytics dataset." } ]
Temporal 3D ConvNet for video classification.
video classification
2,017
[ "NVGesture", "Stream-51", "HSD", "VidSTG", "ActivityNet", "SYNTHIA-AL" ]
[ "ImageNet", "UCF101" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "UCF101", "dval": "UCF101 dataset is an extension of UCF50 and consists of 13,320 video clips, which are classified into 101 categories. These 101 categories can be classified into 5 types (Body motion, Human-human interactions, Human-object interactions, Playing musical instruments and Sports). The total length of these video clips is over 27 hours. All the videos are collected from YouTube and have a fixed frame rate of 25 FPS with the resolution of 320 × 240." }, { "dkey": "NVGesture", "dval": "The NVGesture dataset focuses on touchless driver controlling. It contains 1532 dynamic gestures fallen into 25 classes. It includes 1050 samples for training and 482 for testing. The videos are recorded with three modalities (RGB, depth, and infrared)." }, { "dkey": "Stream-51", "dval": "A new dataset for streaming classification consisting of temporally correlated images from 51 distinct object categories and additional evaluation classes outside of the training distribution to test novelty recognition." }, { "dkey": "HSD", "dval": "An annotated dataset is released to enable dynamic scene classification that includes 80 hours of diverse high quality driving video data clips collected in the San Francisco Bay area. The dataset includes temporal annotations for road places, road types, weather, and road surface conditions." }, { "dkey": "VidSTG", "dval": "The VidSTG dataset is a spatio-temporal video grounding dataset constructed based on the video relation dataset VidOR. VidOR contains 7,000, 835 and 2,165 videos for training, validation and testing, respectively. The goal of the Spatio-Temporal Video Grounding task (STVG) is to localize the spatio-temporal section of an untrimmed video that matches a given sentence depicting an object." }, { "dkey": "ActivityNet", "dval": "The ActivityNet dataset contains 200 different types of activities and a total of 849 hours of videos collected from YouTube. ActivityNet is the largest benchmark for temporal activity detection to date in terms of both the number of activity categories and number of videos, making the task particularly challenging. Version 1.3 of the dataset contains 19994 untrimmed videos in total and is divided into three disjoint subsets, training, validation, and testing by a ratio of 2:1:1. On average, each activity category has 137 untrimmed videos. Each video on average has 1.41 activities which are annotated with temporal boundaries. The ground-truth annotations of test videos are not public." }, { "dkey": "SYNTHIA-AL", "dval": "Specially designed to evaluate active learning for video object detection in road scenes." } ]
We propose an ID-adaptation network for unsupervised person re-identification. Our method uses the common
person re-identification images
2,018
[ "P-DESTRE", "Airport", "SYSU-MM01", "CUHK02" ]
[ "Market-1501", "CUHK03" ]
[ { "dkey": "Market-1501", "dval": "Market-1501 is a large-scale public benchmark dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1501 identities which are captured by six different cameras, and 32,668 pedestrian image bounding-boxes obtained using the Deformable Part Models pedestrian detector. Each person has 3.6 images on average at each viewpoint. The dataset is split into two parts: 750 identities are utilized for training and the remaining 751 identities are used for testing. In the official testing protocol 3,368 query images are selected as probe set to find the correct match across 19,732 reference gallery images." }, { "dkey": "CUHK03", "dval": "The CUHK03 consists of 14,097 images of 1,467 different identities, where 6 campus cameras were deployed for image collection and each identity is captured by 2 campus cameras. This dataset provides two types of annotations, one by manually labelled bounding boxes and the other by bounding boxes produced by an automatic detector. The dataset also provides 20 random train/test splits in which 100 identities are selected for testing and the rest for training" }, { "dkey": "P-DESTRE", "dval": "Provides consistent ID annotations across multiple days, making it suitable for the extremely challenging problem of person search, i.e., where no clothing information can be reliably used. Apart this feature, the P-DESTRE annotations enable the research on UAV-based pedestrian detection, tracking, re-identification and soft biometric solutions." }, { "dkey": "Airport", "dval": "The Airport dataset is a dataset for person re-identification which consists of 39,902 images and 9,651 identities across six cameras." }, { "dkey": "SYSU-MM01", "dval": "The SYSU-MM01 is a dataset collected for the Visible-Infrared Re-identification problem. The images in the dataset were obtained from 491 different persons by recording them using 4 RGB and 2 infrared cameras. Within the dataset, the persons are divided into 3 fixed splits to create training, validation and test sets. In the training set, there are 20284 RGB and 9929 infrared images of 296 persons. The validation set contains 1974 RGB and 1980 infrared images of 99 persons. The testing set consists of the images of 96 persons where 3803 infrared images are used as query and 301 randomly selected RGB images are used as gallery." }, { "dkey": "CUHK02", "dval": "CUHK02 is a dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1,816 identities from two disjoint camera views. Each identity has two samples per camera view making a total of 7,264 images. It is used for Person Re-identification." } ]
I want to train a multi-passage BERT model for open-domain QA
open-domain qa text 100 words
2,019
[ "MultiReQA", "ConvAI2", "Natural Questions", "OpenBookQA", "HotpotQA", "ROPES" ]
[ "SearchQA", "SQuAD", "TriviaQA" ]
[ { "dkey": "SearchQA", "dval": "SearchQA was built using an in-production, commercial search engine. It closely reflects the full pipeline of a (hypothetical) general question-answering system, which consists of information retrieval and answer synthesis." }, { "dkey": "SQuAD", "dval": "The Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD) is a collection of question-answer pairs derived from Wikipedia articles. In SQuAD, the correct answers of questions can be any sequence of tokens in the given text. Because the questions and answers are produced by humans through crowdsourcing, it is more diverse than some other question-answering datasets. SQuAD 1.1 contains 107,785 question-answer pairs on 536 articles. SQuAD2.0 (open-domain SQuAD, SQuAD-Open), the latest version, combines the 100,000 questions in SQuAD1.1 with over 50,000 un-answerable questions written adversarially by crowdworkers in forms that are similar to the answerable ones." }, { "dkey": "TriviaQA", "dval": "TriviaQA is a realistic text-based question answering dataset which includes 950K question-answer pairs from 662K documents collected from Wikipedia and the web. This dataset is more challenging than standard QA benchmark datasets such as Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD), as the answers for a question may not be directly obtained by span prediction and the context is very long. TriviaQA dataset consists of both human-verified and machine-generated QA subsets." }, { "dkey": "MultiReQA", "dval": "MultiReQA is a cross-domain evaluation for retrieval question answering models. Retrieval question answering (ReQA) is the task of retrieving a sentence-level answer to a question from an open corpus. MultiReQA is a new multi-domain ReQA evaluation suite composed of eight retrieval QA tasks drawn from publicly available QA datasets from the MRQA shared task.\nMultiReQA contains the sentence boundary annotation from eight publicly available QA datasets including SearchQA, TriviaQA, HotpotQA, NaturalQuestions, SQuAD, BioASQ, RelationExtraction, and TextbookQA. Five of these datasets, including SearchQA, TriviaQA, HotpotQA, NaturalQuestions, SQuAD, contain both training and test data, and three, in cluding BioASQ, RelationExtraction, TextbookQA, contain only the test data." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "Natural Questions", "dval": "The Natural Questions corpus is a question answering dataset containing 307,373 training examples, 7,830 development examples, and 7,842 test examples. Each example is comprised of a google.com query and a corresponding Wikipedia page. Each Wikipedia page has a passage (or long answer) annotated on the page that answers the question and one or more short spans from the annotated passage containing the actual answer. The long and the short answer annotations can however be empty. If they are both empty, then there is no answer on the page at all. If the long answer annotation is non-empty, but the short answer annotation is empty, then the annotated passage answers the question but no explicit short answer could be found. Finally 1% of the documents have a passage annotated with a short answer that is “yes” or “no”, instead of a list of short spans." }, { "dkey": "OpenBookQA", "dval": "OpenBookQA is a new kind of question-answering dataset modeled after open book exams for assessing human understanding of a subject. It consists of 5,957 multiple-choice elementary-level science questions (4,957 train, 500 dev, 500 test), which probe the understanding of a small “book” of 1,326 core science facts and the application of these facts to novel situations. For training, the dataset includes a mapping from each question to the core science fact it was designed to probe. Answering OpenBookQA questions requires additional broad common knowledge, not contained in the book. The questions, by design, are answered incorrectly by both a retrieval-based algorithm and a word co-occurrence algorithm.\nAdditionally, the dataset includes a collection of 5,167 crowd-sourced common knowledge facts, and an expanded version of the train/dev/test questions where each question is associated with its originating core fact, a human accuracy score, a clarity score, and an anonymized crowd-worker ID." }, { "dkey": "HotpotQA", "dval": "HotpotQA is a question answering dataset collected on the English Wikipedia, containing about 113K crowd-sourced questions that are constructed to require the introduction paragraphs of two Wikipedia articles to answer. Each question in the dataset comes with the two gold paragraphs, as well as a list of sentences in these paragraphs that crowdworkers identify as supporting facts necessary to answer the question. \n\nA diverse range of reasoning strategies are featured in HotpotQA, including questions involving missing entities in the question, intersection questions (What satisfies property A and property B?), and comparison questions, where two entities are compared by a common attribute, among others. In the few-document distractor setting, the QA models are given ten paragraphs in which the gold paragraphs are guaranteed to be found; in the open-domain fullwiki setting, the models are only given the question and the entire Wikipedia. Models are evaluated on their answer accuracy and explainability, where the former is measured as overlap between the predicted and gold answers with exact match (EM) and unigram F1, and the latter concerns how well the predicted supporting fact sentences match human annotation (Supporting Fact EM/F1). A joint metric is also reported on this dataset, which encourages systems to perform well on both tasks simultaneously." }, { "dkey": "ROPES", "dval": "ROPES is a QA dataset which tests a system's ability to apply knowledge from a passage of text to a new situation. A system is presented a background passage containing a causal or qualitative relation(s), a novel situation that uses this background, and questions that require reasoning about effects of the relationships in the back-ground passage in the context of the situation." } ]
This is the first attempt to introduce SMG block into CNN architecture.
classification images text
2,019
[ "C&Z", "NAS-Bench-101", "LEAF-QA", "THEODORE" ]
[ "ImageNet", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "C&Z", "dval": "One of the first datasets (if not the first) to highlight the importance of bias and diversity in the community, which started a revolution afterwards. Introduced in 2014 as integral part of a thesis of Master of Science [1,2] at Carnegie Mellon and City University of Hong Kong. It was later expanded by adding synthetic images generated by a GAN architecture at ETH Zürich (in HDCGAN by Curtó et al. 2017). Being then not only the pioneer of talking about the importance of balanced datasets for learning and vision but also for being the first GAN augmented dataset of faces. \n\nThe original description goes as follows:\n\nA bias-free dataset, containing human faces from different ethnical groups in a wide variety of illumination conditions and image resolutions. C&Z is enhanced with HDCGAN synthetic images, thus being the first GAN augmented dataset of faces.\n\nDataset: https://github.com/curto2/c\n\nSupplement (with scripts to handle the labels): https://github.com/curto2/graphics\n\n[1] https://www.curto.hk/c/decurto.pdf\n\n[2] https://www.zarza.hk/z/dezarza.pdf" }, { "dkey": "NAS-Bench-101", "dval": "NAS-Bench-101 is the first public architecture dataset for NAS research. To build NASBench-101, the authors carefully constructed a compact, yet expressive, search space, exploiting graph isomorphisms to identify 423k unique convolutional\narchitectures. The authors trained and evaluated all of these architectures multiple times on CIFAR-10 and compiled the results into a large dataset of over 5 million trained models. This allows researchers to evaluate the quality of a diverse range of models in milliseconds by querying the precomputed dataset." }, { "dkey": "LEAF-QA", "dval": "LEAF-QA, a comprehensive dataset of 250,000 densely annotated figures/charts, constructed from real-world open data sources, along with ~2 million question-answer (QA) pairs querying the structure and semantics of these charts. LEAF-QA highlights the problem of multimodal QA, which is notably different from conventional visual QA (VQA), and has recently gained interest in the community. Furthermore, LEAF-QA is significantly more complex than previous attempts at chart QA, viz. FigureQA and DVQA, which present only limited variations in chart data. LEAF-QA being constructed from real-world sources, requires a novel architecture to enable question answering." }, { "dkey": "THEODORE", "dval": "Recent work about synthetic indoor datasets from perspective views has shown significant improvements of object detection results with Convolutional Neural Networks(CNNs). In this paper, we introduce THEODORE: a novel, large-scale indoor dataset containing 100,000 high- resolution diversified fisheye images with 14 classes. To this end, we create 3D virtual environments of living rooms, different human characters and interior textures. Beside capturing fisheye images from virtual environments we create annotations for semantic segmentation, instance masks and bounding boxes for object detection tasks. We compare our synthetic dataset to state of the art real-world datasets for omnidirectional images. Based on MS COCO weights, we show that our dataset is well suited for fine-tuning CNNs for object detection. Through a high generalization of our models by means of image synthesis and domain randomization we reach an AP up to 0.84 for class person on High-Definition Analytics dataset." } ]
A novel probabilistic generative model for action sequences.
action sequence modeling video
2,019
[ "JHMDB", "NTU RGB+D", "BABEL", "SCAN", "EPIC-KITCHENS-100" ]
[ "MultiTHUMOS", "Breakfast" ]
[ { "dkey": "MultiTHUMOS", "dval": "The MultiTHUMOS dataset contains dense, multilabel, frame-level action annotations for 30 hours across 400 videos in the THUMOS'14 action detection dataset. It consists of 38,690 annotations of 65 action classes, with an average of 1.5 labels per frame and 10.5 action classes per video." }, { "dkey": "Breakfast", "dval": "The Breakfast Actions Dataset comprises of 10 actions related to breakfast preparation, performed by 52 different individuals in 18 different kitchens. The dataset is one of the largest fully annotated datasets available. The actions are recorded “in the wild” as opposed to a single controlled lab environment. It consists of over 77 hours of video recordings." }, { "dkey": "JHMDB", "dval": "JHMDB is an action recognition dataset that consists of 960 video sequences belonging to 21 actions. It is a subset of the larger HMDB51 dataset collected from digitized movies and YouTube videos. The dataset contains video and annotation for puppet flow per frame (approximated optimal flow on the person), puppet mask per frame, joint positions per frame, action label per clip and meta label per clip (camera motion, visible body parts, camera viewpoint, number of people, video quality)." }, { "dkey": "NTU RGB+D", "dval": "NTU RGB+D is a large-scale dataset for RGB-D human action recognition. It involves 56,880 samples of 60 action classes collected from 40 subjects. The actions can be generally divided into three categories: 40 daily actions (e.g., drinking, eating, reading), nine health-related actions (e.g., sneezing, staggering, falling down), and 11 mutual actions (e.g., punching, kicking, hugging). These actions take place under 17 different scene conditions corresponding to 17 video sequences (i.e., S001–S017). The actions were captured using three cameras with different horizontal imaging viewpoints, namely, −45∘,0∘, and +45∘. Multi-modality information is provided for action characterization, including depth maps, 3D skeleton joint position, RGB frames, and infrared sequences. The performance evaluation is performed by a cross-subject test that split the 40 subjects into training and test groups, and by a cross-view test that employed one camera (+45∘) for testing, and the other two cameras for training." }, { "dkey": "BABEL", "dval": "BABEL is a large dataset with language labels describing the actions being performed in mocap sequences. BABEL consists of action labels for about 43 hours of mocap sequences from AMASS. Action labels are at two levels of abstraction -- sequence labels describe the overall action in the sequence, and frame labels describe all actions in every frame of the sequence. Each frame label is precisely aligned with the duration of the corresponding action in the mocap sequence, and multiple actions can overlap. There are over 28k sequence labels, and 63k frame labels in BABEL, which belong to over 250 unique action categories. Labels from BABEL can be leveraged for tasks like action recognition, temporal action localization, motion synthesis, etc." }, { "dkey": "SCAN", "dval": "SCAN is a dataset for grounded navigation which consists of a set of simple compositional navigation commands paired with the corresponding action sequences." }, { "dkey": "EPIC-KITCHENS-100", "dval": "This paper introduces the pipeline to scale the largest dataset in egocentric vision EPIC-KITCHENS. The effort culminates in EPIC-KITCHENS-100, a collection of 100 hours, 20M frames, 90K actions in 700 variable-length videos, capturing long-term unscripted activities in 45 environments, using head-mounted cameras. Compared to its previous version (EPIC-KITCHENS-55), EPIC-KITCHENS-100 has been annotated using a novel pipeline that allows denser (54% more actions per minute) and more complete annotations of fine-grained actions (+128% more action segments). This collection also enables evaluating the \"test of time\" - i.e. whether models trained on data collected in 2018 can generalise to new footage collected under the same hypotheses albeit \"two years on\".\nThe dataset is aligned with 6 challenges: action recognition (full and weak supervision), action detection, action anticipation, cross-modal retrieval (from captions), as well as unsupervised domain adaptation for action recognition. For each challenge, we define the task, provide baselines and evaluation metrics." } ]
In this work, we propose a novel pretext task, named conditional
learning-from-motion images optical flow fields
2,019
[ "THEODORE", "SuperGLUE", "PHM2017", "ANETAC", "UASOL" ]
[ "MPII", "LIP" ]
[ { "dkey": "MPII", "dval": "The MPII Human Pose Dataset for single person pose estimation is composed of about 25K images of which 15K are training samples, 3K are validation samples and 7K are testing samples (which labels are withheld by the authors). The images are taken from YouTube videos covering 410 different human activities and the poses are manually annotated with up to 16 body joints." }, { "dkey": "LIP", "dval": "The LIP (Look into Person) dataset is a large-scale dataset focusing on semantic understanding of a person. It contains 50,000 images with elaborated pixel-wise annotations of 19 semantic human part labels and 2D human poses with 16 key points. The images are collected from real-world scenarios and the subjects appear with challenging poses and view, heavy occlusions, various appearances and low resolution." }, { "dkey": "THEODORE", "dval": "Recent work about synthetic indoor datasets from perspective views has shown significant improvements of object detection results with Convolutional Neural Networks(CNNs). In this paper, we introduce THEODORE: a novel, large-scale indoor dataset containing 100,000 high- resolution diversified fisheye images with 14 classes. To this end, we create 3D virtual environments of living rooms, different human characters and interior textures. Beside capturing fisheye images from virtual environments we create annotations for semantic segmentation, instance masks and bounding boxes for object detection tasks. We compare our synthetic dataset to state of the art real-world datasets for omnidirectional images. Based on MS COCO weights, we show that our dataset is well suited for fine-tuning CNNs for object detection. Through a high generalization of our models by means of image synthesis and domain randomization we reach an AP up to 0.84 for class person on High-Definition Analytics dataset." }, { "dkey": "SuperGLUE", "dval": "SuperGLUE is a benchmark dataset designed to pose a more rigorous test of language understanding than GLUE. SuperGLUE has the same high-level motivation as GLUE: to provide a simple, hard-to-game measure of progress toward general-purpose language understanding technologies for English. SuperGLUE follows the basic design of GLUE: It consists of a public leaderboard built around eight language understanding tasks, drawing on existing data, accompanied by a single-number\nperformance metric, and an analysis toolkit. However, it improves upon GLUE in several ways:\n\n\nMore challenging tasks: SuperGLUE retains the two hardest tasks in GLUE. The remaining tasks were identified from those submitted to an open call for task proposals and were selected based on difficulty for current NLP approaches.\nMore diverse task formats: The task formats in GLUE are limited to sentence- and sentence-pair classification. The authors expand the set of task formats in SuperGLUE to include\ncoreference resolution and question answering (QA).\nComprehensive human baselines: the authors include human performance estimates for all benchmark tasks, which verify that substantial headroom exists between a strong BERT-based baseline and human performance.\nImproved code support: SuperGLUE is distributed with a new, modular toolkit for work on pretraining, multi-task learning, and transfer learning in NLP, built around standard tools including PyTorch (Paszke et al., 2017) and AllenNLP (Gardner et al., 2017).\nRefined usage rules: The conditions for inclusion on the SuperGLUE leaderboard were revamped to ensure fair competition, an informative leaderboard, and full credit\nassignment to data and task creators." }, { "dkey": "PHM2017", "dval": "PHM2017 is a new dataset consisting of 7,192 English tweets across six diseases and conditions: Alzheimer’s Disease, heart attack (any severity), Parkinson’s disease, cancer (any type), Depression (any severity), and Stroke. The Twitter search API was used to retrieve the data using the colloquial disease names as search keywords, with the expectation of retrieving a high-recall, low precision dataset. After removing the re-tweets and replies, the tweets were manually annotated. The labels are:\n\n\nself-mention. The tweet contains a health mention with a health self-report of the Twitter account owner, e.g., \"However, I worked hard and ran for Tokyo Mayer Election Campaign in January through February, 2014, without publicizing the cancer.\"\nother-mention. The tweet contains a health mention of a health report about someone other than the account owner, e.g., \"Designer with Parkinson’s couldn’t work then engineer invents bracelet + changes her world\"\nawareness. The tweet contains the disease name, but does not mention a specific person, e.g., \"A Month Before a Heart Attack, Your Body Will Warn You With These 8 Signals\"\nnon-health. The tweet contains the disease name, but the tweet topic is not about health. \"Now I can have cancer on my wall for all to see <3\"" }, { "dkey": "ANETAC", "dval": "An English-Arabic named entity transliteration and classification dataset built from freely available parallel translation corpora. The dataset contains 79,924 instances, each instance is a triplet (e, a, c), where e is the English named entity, a is its Arabic transliteration and c is its class that can be either a Person, a Location, or an Organization. The ANETAC dataset is mainly aimed for the researchers that are working on Arabic named entity transliteration, but it can also be used for named entity classification purposes." }, { "dkey": "UASOL", "dval": "The UASOL an RGB-D stereo dataset, that contains 160902 frames, filmed at 33 different scenes, each with between 2 k and 10 k frames. The frames show different paths from the perspective of a pedestrian, including sidewalks, trails, roads, etc. The images were extracted from video files with 15 fps at HD2K resolution with a size of 2280 × 1282 pixels. The dataset also provides a GPS geolocalization tag for each second of the sequences and reflects different climatological conditions. It also involved up to 4 different persons filming the dataset at different moments of the day.\n\nWe propose a train, validation and test split to train the network. \nAdditionally, we introduce a subset of 676 pairs of RGB Stereo images and their respective depth, which we extracted randomly from the entire dataset. This given test set is introduced to make comparability possible between the different methods trained with the dataset." } ]
A method for unsupervised transfer learning of text classifiers.
transfer learning classification text
2,019
[ "BLUE", "MVTecAD", "ROSTD", "Icentia11K", "STL-10", "STAR" ]
[ "MRPC", "GLUE", "SST" ]
[ { "dkey": "MRPC", "dval": "Microsoft Research Paraphrase Corpus (MRPC) is a corpus consists of 5,801 sentence pairs collected from newswire articles. Each pair is labelled if it is a paraphrase or not by human annotators. The whole set is divided into a training subset (4,076 sentence pairs of which 2,753 are paraphrases) and a test subset (1,725 pairs of which 1,147 are paraphrases)." }, { "dkey": "GLUE", "dval": "General Language Understanding Evaluation (GLUE) benchmark is a collection of nine natural language understanding tasks, including single-sentence tasks CoLA and SST-2, similarity and paraphrasing tasks MRPC, STS-B and QQP, and natural language inference tasks MNLI, QNLI, RTE and WNLI." }, { "dkey": "SST", "dval": "The Stanford Sentiment Treebank is a corpus with fully labeled parse trees that allows for a\ncomplete analysis of the compositional effects of\nsentiment in language. The corpus is based on\nthe dataset introduced by Pang and Lee (2005) and\nconsists of 11,855 single sentences extracted from\nmovie reviews. It was parsed with the Stanford\nparser and includes a total of 215,154 unique phrases\nfrom those parse trees, each annotated by 3 human judges.\n\nEach phrase is labelled as either negative, somewhat negative, neutral, somewhat positive or positive.\nThe corpus with all 5 labels is referred to as SST-5 or SST fine-grained. Binary classification experiments on full sentences (negative or somewhat negative vs somewhat positive or positive with neutral sentences discarded) refer to the dataset as SST-2 or SST binary." }, { "dkey": "BLUE", "dval": "The BLUE benchmark consists of five different biomedicine text-mining tasks with ten corpora. These tasks cover a diverse range of text genres (biomedical literature and clinical notes), dataset sizes, and degrees of difficulty and, more importantly, highlight common biomedicine text-mining challenges." }, { "dkey": "MVTecAD", "dval": "MVTec AD is a dataset for benchmarking anomaly detection methods with a focus on industrial inspection. It contains over 5000 high-resolution images divided into fifteen different object and texture categories. Each category comprises a set of defect-free training images and a test set of images with various kinds of defects as well as images without defects.\n\nThere are two common metrics: Detection AUROC and Segmentation (or pixelwise) AUROC\n\nDetection (or, classification) methods output single float (anomaly score) per input test image. \n\nSegmentation methods output anomaly probability for each pixel. \n\"To assess segmentation performance, we evaluate the relative per-region overlap of the segmentation with the ground truth. To get an additional performance measure that is independent of the determined threshold, we compute the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC AUC). We define the true positive rate as the percentage of pixels that were correctly classified as anomalous\" [1]\nLater segmentation metric was improved to balance regions with small and large area, see PRO-AUC and other in [2]\n\n[1] Paul Bergmann et al, \"MVTec AD — A Comprehensive Real-World Dataset for Unsupervised Anomaly Detection\"\n[2] Bergmann, P., Batzner, K., Fauser, M. et al. The MVTec Anomaly Detection Dataset: A Comprehensive Real-World Dataset for Unsupervised Anomaly Detection. Int J Comput Vis (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11263-020-01400-4" }, { "dkey": "ROSTD", "dval": "A dataset of 4K out-of-domain (OOD) examples for the publicly available dataset from (Schuster et al. 2019). In contrast to existing settings which synthesize OOD examples by holding out a subset of classes, the examples were authored by annotators with apriori instructions to be out-of-domain with respect to the sentences in an existing dataset." }, { "dkey": "Icentia11K", "dval": "Public ECG dataset of continuous raw signals for representation learning containing 11 thousand patients and 2 billion labelled beats." }, { "dkey": "STL-10", "dval": "The STL-10 is an image dataset derived from ImageNet and popularly used to evaluate algorithms of unsupervised feature learning or self-taught learning. Besides 100,000 unlabeled images, it contains 13,000 labeled images from 10 object classes (such as birds, cats, trucks), among which 5,000 images are partitioned for training while the remaining 8,000 images for testing. All the images are color images with 96×96 pixels in size." }, { "dkey": "STAR", "dval": "A schema-guided task-oriented dialog dataset consisting of 127,833 utterances and knowledge base queries across 5,820 task-oriented dialogs in 13 domains that is especially designed to facilitate task and domain transfer learning in task-oriented dialog." } ]
The model aims to achieve good detection performance, while the output also needs to be easy to understand for
object detection image paragraph-level
2,019
[ "CoNLL-2014 Shared Task: Grammatical Error Correction", "ReCAM", "TweetQA", "BDD100K" ]
[ "ImageNet", "COCO" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "CoNLL-2014 Shared Task: Grammatical Error Correction", "dval": "CoNLL-2014 will continue the CoNLL tradition of having a high profile shared task in natural language processing. This year's shared task will be grammatical error correction, a continuation of the CoNLL shared task in 2013. A participating system in this shared task is given short English texts written by non-native speakers of English. The system detects the grammatical errors present in the input texts, and returns the corrected essays. The shared task in 2014 will require a participating system to correct all errors present in an essay (i.e., not restricted to just five error types in 2013). Also, the evaluation metric will be changed to F0.5, weighting precision twice as much as recall.\n\nThe grammatical error correction task is impactful since it is estimated that hundreds of millions of people in the world are learning English and they benefit directly from an automated grammar checker. However, for many error types, current grammatical error correction methods do not achieve a high performance and thus more research is needed." }, { "dkey": "ReCAM", "dval": "Tasks\nOur shared task has three subtasks. Subtask 1 and 2 focus on evaluating machine learning models' performance with regard to two definitions of abstractness (Spreen and Schulz, 1966; Changizi, 2008), which we call imperceptibility and nonspecificity, respectively. Subtask 3 aims to provide some insights to their relationships.\n\n• Subtask 1: ReCAM-Imperceptibility\n\nConcrete words refer to things, events, and properties that we can perceive directly with our senses (Spreen and Schulz, 1966; Coltheart 1981; Turney et al., 2011), e.g., donut, trees, and red. In contrast, abstract words refer to ideas and concepts that are distant from immediate perception. Examples include objective, culture, and economy. In subtask 1, the participanting systems are required to perform reading comprehension of abstract meaning for imperceptible concepts.\n\nBelow is an example. Given a passage and a question, your model needs to choose from the five candidates the best one for replacing @placeholder.\n\n• Subtask 2: ReCAM-Nonspecificity\n\nSubtask 2 focuses on a different type of definition. Compared to concrete concepts like groundhog and whale, hypernyms such as vertebrate are regarded as more abstract (Changizi, 2008). \n\n• Subtask 3: ReCAM-Intersection\nSubtask 3 aims to provide more insights to the relationship of the two views on abstractness, In this subtask, we test the performance of a system that is trained on one definition and evaluted on the other." }, { "dkey": "TweetQA", "dval": "With social media becoming increasingly popular on which lots of news and real-time events are reported, developing automated question answering systems is critical to the effectiveness of many applications that rely on real-time knowledge. While previous question answering (QA) datasets have concentrated on formal text like news and Wikipedia, the first large-scale dataset for QA over social media data is presented. To make sure the tweets are meaningful and contain interesting information, tweets used by journalists to write news articles are gathered. Then human annotators are asked to write questions and answers upon these tweets. Unlike other QA datasets like SQuAD in which the answers are extractive, the answer are allowed to be abstractive. The task requires model to read a short tweet and a question and outputs a text phrase (does not need to be in the tweet) as the answer." }, { "dkey": "BDD100K", "dval": "Datasets drive vision progress, yet existing driving datasets are impoverished in terms of visual content and supported tasks to study multitask learning for autonomous driving. Researchers are usually constrained to study a small set of problems on one dataset, while real-world computer vision applications require performing tasks of various complexities. We construct BDD100K, the largest driving video dataset with 100K videos and 10 tasks to evaluate the exciting progress of image recognition algorithms on autonomous driving. The dataset possesses geographic, environmental, and weather diversity, which is useful for training models that are less likely to be surprised by new conditions. Based on this diverse dataset, we build a benchmark for heterogeneous multitask learning and study how to solve the tasks together. Our experiments show that special training strategies are needed for existing models to perform such heterogeneous tasks. BDD100K opens the door for future studies in this important venue. More detail is at the dataset home page." } ]
A novel view-enhanced recurrent attention model for 3D shape classification.
3d shape classification grayscale images
2,019
[ "WHU", "Deep Fashion3D", "NVGesture", "PadChest", "30MQA", "IntrA" ]
[ "ImageNet", "ModelNet" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "ModelNet", "dval": "The ModelNet40 dataset contains synthetic object point clouds. As the most widely used benchmark for point cloud analysis, ModelNet40 is popular because of its various categories, clean shapes, well-constructed dataset, etc. The original ModelNet40 consists of 12,311 CAD-generated meshes in 40 categories (such as airplane, car, plant, lamp), of which 9,843 are used for training while the rest 2,468 are reserved for testing. The corresponding point cloud data points are uniformly sampled from the mesh surfaces, and then further preprocessed by moving to the origin and scaling into a unit sphere." }, { "dkey": "WHU", "dval": "Created for MVS tasks and is a large-scale multi-view aerial dataset generated from a highly accurate 3D digital surface model produced from thousands of real aerial images with precise camera parameters." }, { "dkey": "Deep Fashion3D", "dval": "A novel benchmark and dataset for the evaluation of image-based garment reconstruction systems. Deep Fashion3D contains 2078 models reconstructed from real garments, which covers 10 different categories and 563 garment instances. It provides rich annotations including 3D feature lines, 3D body pose and the corresponded multi-view real images. In addition, each garment is randomly posed to enhance the variety of real clothing deformations." }, { "dkey": "NVGesture", "dval": "The NVGesture dataset focuses on touchless driver controlling. It contains 1532 dynamic gestures fallen into 25 classes. It includes 1050 samples for training and 482 for testing. The videos are recorded with three modalities (RGB, depth, and infrared)." }, { "dkey": "PadChest", "dval": "PadChest is a labeled large-scale, high resolution chest x-ray dataset for the automated exploration\nof medical images along with their associated reports. This dataset includes more than 160,000\nimages obtained from 67,000 patients that were interpreted and reported by radiologists at Hospital\nSan Juan Hospital (Spain) from 2009 to 2017, covering six different position views and additional\ninformation on image acquisition and patient demography. The reports were labeled with 174 different\nradiographic findings, 19 differential diagnoses and 104 anatomic locations organized as a hierarchical\ntaxonomy and mapped onto standard Unified Medical Language System (UMLS) terminology. Of\nthese reports, 27% were manually annotated by trained physicians and the remaining set was labeled\nusing a supervised method based on a recurrent neural network with attention mechanisms. The labels\ngenerated were then validated in an independent test set achieving a 0.93 Micro-F1 score." }, { "dkey": "30MQA", "dval": "An enormous question answer pair corpus produced by applying a novel neural network architecture on the knowledge base Freebase to transduce facts into natural language questions." }, { "dkey": "IntrA", "dval": "IntrA is an open-access 3D intracranial aneurysm dataset that makes the application of points-based and mesh-based classification and segmentation models available. This dataset can be used to diagnose intracranial aneurysms and to extract the neck for a clipping operation in medicine and other areas of deep learning, such as normal estimation and surface reconstruction.\n\n103 3D models of entire brain vessels are collected by reconstructing scanned 2D MRA images of patients (the raw 2D MRA images are not published due to medical ethics).\n1909 blood vessel segments are generated automatically from the complete models, including 1694 healthy vessel segments and 215 aneurysm segments for diagnosis.\n116 aneurysm segments are divided and annotated manually by medical experts; the scale of each aneurysm segment is based on the need for a preoperative examination.\nGeodesic distance matrices are computed and included for each annotated 3D segment, because the expression of the geodesic distance is more accurate than Euclidean distance according to the shape of vessels." } ]
I want to test if a trained image classifier is overfitted to the training set.
image classification images
2,019
[ "SNIPS", "DOTA", "ConvAI2", "Food-101", "GYAFC", "DUTS", "HACS" ]
[ "ImageNet", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "DOTA", "dval": "DOTA is a large-scale dataset for object detection in aerial images. It can be used to develop and evaluate object detectors in aerial images. The images are collected from different sensors and platforms. Each image is of the size in the range from 800 × 800 to 20,000 × 20,000 pixels and contains objects exhibiting a wide variety of scales, orientations, and shapes. The instances in DOTA images are annotated by experts in aerial image interpretation by arbitrary (8 d.o.f.) quadrilateral. We will continue to update DOTA, to grow in size and scope to reflect evolving real-world conditions. Now it has three versions:\n\nDOTA-v1.0 contains 15 common categories, 2,806 images and 188, 282 instances. The proportions of the training set, validation set, and testing set in DOTA-v1.0 are 1/2, 1/6, and 1/3, respectively.\n\nDOTA-v1.5 uses the same images as DOTA-v1.0, but the extremely small instances (less than 10 pixels) are also annotated. Moreover, a new category, ”container crane” is added. It contains 403,318 instances in total. The number of images and dataset splits are the same as DOTA-v1.0. This version was released for the DOAI Challenge 2019 on Object Detection in Aerial Images in conjunction with IEEE CVPR 2019.\n\nDOTA-v2.0 collects more Google Earth, GF-2 Satellite, and aerial images. There are 18 common categories, 11,268 images and 1,793,658 instances in DOTA-v2.0. Compared to DOTA-v1.5, it further adds the new categories of ”airport” and ”helipad”. The 11,268 images of DOTA are split into training, validation, test-dev, and test-challenge sets. To avoid the problem of overfitting, the proportion of training and validation set is smaller than the test set. Furthermore, we have two test sets, namely test-dev and test-challenge. Training contains 1,830 images and 268,627 instances. Validation contains 593 images and 81,048 instances. We released the images and ground truths for training and validation sets. Test-dev contains 2,792 images and 353,346 instances. We released the images but not the ground truths. Test-challenge contains 6,053 images and 1,090,637 instances." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "Food-101", "dval": "The Food-101 dataset consists of 101 food categories with 750 training and 250 test images per category, making a total of 101k images. The labels for the test images have been manually cleaned, while the training set contains some noise." }, { "dkey": "GYAFC", "dval": "Grammarly’s Yahoo Answers Formality Corpus (GYAFC) is the largest dataset for any style containing a total of 110K informal / formal sentence pairs.\n\nYahoo Answers is a question answering forum, contains a large number of informal sentences and allows redistribution of data. The authors used the Yahoo Answers L6 corpus to create the GYAFC dataset of informal and formal sentence pairs. In order to ensure a uniform distribution of data, they removed sentences that are questions, contain URLs, and are shorter than 5 words or longer than 25. After these preprocessing steps, 40 million sentences remain. \n\nThe Yahoo Answers corpus consists of several different domains like Business, Entertainment & Music, Travel, Food, etc. Pavlick and Tetreault formality classifier (PT16) shows that the formality level varies significantly\nacross different genres. In order to control for this variation, the authors work with two specific domains that contain the most informal sentences and show results on training and testing within those categories. The authors use the formality classifier from PT16 to identify informal sentences and train this classifier on the Answers genre of the PT16 corpus\nwhich consists of nearly 5,000 randomly selected sentences from Yahoo Answers manually annotated on a scale of -3 (very informal) to 3 (very formal). They find that the domains of Entertainment & Music and Family & Relationships contain the most informal sentences and create the GYAFC dataset using these domains." }, { "dkey": "DUTS", "dval": "DUTS is a saliency detection dataset containing 10,553 training images and 5,019 test images. All training images are collected from the ImageNet DET training/val sets, while test images are collected from the ImageNet DET test set and the SUN data set. Both the training and test set contain very challenging scenarios for saliency detection. Accurate pixel-level ground truths are manually annotated by 50 subjects." }, { "dkey": "HACS", "dval": "HACS is a dataset for human action recognition. It uses a taxonomy of 200 action classes, which is identical to that of the ActivityNet-v1.3 dataset. It has 504K videos retrieved from YouTube. Each one is strictly shorter than 4 minutes, and the average length is 2.6 minutes. A total of 1.5M clips of 2-second duration are sparsely sampled by methods based on both uniform randomness and consensus/disagreement of image classifiers. 0.6M and 0.9M clips are annotated as positive and negative samples, respectively.\n\nAuthors split the collection into training, validation and testing sets of size 1.4M, 50K and 50K clips, which are sampled\nfrom 492K, 6K and 6K videos, respectively." } ]
I want to learn a controllable, geometric model of object categories in an entirely unsupervised manner
photorealistic image manipulation rgb images
2,019
[ "DeepMind Control Suite", "ABC Dataset", "2D-3D-S", "CubiCasa5K", "STL-10", "ModelNet" ]
[ "MAFL", "CelebA" ]
[ { "dkey": "MAFL", "dval": "The MAFL dataset contains manually annotated facial landmark locations for 19,000 training and 1,000 test images." }, { "dkey": "CelebA", "dval": "CelebFaces Attributes dataset contains 202,599 face images of the size 178×218 from 10,177 celebrities, each annotated with 40 binary labels indicating facial attributes like hair color, gender and age." }, { "dkey": "DeepMind Control Suite", "dval": "The DeepMind Control Suite (DMCS) is a set of simulated continuous control environments with a standardized structure and interpretable rewards. The tasks are written and powered by the MuJoCo physics engine, making them easy to identify. Control Suite tasks include Pendulum, Acrobot, Cart-pole, Cart-k-pole, Ball in cup, Point-mass, Reacher, Finger, Hooper, Fish, Cheetah, Walker, Manipulator, Manipulator extra, Stacker, Swimmer, Humanoid, Humanoid_CMU and LQR." }, { "dkey": "ABC Dataset", "dval": "The ABC Dataset is a collection of one million Computer-Aided Design (CAD) models for research of geometric deep learning methods and applications. Each model is a collection of explicitly parametrized curves and surfaces, providing ground truth for differential quantities, patch segmentation, geometric feature detection, and shape reconstruction. Sampling the parametric descriptions of surfaces and curves allows generating data in different formats and resolutions, enabling fair comparisons for a wide range of geometric learning algorithms." }, { "dkey": "2D-3D-S", "dval": "The 2D-3D-S dataset provides a variety of mutually registered modalities from 2D, 2.5D and 3D domains, with instance-level semantic and geometric annotations. It covers over 6,000 m2 collected in 6 large-scale indoor areas that originate from 3 different buildings. It contains over 70,000 RGB images, along with the corresponding depths, surface normals, semantic annotations, global XYZ images (all in forms of both regular and 360° equirectangular images) as well as camera information. It also includes registered raw and semantically annotated 3D meshes and point clouds. The dataset enables development of joint and cross-modal learning models and potentially unsupervised approaches utilizing the regularities present in large-scale indoor spaces." }, { "dkey": "CubiCasa5K", "dval": "CubiCasa5K is a large-scale floorplan image dataset containing 5000 samples annotated into over 80 floorplan object categories. The dataset annotations are performed in a dense and versatile manner by using polygons for separating the different objects." }, { "dkey": "STL-10", "dval": "The STL-10 is an image dataset derived from ImageNet and popularly used to evaluate algorithms of unsupervised feature learning or self-taught learning. Besides 100,000 unlabeled images, it contains 13,000 labeled images from 10 object classes (such as birds, cats, trucks), among which 5,000 images are partitioned for training while the remaining 8,000 images for testing. All the images are color images with 96×96 pixels in size." }, { "dkey": "ModelNet", "dval": "The ModelNet40 dataset contains synthetic object point clouds. As the most widely used benchmark for point cloud analysis, ModelNet40 is popular because of its various categories, clean shapes, well-constructed dataset, etc. The original ModelNet40 consists of 12,311 CAD-generated meshes in 40 categories (such as airplane, car, plant, lamp), of which 9,843 are used for training while the rest 2,468 are reserved for testing. The corresponding point cloud data points are uniformly sampled from the mesh surfaces, and then further preprocessed by moving to the origin and scaling into a unit sphere." } ]
I am trying to train a supervised model for action recognition from videos.
action recognition videos
2,018
[ "EPIC-KITCHENS-100", "ConvAI2", "AViD", "Kinetics-600", "NTU RGB+D", "Charades" ]
[ "ImageNet", "UCF101" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "UCF101", "dval": "UCF101 dataset is an extension of UCF50 and consists of 13,320 video clips, which are classified into 101 categories. These 101 categories can be classified into 5 types (Body motion, Human-human interactions, Human-object interactions, Playing musical instruments and Sports). The total length of these video clips is over 27 hours. All the videos are collected from YouTube and have a fixed frame rate of 25 FPS with the resolution of 320 × 240." }, { "dkey": "EPIC-KITCHENS-100", "dval": "This paper introduces the pipeline to scale the largest dataset in egocentric vision EPIC-KITCHENS. The effort culminates in EPIC-KITCHENS-100, a collection of 100 hours, 20M frames, 90K actions in 700 variable-length videos, capturing long-term unscripted activities in 45 environments, using head-mounted cameras. Compared to its previous version (EPIC-KITCHENS-55), EPIC-KITCHENS-100 has been annotated using a novel pipeline that allows denser (54% more actions per minute) and more complete annotations of fine-grained actions (+128% more action segments). This collection also enables evaluating the \"test of time\" - i.e. whether models trained on data collected in 2018 can generalise to new footage collected under the same hypotheses albeit \"two years on\".\nThe dataset is aligned with 6 challenges: action recognition (full and weak supervision), action detection, action anticipation, cross-modal retrieval (from captions), as well as unsupervised domain adaptation for action recognition. For each challenge, we define the task, provide baselines and evaluation metrics." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "AViD", "dval": "Is a collection of action videos from many different countries. The motivation is to create a public dataset that would benefit training and pretraining of action recognition models for everybody, rather than making it useful for limited countries." }, { "dkey": "Kinetics-600", "dval": "The Kinetics-600 is a large-scale action recognition dataset which consists of around 480K videos from 600 action categories. The 480K videos are divided into 390K, 30K, 60K for training, validation and test sets, respectively. Each video in the dataset is a 10-second clip of action moment annotated from raw YouTube video. It is an extensions of the Kinetics-400 dataset." }, { "dkey": "NTU RGB+D", "dval": "NTU RGB+D is a large-scale dataset for RGB-D human action recognition. It involves 56,880 samples of 60 action classes collected from 40 subjects. The actions can be generally divided into three categories: 40 daily actions (e.g., drinking, eating, reading), nine health-related actions (e.g., sneezing, staggering, falling down), and 11 mutual actions (e.g., punching, kicking, hugging). These actions take place under 17 different scene conditions corresponding to 17 video sequences (i.e., S001–S017). The actions were captured using three cameras with different horizontal imaging viewpoints, namely, −45∘,0∘, and +45∘. Multi-modality information is provided for action characterization, including depth maps, 3D skeleton joint position, RGB frames, and infrared sequences. The performance evaluation is performed by a cross-subject test that split the 40 subjects into training and test groups, and by a cross-view test that employed one camera (+45∘) for testing, and the other two cameras for training." }, { "dkey": "Charades", "dval": "The Charades dataset is composed of 9,848 videos of daily indoors activities with an average length of 30 seconds, involving interactions with 46 objects classes in 15 types of indoor scenes and containing a vocabulary of 30 verbs leading to 157 action classes. Each video in this dataset is annotated by multiple free-text descriptions, action labels, action intervals and classes of interacting objects. 267 different users were presented with a sentence, which includes objects and actions from a fixed vocabulary, and they recorded a video acting out the sentence. In total, the dataset contains 66,500 temporal annotations for 157 action classes, 41,104 labels for 46 object classes, and 27,847 textual descriptions of the videos. In the standard split there are7,986 training video and 1,863 validation video." } ]
In this paper, we propose a deep feature extraction model to combine color histogram features and texture
person re-identification images
2,016
[ "OST300", "T-LESS", "MNIST-M", "Deep Fashion3D", "HIGGS Data Set", "Places", "CATS" ]
[ "VIPeR", "Market-1501" ]
[ { "dkey": "VIPeR", "dval": "The Viewpoint Invariant Pedestrian Recognition (VIPeR) dataset includes 632 people and two outdoor cameras under different viewpoints and light conditions. Each person has one image per camera and each image has been scaled to be 128×48 pixels. It provides the pose angle of each person as 0° (front), 45°, 90° (right), 135°, and 180° (back)." }, { "dkey": "Market-1501", "dval": "Market-1501 is a large-scale public benchmark dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1501 identities which are captured by six different cameras, and 32,668 pedestrian image bounding-boxes obtained using the Deformable Part Models pedestrian detector. Each person has 3.6 images on average at each viewpoint. The dataset is split into two parts: 750 identities are utilized for training and the remaining 751 identities are used for testing. In the official testing protocol 3,368 query images are selected as probe set to find the correct match across 19,732 reference gallery images." }, { "dkey": "OST300", "dval": "OST300 is an outdoor scene dataset with 300 test images of outdoor scenes, and a training set of 7 categories of images with rich textures." }, { "dkey": "T-LESS", "dval": "T-LESS is a dataset for estimating the 6D pose, i.e. translation and rotation, of texture-less rigid objects. The dataset features thirty industry-relevant objects with no significant texture and no discriminative color or reflectance properties. The objects exhibit symmetries and mutual similarities in shape and/or size. Compared to other datasets, a unique property is that some of the objects are parts of others. The dataset includes training and test images that were captured with three synchronized sensors, specifically a structured-light and a time-of-flight RGB-D sensor and a high-resolution RGB camera. There are approximately 39K training and 10K test images from each sensor. Additionally, two types of 3D models are provided for each object, i.e. a manually created CAD model and a semi-automatically reconstructed one. Training images depict individual objects against a black background. Test images originate from twenty test scenes having varying complexity, which increases from simple scenes with several isolated objects to very challenging ones with multiple instances of several objects and with a high amount of clutter and occlusion. The images were captured from a systematically sampled view sphere around the object/scene, and are annotated with accurate ground truth 6D poses of all modeled objects." }, { "dkey": "MNIST-M", "dval": "MNIST-M is created by combining MNIST digits with the patches randomly extracted from color photos of BSDS500 as their background. It contains 59,001 training and 90,001 test images." }, { "dkey": "Deep Fashion3D", "dval": "A novel benchmark and dataset for the evaluation of image-based garment reconstruction systems. Deep Fashion3D contains 2078 models reconstructed from real garments, which covers 10 different categories and 563 garment instances. It provides rich annotations including 3D feature lines, 3D body pose and the corresponded multi-view real images. In addition, each garment is randomly posed to enhance the variety of real clothing deformations." }, { "dkey": "HIGGS Data Set", "dval": "The data has been produced using Monte Carlo simulations. The first 21 features (columns 2-22) are kinematic properties measured by the particle detectors in the accelerator. The last seven features are functions of the first 21 features; these are high-level features derived by physicists to help discriminate between the two classes. There is an interest in using deep learning methods to obviate the need for physicists to manually develop such features. Benchmark results using Bayesian Decision Trees from a standard physics package and 5-layer neural networks are presented in the original paper. The last 500,000 examples are used as a test set." }, { "dkey": "Places", "dval": "The Places dataset is proposed for scene recognition and contains more than 2.5 million images covering more than 205 scene categories with more than 5,000 images per category." }, { "dkey": "CATS", "dval": "A dataset consisting of stereo thermal, stereo color, and cross-modality image pairs with high accuracy ground truth (< 2mm) generated from a LiDAR. The authors scanned 100 cluttered indoor and 80 outdoor scenes featuring challenging environments and conditions. CATS contains approximately 1400 images of pedestrians, vehicles, electronics, and other thermally interesting objects in different environmental conditions, including nighttime, daytime, and foggy scenes." } ]
The system consists of a detector that uses multiple deep convolutional neural networks for pedestrian detection.
pedestrian detection images
2,019
[ "MOT17", "COVIDx", "Birdsnap", "GoPro", "TIMIT" ]
[ "COCO", "CityPersons", "Cityscapes", "KITTI" ]
[ { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "CityPersons", "dval": "The CityPersons dataset is a subset of Cityscapes which only consists of person annotations. There are 2975 images for training, 500 and 1575 images for validation and testing. The average of the number of pedestrians in an image is 7. The visible-region and full-body annotations are provided." }, { "dkey": "Cityscapes", "dval": "Cityscapes is a large-scale database which focuses on semantic understanding of urban street scenes. It provides semantic, instance-wise, and dense pixel annotations for 30 classes grouped into 8 categories (flat surfaces, humans, vehicles, constructions, objects, nature, sky, and void). The dataset consists of around 5000 fine annotated images and 20000 coarse annotated ones. Data was captured in 50 cities during several months, daytimes, and good weather conditions. It was originally recorded as video so the frames were manually selected to have the following features: large number of dynamic objects, varying scene layout, and varying background." }, { "dkey": "KITTI", "dval": "KITTI (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Toyota Technological Institute) is one of the most popular datasets for use in mobile robotics and autonomous driving. It consists of hours of traffic scenarios recorded with a variety of sensor modalities, including high-resolution RGB, grayscale stereo cameras, and a 3D laser scanner. Despite its popularity, the dataset itself does not contain ground truth for semantic segmentation. However, various researchers have manually annotated parts of the dataset to fit their necessities. Álvarez et al. generated ground truth for 323 images from the road detection challenge with three classes: road, vertical, and sky. Zhang et al. annotated 252 (140 for training and 112 for testing) acquisitions – RGB and Velodyne scans – from the tracking challenge for ten object categories: building, sky, road, vegetation, sidewalk, car, pedestrian, cyclist, sign/pole, and fence. Ros et al. labeled 170 training images and 46 testing images (from the visual odometry challenge) with 11 classes: building, tree, sky, car, sign, road, pedestrian, fence, pole, sidewalk, and bicyclist." }, { "dkey": "MOT17", "dval": "The Multiple Object Tracking 17 (MOT17) dataset is a dataset for multiple object tracking. Similar to its previous version MOT16, this challenge contains seven different indoor and outdoor scenes of public places with pedestrians as the objects of interest. A video for each scene is divided into two clips, one for training and the other for testing. The dataset provides detections of objects in the video frames with three detectors, namely SDP, Faster-RCNN and DPM. The challenge accepts both on-line and off-line tracking approaches, where the latter are allowed to use the future video frames to predict tracks." }, { "dkey": "COVIDx", "dval": "An open access benchmark dataset comprising of 13,975 CXR images across 13,870 patient cases, with the largest number of publicly available COVID-19 positive cases to the best of the authors' knowledge." }, { "dkey": "Birdsnap", "dval": "Birdsnap is a large bird dataset consisting of 49,829 images from 500 bird species with 47,386 images used for training and 2,443 images used for testing." }, { "dkey": "GoPro", "dval": "The GoPro dataset for deblurring consists of 3,214 blurred images with the size of 1,280×720 that are divided into 2,103 training images and 1,111 test images. The dataset consists of pairs of a realistic blurry image and the corresponding ground truth shapr image that are obtained by a high-speed camera." }, { "dkey": "TIMIT", "dval": "The TIMIT Acoustic-Phonetic Continuous Speech Corpus is a standard dataset used for evaluation of automatic speech recognition systems. It consists of recordings of 630 speakers of 8 dialects of American English each reading 10 phonetically-rich sentences. It also comes with the word and phone-level transcriptions of the speech." } ]
I want to train a supervised image classification model.
image classification
2,018
[ "SNIPS", "ConvAI2", "DCASE 2014", "I-HAZE" ]
[ "ImageNet", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "DCASE 2014", "dval": "DCASE2014 is an audio classification benchmark." }, { "dkey": "I-HAZE", "dval": "The I-Haze dataset contains 25 indoor hazy images (size 2833×4657 pixels) training. It has 5 hazy images for validation along with their corresponding ground truth images." } ]
An adversarial example crafted to fool a deep neural network model.
black-box attack images
2,020
[ "ANLI", "UNSW-NB15", "GTSRB", "ImageNet-A", "DailyDialog++", "SWAG" ]
[ "ImageNet", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "ANLI", "dval": "The Adversarial Natural Language Inference (ANLI, Nie et al.) is a new large-scale NLI benchmark dataset, collected via an iterative, adversarial human-and-model-in-the-loop procedure. Particular, the data is selected to be difficult to the state-of-the-art models, including BERT and RoBERTa." }, { "dkey": "UNSW-NB15", "dval": "UNSW-NB15 is a network intrusion dataset. It contains nine different attacks, includes DoS, worms, Backdoors, and Fuzzers. The dataset contains raw network packets. The number of records in the training set is 175,341 records and the testing set is 82,332 records from the different types, attack and normal.\n\nPaper: UNSW-NB15: a comprehensive data set for network intrusion detection systems" }, { "dkey": "GTSRB", "dval": "The German Traffic Sign Recognition Benchmark (GTSRB) contains 43 classes of traffic signs, split into 39,209 training images and 12,630 test images. The images have varying light conditions and rich backgrounds." }, { "dkey": "ImageNet-A", "dval": "The ImageNet-A dataset consists of real-world, unmodified, and naturally occurring examples that are misclassified by ResNet models." }, { "dkey": "DailyDialog++", "dval": "Consists of (i) five relevant responses for each context and (ii) five adversarially crafted irrelevant responses for each context." }, { "dkey": "SWAG", "dval": "Given a partial description like \"she opened the hood of the car,\" humans can reason about the situation and anticipate what might come next (\"then, she examined the engine\"). SWAG (Situations With Adversarial Generations) is a large-scale dataset for this task of grounded commonsense inference, unifying natural language inference and physically grounded reasoning.\n\nThe dataset consists of 113k multiple choice questions about grounded situations. Each question is a video caption from LSMDC or ActivityNet Captions, with four answer choices about what might happen next in the scene. The correct answer is the (real) video caption for the next event in the video; the three incorrect answers are adversarially generated and human verified, so as to fool machines but not humans. The authors aim for SWAG to be a benchmark for evaluating grounded commonsense NLI and for learning representations." } ]
I want to automatically search for an efficient and effective CNN architecture for person reIDentif
person reidentification images
2,019
[ "NAS-Bench-201", "NATS-Bench", "NAS-Bench-101", "PHM2017", "MARS", "PRID2011", "Partial-REID" ]
[ "ImageNet", "Market-1501", "CUHK03" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "Market-1501", "dval": "Market-1501 is a large-scale public benchmark dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1501 identities which are captured by six different cameras, and 32,668 pedestrian image bounding-boxes obtained using the Deformable Part Models pedestrian detector. Each person has 3.6 images on average at each viewpoint. The dataset is split into two parts: 750 identities are utilized for training and the remaining 751 identities are used for testing. In the official testing protocol 3,368 query images are selected as probe set to find the correct match across 19,732 reference gallery images." }, { "dkey": "CUHK03", "dval": "The CUHK03 consists of 14,097 images of 1,467 different identities, where 6 campus cameras were deployed for image collection and each identity is captured by 2 campus cameras. This dataset provides two types of annotations, one by manually labelled bounding boxes and the other by bounding boxes produced by an automatic detector. The dataset also provides 20 random train/test splits in which 100 identities are selected for testing and the rest for training" }, { "dkey": "NAS-Bench-201", "dval": "NAS-Bench-201 is a benchmark (and search space) for neural architecture search. Each architecture consists of a predefined skeleton with a stack of the searched cell. In this way, architecture search is transformed into the problem of searching a good cell." }, { "dkey": "NATS-Bench", "dval": "A unified benchmark on searching for both topology and size, for (almost) any up-to-date NAS algorithm. NATS-Bench includes the search space of 15,625 neural cell candidates for architecture topology and 32,768 for architecture size on three datasets." }, { "dkey": "NAS-Bench-101", "dval": "NAS-Bench-101 is the first public architecture dataset for NAS research. To build NASBench-101, the authors carefully constructed a compact, yet expressive, search space, exploiting graph isomorphisms to identify 423k unique convolutional\narchitectures. The authors trained and evaluated all of these architectures multiple times on CIFAR-10 and compiled the results into a large dataset of over 5 million trained models. This allows researchers to evaluate the quality of a diverse range of models in milliseconds by querying the precomputed dataset." }, { "dkey": "PHM2017", "dval": "PHM2017 is a new dataset consisting of 7,192 English tweets across six diseases and conditions: Alzheimer’s Disease, heart attack (any severity), Parkinson’s disease, cancer (any type), Depression (any severity), and Stroke. The Twitter search API was used to retrieve the data using the colloquial disease names as search keywords, with the expectation of retrieving a high-recall, low precision dataset. After removing the re-tweets and replies, the tweets were manually annotated. The labels are:\n\n\nself-mention. The tweet contains a health mention with a health self-report of the Twitter account owner, e.g., \"However, I worked hard and ran for Tokyo Mayer Election Campaign in January through February, 2014, without publicizing the cancer.\"\nother-mention. The tweet contains a health mention of a health report about someone other than the account owner, e.g., \"Designer with Parkinson’s couldn’t work then engineer invents bracelet + changes her world\"\nawareness. The tweet contains the disease name, but does not mention a specific person, e.g., \"A Month Before a Heart Attack, Your Body Will Warn You With These 8 Signals\"\nnon-health. The tweet contains the disease name, but the tweet topic is not about health. \"Now I can have cancer on my wall for all to see <3\"" }, { "dkey": "MARS", "dval": "MARS (Motion Analysis and Re-identification Set) is a large scale video based person reidentification dataset, an extension of the Market-1501 dataset. It has been collected from six near-synchronized cameras. It consists of 1,261 different pedestrians, who are captured by at least 2 cameras. The variations in poses, colors and illuminations of pedestrians, as well as the poor image quality, make it very difficult to yield high matching accuracy. Moreover, the dataset contains 3,248 distractors in order to make it more realistic. Deformable Part Model and GMMCP tracker were used to automatically generate the tracklets (mostly 25-50 frames long)." }, { "dkey": "PRID2011", "dval": "PRID 2011 is a person reidentification dataset that provides multiple person trajectories recorded from two different static surveillance cameras, monitoring crosswalks and sidewalks. The dataset shows a clean background, and the people in the dataset are rarely occluded. In the dataset, 200 people appear in both views. Among the 200 people, 178 people have more than 20 appearances" }, { "dkey": "Partial-REID", "dval": "Partial REID is a specially designed partial person reidentification dataset that includes 600 images from 60 people, with 5 full-body images and 5 occluded images per person. These images were collected on a university campus by 6 cameras from different viewpoints, backgrounds and different types of occlusion. The examples of partial persons in the Partial REID dataset are shown in the Figure." } ]
I want to train a supervised model for human pose estimation from images.
human pose estimation images
2,013
[ "MPII", "PoseTrack", "MPII Human Pose", "K2HPD", "UMDFaces", "V-COCO" ]
[ "FLIC", "LSP" ]
[ { "dkey": "FLIC", "dval": "The FLIC dataset contains 5003 images from popular Hollywood movies. The images were obtained by running a state-of-the-art person detector on every tenth frame of 30 movies. People detected with high confidence (roughly 20K candidates) were then sent to the crowdsourcing marketplace Amazon Mechanical Turk to obtain ground truth labelling. Each image was annotated by five Turkers to label 10 upper body joints. The median-of-five labelling was taken in each image to be robust to outlier annotation. Finally, images were rejected manually by if the person was occluded or severely non-frontal." }, { "dkey": "LSP", "dval": "The Leeds Sports Pose (LSP) dataset is widely used as the benchmark for human pose estimation. The original LSP dataset contains 2,000 images of sportspersons gathered from Flickr, 1000 for training and 1000 for testing. Each image is annotated with 14 joint locations, where left and right joints are consistently labelled from a person-centric viewpoint. The extended LSP dataset contains additional 10,000 images labeled for training.\n\nImage: Sumer et al" }, { "dkey": "MPII", "dval": "The MPII Human Pose Dataset for single person pose estimation is composed of about 25K images of which 15K are training samples, 3K are validation samples and 7K are testing samples (which labels are withheld by the authors). The images are taken from YouTube videos covering 410 different human activities and the poses are manually annotated with up to 16 body joints." }, { "dkey": "PoseTrack", "dval": "The PoseTrack dataset is a large-scale benchmark for multi-person pose estimation and tracking in videos. It requires not only pose estimation in single frames, but also temporal tracking across frames. It contains 514 videos including 66,374 frames in total, split into 300, 50 and 208 videos for training, validation and test set respectively. For training videos, 30 frames from the center are annotated. For validation and test videos, besides 30 frames from the center, every fourth frame is also annotated for evaluating long range articulated tracking. The annotations include 15 body keypoints location, a unique person id and a head bounding box for each person instance." }, { "dkey": "MPII Human Pose", "dval": "MPII Human Pose Dataset is a dataset for human pose estimation. It consists of around 25k images extracted from online videos. Each image contains one or more people, with over 40k people annotated in total. Among the 40k samples, ∼28k samples are for training and the remainder are for testing. Overall the dataset covers 410 human activities and each image is provided with an activity label. Images were extracted from a YouTube video and provided with preceding and following un-annotated frames." }, { "dkey": "K2HPD", "dval": "Includes 100K depth images under challenging scenarios." }, { "dkey": "UMDFaces", "dval": "UMDFaces is a face dataset divided into two parts:\n\n\nStill Images - 367,888 face annotations for 8,277 subjects.\nVideo Frames - Over 3.7 million annotated video frames from over 22,000 videos of 3100 subjects.\n\nPart 1 - Still Images\n\nThe dataset contains 367,888 face annotations for 8,277 subjects divided into 3 batches. The annotations contain human curated bounding boxes for faces and estimated pose (yaw, pitch, and roll), locations of twenty-one keypoints, and gender information generated by a pre-trained neural network.\n\nPart 2 - Video Frames\n\nThe second part contains 3,735,476 annotated video frames extracted from a total of 22,075 for 3,107 subjects. The annotations contain the estimated pose (yaw, pitch, and roll), locations of twenty-one keypoints, and gender information generated by a pre-trained neural network." }, { "dkey": "V-COCO", "dval": "Verbs in COCO (V-COCO) is a dataset that builds off COCO for human-object interaction detection. V-COCO provides 10,346 images (2,533 for training, 2,867 for validating and 4,946 for testing) and 16,199 person instances. Each person has annotations for 29 action categories and there are no interaction labels including objects." } ]
I want to synthesize photorealistic images from my 3D shape.
3d image synthesis images
2,018
[ "SNIPS", "CommonsenseQA", "FAT", "ConvAI2" ]
[ "ImageNet", "ShapeNet" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "ShapeNet", "dval": "ShapeNet is a large scale repository for 3D CAD models developed by researchers from Stanford University, Princeton University and the Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago, USA. The repository contains over 300M models with 220,000 classified into 3,135 classes arranged using WordNet hypernym-hyponym relationships. ShapeNet Parts subset contains 31,693 meshes categorised into 16 common object classes (i.e. table, chair, plane etc.). Each shapes ground truth contains 2-5 parts (with a total of 50 part classes)." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "CommonsenseQA", "dval": "The CommonsenseQA is a dataset for commonsense question answering task. The dataset consists of 12,247 questions with 5 choices each.\nThe dataset was generated by Amazon Mechanical Turk workers in the following process (an example is provided in parentheses):\n\n\na crowd worker observes a source concept from ConceptNet (“River”) and three target concepts (“Waterfall”, “Bridge”, “Valley”) that are all related by the same ConceptNet relation (“AtLocation”),\nthe worker authors three questions, one per target concept, such that only that particular target concept is the answer, while the other two distractor concepts are not, (“Where on a river can you hold a cup upright to catch water on a sunny day?”, “Where can I stand on a river to see water falling without getting wet?”, “I’m crossing the river, my feet are wet but my body is dry, where am I?”)\nfor each question, another worker chooses one additional distractor from Concept Net (“pebble”, “stream”, “bank”), and the author another distractor (“mountain”, “bottom”, “island”) manually." }, { "dkey": "FAT", "dval": "Falling Things (FAT) is a dataset for advancing the state-of-the-art in object detection and 3D pose estimation in the context of robotics. It consists of generated photorealistic images with accurate 3D pose annotations for all objects in 60k images.\n\nThe 60k annotated photos of 21 household objects are taken from the YCB objects set. For each image, the dataset contains the 3D poses, per-pixel class segmentation, and 2D/3D bounding box coordinates for all objects." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." } ]
A neural network model with attention for Natural Language Inference.
natural language inference text
2,017
[ "ANLI", "STS 2014", "IMPPRES", "e-SNLI", "30MQA", "WikiReading" ]
[ "SNLI", "MultiNLI" ]
[ { "dkey": "SNLI", "dval": "The SNLI dataset (Stanford Natural Language Inference) consists of 570k sentence-pairs manually labeled as entailment, contradiction, and neutral. Premises are image captions from Flickr30k, while hypotheses were generated by crowd-sourced annotators who were shown a premise and asked to generate entailing, contradicting, and neutral sentences. Annotators were instructed to judge the relation between sentences given that they describe the same event. Each pair is labeled as “entailment”, “neutral”, “contradiction” or “-”, where “-” indicates that an agreement could not be reached." }, { "dkey": "MultiNLI", "dval": "The Multi-Genre Natural Language Inference (MultiNLI) dataset has 433K sentence pairs. Its size and mode of collection are modeled closely like SNLI. MultiNLI offers ten distinct genres (Face-to-face, Telephone, 9/11, Travel, Letters, Oxford University Press, Slate, Verbatim, Goverment and Fiction) of written and spoken English data. There are matched dev/test sets which are derived from the same sources as those in the training set, and mismatched sets which do not closely resemble any seen at training time." }, { "dkey": "ANLI", "dval": "The Adversarial Natural Language Inference (ANLI, Nie et al.) is a new large-scale NLI benchmark dataset, collected via an iterative, adversarial human-and-model-in-the-loop procedure. Particular, the data is selected to be difficult to the state-of-the-art models, including BERT and RoBERTa." }, { "dkey": "STS 2014", "dval": "STS-2014 is from SemEval-2014, constructed from image descriptions, news headlines, tweet news, discussion forums, and OntoNotes." }, { "dkey": "IMPPRES", "dval": "An IMPlicature and PRESupposition diagnostic dataset (IMPPRES), consisting of >25k semiautomatically generated sentence pairs illustrating well-studied pragmatic inference types." }, { "dkey": "e-SNLI", "dval": "e-SNLI is used for various goals, such as obtaining full sentence justifications of a model's decisions, improving universal sentence representations and transferring to out-of-domain NLI datasets." }, { "dkey": "30MQA", "dval": "An enormous question answer pair corpus produced by applying a novel neural network architecture on the knowledge base Freebase to transduce facts into natural language questions." }, { "dkey": "WikiReading", "dval": "WikiReading is a large-scale natural language understanding task and publicly-available dataset with 18 million instances. The task is to predict textual values from the structured knowledge base Wikidata by reading the text of the corresponding Wikipedia articles. The task contains a rich variety of challenging classification and extraction sub-tasks, making it well-suited for end-to-end models such as deep neural networks (DNNs)." } ]
In this paper, we propose a novel self-assembly neural modular network for multi-
multi-hop question answering text paragraph-level
2,019
[ "Places", "30MQA", "MVSEC", "THEODORE", "WGISD" ]
[ "HotpotQA", "SQuAD", "TriviaQA" ]
[ { "dkey": "HotpotQA", "dval": "HotpotQA is a question answering dataset collected on the English Wikipedia, containing about 113K crowd-sourced questions that are constructed to require the introduction paragraphs of two Wikipedia articles to answer. Each question in the dataset comes with the two gold paragraphs, as well as a list of sentences in these paragraphs that crowdworkers identify as supporting facts necessary to answer the question. \n\nA diverse range of reasoning strategies are featured in HotpotQA, including questions involving missing entities in the question, intersection questions (What satisfies property A and property B?), and comparison questions, where two entities are compared by a common attribute, among others. In the few-document distractor setting, the QA models are given ten paragraphs in which the gold paragraphs are guaranteed to be found; in the open-domain fullwiki setting, the models are only given the question and the entire Wikipedia. Models are evaluated on their answer accuracy and explainability, where the former is measured as overlap between the predicted and gold answers with exact match (EM) and unigram F1, and the latter concerns how well the predicted supporting fact sentences match human annotation (Supporting Fact EM/F1). A joint metric is also reported on this dataset, which encourages systems to perform well on both tasks simultaneously." }, { "dkey": "SQuAD", "dval": "The Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD) is a collection of question-answer pairs derived from Wikipedia articles. In SQuAD, the correct answers of questions can be any sequence of tokens in the given text. Because the questions and answers are produced by humans through crowdsourcing, it is more diverse than some other question-answering datasets. SQuAD 1.1 contains 107,785 question-answer pairs on 536 articles. SQuAD2.0 (open-domain SQuAD, SQuAD-Open), the latest version, combines the 100,000 questions in SQuAD1.1 with over 50,000 un-answerable questions written adversarially by crowdworkers in forms that are similar to the answerable ones." }, { "dkey": "TriviaQA", "dval": "TriviaQA is a realistic text-based question answering dataset which includes 950K question-answer pairs from 662K documents collected from Wikipedia and the web. This dataset is more challenging than standard QA benchmark datasets such as Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD), as the answers for a question may not be directly obtained by span prediction and the context is very long. TriviaQA dataset consists of both human-verified and machine-generated QA subsets." }, { "dkey": "Places", "dval": "The Places dataset is proposed for scene recognition and contains more than 2.5 million images covering more than 205 scene categories with more than 5,000 images per category." }, { "dkey": "30MQA", "dval": "An enormous question answer pair corpus produced by applying a novel neural network architecture on the knowledge base Freebase to transduce facts into natural language questions." }, { "dkey": "MVSEC", "dval": "The Multi Vehicle Stereo Event Camera (MVSEC) dataset is a collection of data designed for the development of novel 3D perception algorithms for event based cameras. Stereo event data is collected from car, motorbike, hexacopter and handheld data, and fused with lidar, IMU, motion capture and GPS to provide ground truth pose and depth images." }, { "dkey": "THEODORE", "dval": "Recent work about synthetic indoor datasets from perspective views has shown significant improvements of object detection results with Convolutional Neural Networks(CNNs). In this paper, we introduce THEODORE: a novel, large-scale indoor dataset containing 100,000 high- resolution diversified fisheye images with 14 classes. To this end, we create 3D virtual environments of living rooms, different human characters and interior textures. Beside capturing fisheye images from virtual environments we create annotations for semantic segmentation, instance masks and bounding boxes for object detection tasks. We compare our synthetic dataset to state of the art real-world datasets for omnidirectional images. Based on MS COCO weights, we show that our dataset is well suited for fine-tuning CNNs for object detection. Through a high generalization of our models by means of image synthesis and domain randomization we reach an AP up to 0.84 for class person on High-Definition Analytics dataset." }, { "dkey": "WGISD", "dval": "Embrapa Wine Grape Instance Segmentation Dataset (WGISD) contains grape clusters properly annotated in 300 images and a novel annotation methodology for segmentation of complex objects in natural images." } ]
I want to train a supervised model to infer the sequence of transformations that has been applied to an
image provenance analysis images
2,020
[ "PG-19", "OpoSum", "SNIPS", "CLUECorpus2020", "ImageNet-P", "DRIVE" ]
[ "ImageNet", "COCO" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "PG-19", "dval": "A new open-vocabulary language modelling benchmark derived from books." }, { "dkey": "OpoSum", "dval": "OPOSUM is a dataset for the training and evaluation of Opinion Summarization models which contains Amazon reviews from six product domains: Laptop Bags, Bluetooth Headsets, Boots, Keyboards, Televisions, and Vacuums.\nThe six training collections were created by downsampling from the Amazon Product Dataset introduced in McAuley et al. (2015) and contain reviews and their respective ratings. \n\nA subset of the dataset has been manually annotated, specifically, for each domain, 10 different products were uniformly sampled (across ratings) with 10 reviews each, amounting to a total of 600 reviews, to be used only for development (300) and testing (300)." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "CLUECorpus2020", "dval": "CLUECorpus2020 is a large-scale corpus that can be used directly for self-supervised learning such as pre-training of a language model, or language generation. It has 100G raw corpus with 35 billion Chinese characters, which is retrieved from Common Crawl." }, { "dkey": "ImageNet-P", "dval": "ImageNet-P consists of noise, blur, weather, and digital distortions. The dataset has validation perturbations; has difficulty levels; has CIFAR-10, Tiny ImageNet, ImageNet 64 × 64, standard, and Inception-sized editions; and has been designed for benchmarking not training networks. ImageNet-P departs from ImageNet-C by having perturbation sequences generated from each ImageNet validation image. Each sequence contains more than 30 frames, so to counteract an increase in dataset size and evaluation time only 10 common perturbations are used." }, { "dkey": "DRIVE", "dval": "The Digital Retinal Images for Vessel Extraction (DRIVE) dataset is a dataset for retinal vessel segmentation. It consists of a total of JPEG 40 color fundus images; including 7 abnormal pathology cases. The images were obtained from a diabetic retinopathy screening program in the Netherlands. The images were acquired using Canon CR5 non-mydriatic 3CCD camera with FOV equals to 45 degrees. Each image resolution is 584*565 pixels with eight bits per color channel (3 channels). \n\nThe set of 40 images was equally divided into 20 images for the training set and 20 images for the testing set. Inside both sets, for each image, there is circular field of view (FOV) mask of diameter that is approximately 540 pixels. Inside training set, for each image, one manual segmentation by an ophthalmological expert has been applied. Inside testing set, for each image, two manual segmentations have been applied by two different observers, where the first observer segmentation is accepted as the ground-truth for performance evaluation." } ]
I want to train a BERT model. I will first use the proposed Reweighted Proximal
pre-training language representation text
2,019
[ "SNIPS", "ConvAI2", "I-HAZE", "dMelodies", "COCO-Tasks" ]
[ "MRPC", "GLUE", "SQuAD" ]
[ { "dkey": "MRPC", "dval": "Microsoft Research Paraphrase Corpus (MRPC) is a corpus consists of 5,801 sentence pairs collected from newswire articles. Each pair is labelled if it is a paraphrase or not by human annotators. The whole set is divided into a training subset (4,076 sentence pairs of which 2,753 are paraphrases) and a test subset (1,725 pairs of which 1,147 are paraphrases)." }, { "dkey": "GLUE", "dval": "General Language Understanding Evaluation (GLUE) benchmark is a collection of nine natural language understanding tasks, including single-sentence tasks CoLA and SST-2, similarity and paraphrasing tasks MRPC, STS-B and QQP, and natural language inference tasks MNLI, QNLI, RTE and WNLI." }, { "dkey": "SQuAD", "dval": "The Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD) is a collection of question-answer pairs derived from Wikipedia articles. In SQuAD, the correct answers of questions can be any sequence of tokens in the given text. Because the questions and answers are produced by humans through crowdsourcing, it is more diverse than some other question-answering datasets. SQuAD 1.1 contains 107,785 question-answer pairs on 536 articles. SQuAD2.0 (open-domain SQuAD, SQuAD-Open), the latest version, combines the 100,000 questions in SQuAD1.1 with over 50,000 un-answerable questions written adversarially by crowdworkers in forms that are similar to the answerable ones." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "I-HAZE", "dval": "The I-Haze dataset contains 25 indoor hazy images (size 2833×4657 pixels) training. It has 5 hazy images for validation along with their corresponding ground truth images." }, { "dkey": "dMelodies", "dval": "dMelodies is dataset of simple 2-bar melodies generated using 9 independent latent factors of variation where each data point represents a unique melody based on the following constraints:\n- Each melody will correspond to a unique scale (major, minor, blues, etc.).\n- Each melody plays the arpeggios using the standard I-IV-V-I cadence chord pattern.\n- Bar 1 plays the first 2 chords (6 notes), Bar 2 plays the second 2 chords (6 notes).\n- Each played note is an 8th note." }, { "dkey": "COCO-Tasks", "dval": "Comprises about 40,000 images where the most suitable objects for 14 tasks have been annotated." } ]
A framework for multi-label zero-shot learning in human action recognition.
human action recognition video
2,017
[ "Tasty Videos", "RareAct", "SUN Attribute", "VRD", "SGD", "UTD-MHAD" ]
[ "Charades", "Breakfast" ]
[ { "dkey": "Charades", "dval": "The Charades dataset is composed of 9,848 videos of daily indoors activities with an average length of 30 seconds, involving interactions with 46 objects classes in 15 types of indoor scenes and containing a vocabulary of 30 verbs leading to 157 action classes. Each video in this dataset is annotated by multiple free-text descriptions, action labels, action intervals and classes of interacting objects. 267 different users were presented with a sentence, which includes objects and actions from a fixed vocabulary, and they recorded a video acting out the sentence. In total, the dataset contains 66,500 temporal annotations for 157 action classes, 41,104 labels for 46 object classes, and 27,847 textual descriptions of the videos. In the standard split there are7,986 training video and 1,863 validation video." }, { "dkey": "Breakfast", "dval": "The Breakfast Actions Dataset comprises of 10 actions related to breakfast preparation, performed by 52 different individuals in 18 different kitchens. The dataset is one of the largest fully annotated datasets available. The actions are recorded “in the wild” as opposed to a single controlled lab environment. It consists of over 77 hours of video recordings." }, { "dkey": "Tasty Videos", "dval": "A collection of 2511 recipes for zero-shot learning, recognition and anticipation." }, { "dkey": "RareAct", "dval": "RareAct is a video dataset of unusual actions, including actions like “blend phone”, “cut keyboard” and “microwave shoes”. It aims at evaluating the zero-shot and few-shot compositionality of action recognition models for unlikely compositions of common action verbs and object nouns. It contains 122 different actions which were obtained by combining verbs and nouns rarely co-occurring together in the large-scale textual corpus from HowTo100M, but that frequently appear separately." }, { "dkey": "SUN Attribute", "dval": "The SUN Attribute dataset consists of 14,340 images from 717 scene categories, and each category is annotated with a taxonomy of 102 discriminate attributes. The dataset can be used for high-level scene understanding and fine-grained scene recognition." }, { "dkey": "VRD", "dval": "The Visual Relationship Dataset (VRD) contains 4000 images for training and 1000 for testing annotated with visual relationships. Bounding boxes are annotated with a label containing 100 unary predicates. These labels refer to animals, vehicles, clothes and generic objects. Pairs of bounding boxes are annotated with a label containing 70 binary predicates. These labels refer to actions, prepositions, spatial relations, comparatives or preposition phrases. The dataset has 37993 instances of visual relationships and 6672 types of relationships. 1877 instances of relationships occur only in the test set and they are used to evaluate the zero-shot learning scenario." }, { "dkey": "SGD", "dval": "The Schema-Guided Dialogue (SGD) dataset consists of over 20k annotated multi-domain, task-oriented conversations between a human and a virtual assistant. These conversations involve interactions with services and APIs spanning 20 domains, ranging from banks and events to media, calendar, travel, and weather. For most of these domains, the dataset contains multiple different APIs, many of which have overlapping functionalities but different interfaces, which reflects common real-world scenarios. The wide range of available annotations can be used for intent prediction, slot filling, dialogue state tracking, policy imitation learning, language generation, user simulation learning, among other tasks in large-scale virtual assistants. Besides these, the dataset has unseen domains and services in the evaluation set to quantify the performance in zero-shot or few shot settings." }, { "dkey": "UTD-MHAD", "dval": "The UTD-MHAD dataset consists of 27 different actions performed by 8 subjects. Each subject repeated the action for 4 times, resulting in 861 action sequences in total. The RGB, depth, skeleton and the inertial sensor signals were recorded." } ]
I want to train a detection model for 360° images.
object detection omnidirectional images
2,019
[ "FDDB-360", "SNIPS", "Stanford Cars", "ConvAI2", "LFSD", "Fusion 360 Gallery" ]
[ "COCO", "SUN360" ]
[ { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "SUN360", "dval": "The goal of the SUN360 panorama database is to provide academic researchers in computer vision, computer graphics and computational photography, cognition and neuroscience, human perception, machine learning and data mining, with a comprehensive collection of annotated panoramas covering 360x180-degree full view for a large variety of environmental scenes, places and the objects within. To build the core of the dataset, the authors download a huge number of high-resolution panorama images from the Internet, and group them into different place categories. Then, they designed a WebGL annotation tool for annotating the polygons and cuboids for objects in the scene." }, { "dkey": "FDDB-360", "dval": "A 360-degree fisheye-like version of the popular FDDB face detection dataset." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "Stanford Cars", "dval": "The Stanford Cars dataset consists of 196 classes of cars with a total of 16,185 images, taken from the rear. The data is divided into almost a 50-50 train/test split with 8,144 training images and 8,041 testing images. Categories are typically at the level of Make, Model, Year. The images are 360×240." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "LFSD", "dval": "The Light Field Saliency Database (LFSD) contains 100 light fields with 360×360 spatial resolution. A rough focal stack and an all-focus image are provided for each light field. The images in this dataset usually have one salient foreground object and a background with good color contrast." }, { "dkey": "Fusion 360 Gallery", "dval": "The Fusion 360 Gallery Dataset contains rich 2D and 3D geometry data derived from parametric CAD models. The dataset is produced from designs submitted by users of the CAD package Autodesk Fusion 360 to the Autodesk Online Gallery. The dataset provides valuable data for learning how people design, including sequential CAD design data, designs segmented by modelling operation, and design hierarchy and connectivity data." } ]
The robustness of RoBERTa, XLNet, and BERT under stress tests for NLI
nli qa text
2,020
[ "ANLI", "OpenWebText", "MedNLI", "CoarseWSD-20", "Dreaddit", "FarsTail", "ChaosNLI" ]
[ "MultiNLI", "SQuAD" ]
[ { "dkey": "MultiNLI", "dval": "The Multi-Genre Natural Language Inference (MultiNLI) dataset has 433K sentence pairs. Its size and mode of collection are modeled closely like SNLI. MultiNLI offers ten distinct genres (Face-to-face, Telephone, 9/11, Travel, Letters, Oxford University Press, Slate, Verbatim, Goverment and Fiction) of written and spoken English data. There are matched dev/test sets which are derived from the same sources as those in the training set, and mismatched sets which do not closely resemble any seen at training time." }, { "dkey": "SQuAD", "dval": "The Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD) is a collection of question-answer pairs derived from Wikipedia articles. In SQuAD, the correct answers of questions can be any sequence of tokens in the given text. Because the questions and answers are produced by humans through crowdsourcing, it is more diverse than some other question-answering datasets. SQuAD 1.1 contains 107,785 question-answer pairs on 536 articles. SQuAD2.0 (open-domain SQuAD, SQuAD-Open), the latest version, combines the 100,000 questions in SQuAD1.1 with over 50,000 un-answerable questions written adversarially by crowdworkers in forms that are similar to the answerable ones." }, { "dkey": "ANLI", "dval": "The Adversarial Natural Language Inference (ANLI, Nie et al.) is a new large-scale NLI benchmark dataset, collected via an iterative, adversarial human-and-model-in-the-loop procedure. Particular, the data is selected to be difficult to the state-of-the-art models, including BERT and RoBERTa." }, { "dkey": "OpenWebText", "dval": "OpenWebText is an open-source recreation of the WebText corpus. The text is web content extracted from URLs shared on Reddit with at least three upvotes. (38GB)." }, { "dkey": "MedNLI", "dval": "The MedNLI dataset consists of the sentence pairs developed by Physicians from the Past Medical History section of MIMIC-III clinical notes annotated for Definitely True, Maybe True and Definitely False. The dataset contains 11,232 training, 1,395 development and 1,422 test instances. This provides a natural language inference task (NLI) grounded in the medical history of patients." }, { "dkey": "CoarseWSD-20", "dval": "The CoarseWSD-20 dataset is a coarse-grained sense disambiguation dataset built from Wikipedia (nouns only) targeting 2 to 5 senses of 20 ambiguous words. It was specifically designed to provide an ideal setting for evaluating Word Sense Disambiguation (WSD) models (e.g. no senses in test sets missing from training), both quantitively and qualitatively." }, { "dkey": "Dreaddit", "dval": "Consists of 190K posts from five different categories of Reddit communities." }, { "dkey": "FarsTail", "dval": "Natural Language Inference (NLI), also called Textual Entailment, is an important task in NLP with the goal of determining the inference relationship between a premise p and a hypothesis h. It is a three-class problem, where each pair (p, h) is assigned to one of these classes: \"ENTAILMENT\" if the hypothesis can be inferred from the premise, \"CONTRADICTION\" if the hypothesis contradicts the premise, and \"NEUTRAL\" if none of the above holds. There are large datasets such as SNLI, MNLI, and SciTail for NLI in English, but there are few datasets for poor-data languages like Persian. Persian (Farsi) language is a pluricentric language spoken by around 110 million people in countries like Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan. FarsTail is the first relatively large-scale Persian dataset for NLI task. A total of 10,367 samples are generated from a collection of 3,539 multiple-choice questions. The train, validation, and test portions include 7,266, 1,537, and 1,564 instances, respectively." }, { "dkey": "ChaosNLI", "dval": "Chaos NLI is a Natural Language Inference (NLI) dataset with 100 annotations per example (for a total of 464,500 annotations) for some existing data points in the development sets of SNLI, MNLI, and Abductive NLI. The dataset provides additional labels for NLI annotations that reflect the distribution of human annotators, instead of picking the majority label as the gold standard label." } ]
I want to develop a new graph kernel for complex and continuous nodes’ attributes.
graph kernel
2,015
[ "Linux", "IMDB-BINARY", "AIDS", "REDDIT-BINARY", "SNIPS" ]
[ "ENZYMES", "PROTEINS" ]
[ { "dkey": "ENZYMES", "dval": "ENZYMES is a dataset of 600 protein tertiary structures obtained from the BRENDA enzyme database. The ENZYMES dataset contains 6 enzymes." }, { "dkey": "PROTEINS", "dval": "PROTEINS is a dataset of proteins that are classified as enzymes or non-enzymes. Nodes represent the amino acids and two nodes are connected by an edge if they are less than 6 Angstroms apart." }, { "dkey": "Linux", "dval": "The LINUX dataset consists of 48,747 Program Dependence Graphs (PDG) generated from the Linux kernel. Each graph represents a function, where a node represents one statement and an edge represents the dependency between the two statements" }, { "dkey": "IMDB-BINARY", "dval": "IMDB-BINARY is a movie collaboration dataset that consists of the ego-networks of 1,000 actors/actresses who played roles in movies in IMDB. In each graph, nodes represent actors/actress, and there is an edge between them if they appear in the same movie. These graphs are derived from the Action and Romance genres." }, { "dkey": "AIDS", "dval": "AIDS is a graph dataset. It consists of 2000 graphs representing molecular compounds which are constructed from the AIDS Antiviral Screen Database of Active Compounds. It contains 4395 chemical compounds, of which 423 belong to class CA, 1081 to CM, and the remaining compounds to CI." }, { "dkey": "REDDIT-BINARY", "dval": "REDDIT-BINARY consists of graphs corresponding to online discussions on Reddit. In each graph, nodes represent users, and there is an edge between them if at least one of them respond to the other’s comment. There are four popular subreddits, namely, IAmA, AskReddit, TrollXChromosomes, and atheism. IAmA and AskReddit are two question/answer based subreddits, and TrollXChromosomes and atheism are two discussion-based subreddits. A graph is labeled according to whether it belongs to a question/answer-based community or a discussion-based community." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." } ]
We explore different BERT-based text classification models. The best performing model on [DATASET] benchmark achieves the state
text classification
2,019
[ "Glint360K", "ANLI", "MovieFIB", "ReCAM", "Digital Peter" ]
[ "SNLI", "QNLI", "GLUE" ]
[ { "dkey": "SNLI", "dval": "The SNLI dataset (Stanford Natural Language Inference) consists of 570k sentence-pairs manually labeled as entailment, contradiction, and neutral. Premises are image captions from Flickr30k, while hypotheses were generated by crowd-sourced annotators who were shown a premise and asked to generate entailing, contradicting, and neutral sentences. Annotators were instructed to judge the relation between sentences given that they describe the same event. Each pair is labeled as “entailment”, “neutral”, “contradiction” or “-”, where “-” indicates that an agreement could not be reached." }, { "dkey": "QNLI", "dval": "The QNLI (Question-answering NLI) dataset is a Natural Language Inference dataset automatically derived from the Stanford Question Answering Dataset v1.1 (SQuAD). SQuAD v1.1 consists of question-paragraph pairs, where one of the sentences in the paragraph (drawn from Wikipedia) contains the answer to the corresponding question (written by an annotator). The dataset was converted into sentence pair classification by forming a pair between each question and each sentence in the corresponding context, and filtering out pairs with low lexical overlap between the question and the context sentence. The task is to determine whether the context sentence contains the answer to the question. This modified version of the original task removes the requirement that the model select the exact answer, but also removes the simplifying assumptions that the answer is always present in the input and that lexical overlap is a reliable cue. The QNLI dataset is part of GLEU benchmark." }, { "dkey": "GLUE", "dval": "General Language Understanding Evaluation (GLUE) benchmark is a collection of nine natural language understanding tasks, including single-sentence tasks CoLA and SST-2, similarity and paraphrasing tasks MRPC, STS-B and QQP, and natural language inference tasks MNLI, QNLI, RTE and WNLI." }, { "dkey": "Glint360K", "dval": "The largest and cleanest face recognition dataset Glint360K, \nwhich contains 17,091,657 images of 360,232 individuals, baseline models trained on Glint360K can easily achieve state-of-the-art performance." }, { "dkey": "ANLI", "dval": "The Adversarial Natural Language Inference (ANLI, Nie et al.) is a new large-scale NLI benchmark dataset, collected via an iterative, adversarial human-and-model-in-the-loop procedure. Particular, the data is selected to be difficult to the state-of-the-art models, including BERT and RoBERTa." }, { "dkey": "MovieFIB", "dval": "A quantitative benchmark for developing and understanding video of fill-in-the-blank question-answering dataset with over 300,000 examples, based on descriptive video annotations for the visually impaired." }, { "dkey": "ReCAM", "dval": "Tasks\nOur shared task has three subtasks. Subtask 1 and 2 focus on evaluating machine learning models' performance with regard to two definitions of abstractness (Spreen and Schulz, 1966; Changizi, 2008), which we call imperceptibility and nonspecificity, respectively. Subtask 3 aims to provide some insights to their relationships.\n\n• Subtask 1: ReCAM-Imperceptibility\n\nConcrete words refer to things, events, and properties that we can perceive directly with our senses (Spreen and Schulz, 1966; Coltheart 1981; Turney et al., 2011), e.g., donut, trees, and red. In contrast, abstract words refer to ideas and concepts that are distant from immediate perception. Examples include objective, culture, and economy. In subtask 1, the participanting systems are required to perform reading comprehension of abstract meaning for imperceptible concepts.\n\nBelow is an example. Given a passage and a question, your model needs to choose from the five candidates the best one for replacing @placeholder.\n\n• Subtask 2: ReCAM-Nonspecificity\n\nSubtask 2 focuses on a different type of definition. Compared to concrete concepts like groundhog and whale, hypernyms such as vertebrate are regarded as more abstract (Changizi, 2008). \n\n• Subtask 3: ReCAM-Intersection\nSubtask 3 aims to provide more insights to the relationship of the two views on abstractness, In this subtask, we test the performance of a system that is trained on one definition and evaluted on the other." }, { "dkey": "Digital Peter", "dval": "Digital Peter is a dataset of Peter the Great's manuscripts annotated for segmentation and text recognition. The dataset may be useful for researchers to train handwriting text recognition models as a benchmark for comparing different models. It consists of 9,694 images and text files corresponding to lines in historical documents. The dataset includes Peter’s handwritten materials covering the period from 1709 to 1713. \n\nThe open machine learning competition Digital Peter was held based on the considered dataset." } ]
A novel dynamic translation principle for knowledge graph embedding.
knowledge graph embedding
2,017
[ "MutualFriends", "FrameNet", "PARANMT-50M", "ConceptNet" ]
[ "FB15k", "WN18" ]
[ { "dkey": "FB15k", "dval": "The FB15k dataset contains knowledge base relation triples and textual mentions of Freebase entity pairs. It has a total of 592,213 triplets with 14,951 entities and 1,345 relationships. FB15K-237 is a variant of the original dataset where inverse relations are removed, since it was found that a large number of test triplets could be obtained by inverting triplets in the training set." }, { "dkey": "WN18", "dval": "The WN18 dataset has 18 relations scraped from WordNet for roughly 41,000 synsets, resulting in 141,442 triplets. It was found out that a large number of the test triplets can be found in the training set with another relation or the inverse relation. Therefore, a new version of the dataset WN18RR has been proposed to address this issue." }, { "dkey": "MutualFriends", "dval": "In MutualFriends, two agents, A and B, each have a private knowledge base, which contains a list of friends with multiple attributes (e.g., name, school, major, etc.). The agents must chat with each other to find their unique mutual friend." }, { "dkey": "FrameNet", "dval": "FrameNet is a linguistic knowledge graph containing information about lexical and predicate argument semantics of the English language. FrameNet contains two distinct entity classes: frames and lexical units, where a frame is a meaning and a lexical unit is a single meaning for a word." }, { "dkey": "PARANMT-50M", "dval": "PARANMT-50M is a dataset for training paraphrastic sentence embeddings. It consists of more than 50 million English-English sentential paraphrase pairs." }, { "dkey": "ConceptNet", "dval": "ConceptNet is a knowledge graph that connects words and phrases of natural language with labeled edges. Its knowledge is collected from many sources that include expert-created resources, crowd-sourcing, and games with a purpose. It is designed to represent the general knowledge involved in understanding language, improving natural language applications by allowing the application to better understand the meanings behind the words people use." } ]
I'm trying to learn a representation function for each node, which can preserve the graph structure information.
node embedding graphs
2,018
[ "PTC", "REDDIT-12K", "Linux", "AtariARI", "MalNet", "LDC2020T02", "OGB-LSC" ]
[ "Cora", "Pubmed" ]
[ { "dkey": "Cora", "dval": "The Cora dataset consists of 2708 scientific publications classified into one of seven classes. The citation network consists of 5429 links. Each publication in the dataset is described by a 0/1-valued word vector indicating the absence/presence of the corresponding word from the dictionary. The dictionary consists of 1433 unique words." }, { "dkey": "Pubmed", "dval": "The Pubmed dataset consists of 19717 scientific publications from PubMed database pertaining to diabetes classified into one of three classes. The citation network consists of 44338 links. Each publication in the dataset is described by a TF/IDF weighted word vector from a dictionary which consists of 500 unique words." }, { "dkey": "PTC", "dval": "PTC is a collection of 344 chemical compounds represented as graphs which report the carcinogenicity for rats. There are 19 node labels for each node." }, { "dkey": "REDDIT-12K", "dval": "Reddit12k contains 11929 graphs each corresponding to an online discussion thread where nodes represent users, and an edge represents the fact that one of the two users responded to the comment of the other user. There is 1 of 11 graph labels associated with each of these 11929 discussion graphs, representing the category of the community." }, { "dkey": "Linux", "dval": "The LINUX dataset consists of 48,747 Program Dependence Graphs (PDG) generated from the Linux kernel. Each graph represents a function, where a node represents one statement and an edge represents the dependency between the two statements" }, { "dkey": "AtariARI", "dval": "The AtariARI (Atari Annotated RAM Interface) is an environment for representation learning. The Atari Arcade Learning Environment (ALE) does not explicitly expose any ground truth state information. However, ALE does expose the RAM state (128 bytes per timestep) which are used by the game programmer to store important state information such as the location of sprites, the state of the clock, or the current room the agent is in. To extract these variables, the dataset creators consulted commented disassemblies (or source code) of Atari 2600 games which were made available by Engelhardt and Jentzsch and CPUWIZ. The dataset creators were able to find and verify important state variables for a total of 22 games. Once this information was acquired, combining it with the ALE interface produced a wrapper that can automatically output a state label for every example frame generated from the game. The dataset creators make this available with an easy-to-use gym wrapper, which returns this information with no change to existing code using gym interfaces." }, { "dkey": "MalNet", "dval": "MalNet is a large public graph database, representing a large-scale ontology of software function call graphs. MalNet contains over 1.2 million graphs, averaging over 17k nodes and 39k edges per graph, across a hierarchy of 47 types and 696 families." }, { "dkey": "LDC2020T02", "dval": "Abstract Meaning Representation (AMR) Annotation Release 3.0 was developed by the Linguistic Data Consortium (LDC), SDL/Language Weaver, Inc., the University of Colorado's Computational Language and Educational Research group and the Information Sciences Institute at the University of Southern California. It contains a sembank (semantic treebank) of over 59,255 English natural language sentences from broadcast conversations, newswire, weblogs, web discussion forums, fiction and web text. This release adds new data to, and updates material contained in, Abstract Meaning Representation 2.0 (LDC2017T10), specifically: more annotations on new and prior data, new or improved PropBank-style frames, enhanced quality control, and multi-sentence annotations.\n\nAMR captures \"who is doing what to whom\" in a sentence. Each sentence is paired with a graph that represents its whole-sentence meaning in a tree-structure. AMR utilizes PropBank frames, non-core semantic roles, within-sentence coreference, named entity annotation, modality, negation, questions, quantities, and so on to represent the semantic structure of a sentence largely independent of its syntax." }, { "dkey": "OGB-LSC", "dval": "OGB Large-Scale Challenge (OGB-LSC) is a collection of three real-world datasets for advancing the state-of-the-art in large-scale graph ML. OGB-LSC provides graph datasets that are orders of magnitude larger than existing ones and covers three core graph learning tasks -- link prediction, graph regression, and node classification. \n\nOGB-LSC consists of three datasets: MAG240M-LSC, WikiKG90M-LSC, and PCQM4M-LSC. Each dataset offers an independent task.\n\n\nMAG240M-LSC is a heterogeneous academic graph, and the task is to predict the subject areas of papers situated in the heterogeneous graph (node classification).\nWikiKG90M-LSC is a knowledge graph, and the task is to impute missing triplets (link prediction).\nPCQM4M-LSC is a quantum chemistry dataset, and the task is to predict an important molecular property, the HOMO-LUMO gap, of a given molecule (graph regression)." } ]
I'd like to train a deep learning model for
3d human pose estimation single image images
2,018
[ "MNIST-1D", "Kuzushiji-49", "VGGFace2", "BDD100K" ]
[ "MPII", "COCO" ]
[ { "dkey": "MPII", "dval": "The MPII Human Pose Dataset for single person pose estimation is composed of about 25K images of which 15K are training samples, 3K are validation samples and 7K are testing samples (which labels are withheld by the authors). The images are taken from YouTube videos covering 410 different human activities and the poses are manually annotated with up to 16 body joints." }, { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "MNIST-1D", "dval": "A minimalist, low-memory, and low-compute alternative to classic deep learning benchmarks. The training examples are 20 times smaller than MNIST examples yet they differentiate more clearly between linear, nonlinear, and convolutional models which attain 32, 68, and 94% accuracy respectively (these models obtain 94, 99+, and 99+% on MNIST)." }, { "dkey": "Kuzushiji-49", "dval": "Kuzushiji-49 is an MNIST-like dataset that has 49 classes (28x28 grayscale, 270,912 images) from 48 Hiragana characters and one Hiragana iteration mark." }, { "dkey": "VGGFace2", "dval": "The VGGFace2 dataset is made of around 3.31 million images divided into 9131 classes, each representing a different person identity. The dataset is divided into two splits, one for the training and one for test. The latter contains around 170000 images divided into 500 identities while all the other images belong to the remaining 8631 classes available for training. While constructing the datasets, the authors focused their efforts on reaching a very low label noise and a high pose and age diversity thus, making the VGGFace2 dataset a suitable choice to train state-of-the-art deep learning models on face-related tasks. The images of the training set have an average resolution of 137x180 pixels, with less than 1% at a resolution below 32 pixels (considering the shortest side).\n\nCAUTION: Authors note that the distribution of identities in the VGG-Face dataset may not be representative of the global human population. Please be careful of unintended societal, gender, racial and other biases when training or deploying models trained on this data." }, { "dkey": "BDD100K", "dval": "Datasets drive vision progress, yet existing driving datasets are impoverished in terms of visual content and supported tasks to study multitask learning for autonomous driving. Researchers are usually constrained to study a small set of problems on one dataset, while real-world computer vision applications require performing tasks of various complexities. We construct BDD100K, the largest driving video dataset with 100K videos and 10 tasks to evaluate the exciting progress of image recognition algorithms on autonomous driving. The dataset possesses geographic, environmental, and weather diversity, which is useful for training models that are less likely to be surprised by new conditions. Based on this diverse dataset, we build a benchmark for heterogeneous multitask learning and study how to solve the tasks together. Our experiments show that special training strategies are needed for existing models to perform such heterogeneous tasks. BDD100K opens the door for future studies in this important venue. More detail is at the dataset home page." } ]
We propose a novel method to segment blood vessels and optic disk in the fundus retinal images. The method
retinal image analysis images ophthalmology
2,014
[ "ADAM", "RITE", "G1020", "HRF", "ROSE" ]
[ "STARE", "DRIVE" ]
[ { "dkey": "STARE", "dval": "The STARE (Structured Analysis of the Retina) dataset is a dataset for retinal vessel segmentation. It contains 20 equal-sized (700×605) color fundus images. For each image, two groups of annotations are provided.." }, { "dkey": "DRIVE", "dval": "The Digital Retinal Images for Vessel Extraction (DRIVE) dataset is a dataset for retinal vessel segmentation. It consists of a total of JPEG 40 color fundus images; including 7 abnormal pathology cases. The images were obtained from a diabetic retinopathy screening program in the Netherlands. The images were acquired using Canon CR5 non-mydriatic 3CCD camera with FOV equals to 45 degrees. Each image resolution is 584*565 pixels with eight bits per color channel (3 channels). \n\nThe set of 40 images was equally divided into 20 images for the training set and 20 images for the testing set. Inside both sets, for each image, there is circular field of view (FOV) mask of diameter that is approximately 540 pixels. Inside training set, for each image, one manual segmentation by an ophthalmological expert has been applied. Inside testing set, for each image, two manual segmentations have been applied by two different observers, where the first observer segmentation is accepted as the ground-truth for performance evaluation." }, { "dkey": "ADAM", "dval": "ADAM is organized as a half day Challenge, a Satellite Event of the ISBI 2020 conference in Iowa City, Iowa, USA.\n\nThe ADAM challenge focuses on the investigation and development of algorithms associated with the diagnosis of Age-related Macular degeneration (AMD) and segmentation of lesions in fundus photos from AMD patients. The goal of the challenge is to evaluate and compare automated algorithms for the detection of AMD on a common dataset of retinal fundus images. We invite the medical image analysis community to participate by developing and testing existing and novel automated fundus classification and segmentation methods.\n\nInstructions: \nADAM: Automatic Detection challenge on Age-related Macular degeneration\n\nLink: https://amd.grand-challenge.org\n\nAge-related macular degeneration, abbreviated as AMD, is a degenerative disorder in the macular region. It mainly occurs in people older than 45 years old and its incidence rate is even higher than diabetic retinopathy in the elderly. \n\nThe etiology of AMD is not fully understood, which could be related to multiple factors, including genetics, chronic photodestruction effect, and nutritional disorder. AMD is classified into Dry AMD and Wet AMD. Dry AMD (also called nonexudative AMD) is not neovascular. It is characterized by progressive atrophy of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). In the late stage, drusen and the large area of atrophy could be observed under ophthalmoscopy. Wet AMD (also called neovascular or exudative AMD), is characterized by active neovascularization under RPE, subsequently causing exudation, hemorrhage, and scarring, and will eventually cause irreversible damage to the photoreceptors and rapid vision loss if left untreated.\n\nAn early diagnosis of AMD is crucial to treatment and prognosis. Fundus photo is one of the basic examinations. The current dataset is composed of AMD and non-AMD (myopia, normal control, etc.) photos. Typical signs of AMD that can be found in these photos include drusen, exudation, hemorrhage, etc. \n\nThe ADAM challenge has 4 tasks:\n\nTask 1: Classification of AMD and non-AMD fundus images.\n\nTask 2: Detection and segmentation of optic disc.\n\nTask 3: Localization of fovea.\n\nTask 4: Detection and Segmentation of lesions from fundus images." }, { "dkey": "RITE", "dval": "The RITE (Retinal Images vessel Tree Extraction) is a database that enables comparative studies on segmentation or classification of arteries and veins on retinal fundus images, which is established based on the public available DRIVE database (Digital Retinal Images for Vessel Extraction).\n\nRITE contains 40 sets of images, equally separated into a training subset and a test subset, the same as DRIVE. The two subsets are built from the corresponding two subsets in DRIVE. For each set, there is a fundus photograph, a vessel reference standard, and a Arteries/Veins (A/V) reference standard. \n\n\nThe fundus photograph is inherited from DRIVE. \nFor the training set, the vessel reference standard is a modified version of 1st_manual from DRIVE. \nFor the test set, the vessel reference standard is 2nd_manual from DRIVE. \nFor the A/V reference standard, four types of vessels are labelled using four colors based on the vessel reference standard. \nArteries are labelled in red; veins are labelled in blue; the overlapping of arteries and veins are labelled in green; the vessels which are uncertain are labelled in white. \nThe fundus photograph is in tif format. And the vessel reference standard and the A/V reference standard are in png format. \n\nThe dataset is described in more detail in our paper, which you will cite if you use the dataset in any way: \n\nHu Q, Abràmoff MD, Garvin MK. Automated separation of binary overlapping trees in low-contrast color retinal images. Med Image Comput Comput Assist Interv. 2013;16(Pt 2):436-43. PubMed PMID: 24579170 https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-40763-5_54" }, { "dkey": "G1020", "dval": "A large publicly available retinal fundus image dataset for glaucoma classification called G1020. The dataset is curated by conforming to standard practices in routine ophthalmology and it is expected to serve as standard benchmark dataset for glaucoma detection. This database consists of 1020 high resolution colour fundus images and provides ground truth annotations for glaucoma diagnosis, optic disc and optic cup segmentation, vertical cup-to-disc ratio, size of neuroretinal rim in inferior, superior, nasal and temporal quadrants, and bounding box location for optic disc." }, { "dkey": "HRF", "dval": "The HRF dataset is a dataset for retinal vessel segmentation which comprises 45 images and is organized as 15 subsets. Each subset contains one healthy fundus image, one image of patient with diabetic retinopathy and one glaucoma image. The image sizes are 3,304 x 2,336, with a training/testing image split of 22/23." }, { "dkey": "ROSE", "dval": "Retinal OCTA SEgmentation dataset (ROSE) consists of 229 OCTA images with vessel annotations at either centerline-level or pixel level." } ]
Force Regularization uses an attractive force to force low-rank representation of each filter. We theoretically
low-rank representation learning images
2,017
[ "TUT Sound Events 2017", "Hopkins155", "MultiRC", "How2QA" ]
[ "ImageNet", "CIFAR-10" ]
[ { "dkey": "ImageNet", "dval": "The ImageNet dataset contains 14,197,122 annotated images according to the WordNet hierarchy. Since 2010 the dataset is used in the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC), a benchmark in image classification and object detection.\nThe publicly released dataset contains a set of manually annotated training images. A set of test images is also released, with the manual annotations withheld.\nILSVRC annotations fall into one of two categories: (1) image-level annotation of a binary label for the presence or absence of an object class in the image, e.g., “there are cars in this image” but “there are no tigers,” and (2) object-level annotation of a tight bounding box and class label around an object instance in the image, e.g., “there is a screwdriver centered at position (20,25) with width of 50 pixels and height of 30 pixels”.\nThe ImageNet project does not own the copyright of the images, therefore only thumbnails and URLs of images are provided.\n\n\nTotal number of non-empty WordNet synsets: 21841\nTotal number of images: 14197122\nNumber of images with bounding box annotations: 1,034,908\nNumber of synsets with SIFT features: 1000\nNumber of images with SIFT features: 1.2 million" }, { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "TUT Sound Events 2017", "dval": "The TUT Sound Events 2017 dataset contains 24 audio recordings in a street environment and contains 6 different classes. These classes are: brakes squeaking, car, children, large vehicle, people speaking, and people walking." }, { "dkey": "Hopkins155", "dval": "The Hopkins 155 dataset consists of 156 video sequences of two or three motions. Each video sequence motion corresponds to a low-dimensional subspace. There are 39−550 data vectors drawn from two or three motions for each video sequence." }, { "dkey": "MultiRC", "dval": "MultiRC (Multi-Sentence Reading Comprehension) is a dataset of short paragraphs and multi-sentence questions, i.e., questions that can be answered by combining information from multiple sentences of the paragraph.\nThe dataset was designed with three key challenges in mind:\n* The number of correct answer-options for each question is not pre-specified. This removes the over-reliance on answer-options and forces them to decide on the correctness of each candidate answer independently of others. In other words, the task is not to simply identify the best answer-option, but to evaluate the correctness of each answer-option individually.\n* The correct answer(s) is not required to be a span in the text.\n* The paragraphs in the dataset have diverse provenance by being extracted from 7 different domains such as news, fiction, historical text etc., and hence are expected to be more diverse in their contents as compared to single-domain datasets.\nThe entire corpus consists of around 10K questions (including about 6K multiple-sentence questions). The 60% of the data is released as training and development data. The rest of the data is saved for evaluation and every few months a new unseen additional data is included for evaluation to prevent unintentional overfitting over time." }, { "dkey": "How2QA", "dval": "To collect How2QA for video QA task, the same set of selected video clips are presented to another group of AMT workers for multichoice QA annotation. Each worker is assigned with one video segment and asked to write one question with four answer candidates (one correctand three distractors). Similarly, narrations are hidden from the workers to ensure the collected QA pairs are not biased by subtitles. Similar to TVQA, the start and end points are provided for the relevant moment for each question. After filtering low-quality annotations, the final dataset contains 44,007 QA pairs for 22k 60-second clips selected from 9035 videos." } ]
In this paper, we study the cost and effectiveness trade-off between different
3d human recovery single images
2,019
[ "FOBIE", "Decagon", "MobiBits", "ISRUC-Sleep", "UASOL" ]
[ "3DPW", "COCO" ]
[ { "dkey": "3DPW", "dval": "The 3D Poses in the Wild dataset is the first dataset in the wild with accurate 3D poses for evaluation. While other datasets outdoors exist, they are all restricted to a small recording volume. 3DPW is the first one that includes video footage taken from a moving phone camera.\n\nThe dataset includes:\n\n\n60 video sequences.\n2D pose annotations.\n3D poses obtained with the method introduced in the paper.\nCamera poses for every frame in the sequences.\n3D body scans and 3D people models (re-poseable and re-shapeable). Each sequence contains its corresponding models.\n18 3D models in different clothing variations." }, { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "FOBIE", "dval": "The Focused Open Biology Information Extraction (FOBIE) dataset aims to support IE from Computer-Aided Biomimetics. The dataset contains ~1,500 sentences from scientific biological texts. These sentences are annotated with TRADE-OFFS and syntactically similar relations between unbounded arguments, as well as argument-modifiers.\n\nThe FOBIE dataset has been used to explore Semi-Open Relation Extraction (SORE). The code for this and instructions can be found inside the SORE folder Readme.md, or in the ReadTheDocs documentations." }, { "dkey": "Decagon", "dval": "Bio-decagon is a dataset for polypharmacy side effect identification problem framed as a multirelational link prediction problem in a two-layer multimodal graph/network of two node types: drugs and proteins. Protein-protein interaction\nnetwork describes relationships between proteins. Drug-drug interaction network contains 964 different types of edges (one for each side effect type) and describes which drug pairs lead to which side effects. Lastly,\ndrug-protein links describe the proteins targeted by a given drug.\n\nThe final network after linking entity vocabularies used by different databases has 645 drug and 19,085 protein nodes connected by 715,612 protein-protein, 4,651,131 drug-drug, and 18,596 drug-protein edges." }, { "dkey": "MobiBits", "dval": "A novel database comprising representations of five different biometric characteristics, collected in a mobile, unconstrained or semi-constrained setting with three different mobile devices, including characteristics previously unavailable in existing datasets, namely hand images, thermal hand images, and thermal face images, all acquired with a mobile, off-the-shelf device." }, { "dkey": "ISRUC-Sleep", "dval": "ISRUC-Sleep is a polysomnographic (PSG) dataset. The data were obtained from human adults, including healthy subjects, and subjects with sleep disorders under the effect of sleep medication. The dataset, which is structured to support different research objectives, comprises three groups of data: (a) data concerning 100 subjects, with one recording session per subject, (b) data gathered from 8 subjects; two recording sessions were performed per subject, which are useful for studies involving changes in the PSG signals over time, (c) data collected from one recording session related to 10 healthy subjects, which are useful for studies involving comparison of healthy subjects with the patients suffering from sleep disorders." }, { "dkey": "UASOL", "dval": "The UASOL an RGB-D stereo dataset, that contains 160902 frames, filmed at 33 different scenes, each with between 2 k and 10 k frames. The frames show different paths from the perspective of a pedestrian, including sidewalks, trails, roads, etc. The images were extracted from video files with 15 fps at HD2K resolution with a size of 2280 × 1282 pixels. The dataset also provides a GPS geolocalization tag for each second of the sequences and reflects different climatological conditions. It also involved up to 4 different persons filming the dataset at different moments of the day.\n\nWe propose a train, validation and test split to train the network. \nAdditionally, we introduce a subset of 676 pairs of RGB Stereo images and their respective depth, which we extracted randomly from the entire dataset. This given test set is introduced to make comparability possible between the different methods trained with the dataset." } ]
I want to train a supervised model for multi-person pose
multi-person pose estimation images 3d point clouds
2,019
[ "PoseTrack", "MannequinChallenge", "SNIPS", "VIPeR", "MVSEC", "Multi-PIE" ]
[ "MPII", "COCO" ]
[ { "dkey": "MPII", "dval": "The MPII Human Pose Dataset for single person pose estimation is composed of about 25K images of which 15K are training samples, 3K are validation samples and 7K are testing samples (which labels are withheld by the authors). The images are taken from YouTube videos covering 410 different human activities and the poses are manually annotated with up to 16 body joints." }, { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "PoseTrack", "dval": "The PoseTrack dataset is a large-scale benchmark for multi-person pose estimation and tracking in videos. It requires not only pose estimation in single frames, but also temporal tracking across frames. It contains 514 videos including 66,374 frames in total, split into 300, 50 and 208 videos for training, validation and test set respectively. For training videos, 30 frames from the center are annotated. For validation and test videos, besides 30 frames from the center, every fourth frame is also annotated for evaluating long range articulated tracking. The annotations include 15 body keypoints location, a unique person id and a head bounding box for each person instance." }, { "dkey": "MannequinChallenge", "dval": "The MannequinChallenge Dataset (MQC) provides in-the-wild videos of people in static poses while a hand-held camera pans around the scene. The dataset consists of three splits for training, validation and testing." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "VIPeR", "dval": "The Viewpoint Invariant Pedestrian Recognition (VIPeR) dataset includes 632 people and two outdoor cameras under different viewpoints and light conditions. Each person has one image per camera and each image has been scaled to be 128×48 pixels. It provides the pose angle of each person as 0° (front), 45°, 90° (right), 135°, and 180° (back)." }, { "dkey": "MVSEC", "dval": "The Multi Vehicle Stereo Event Camera (MVSEC) dataset is a collection of data designed for the development of novel 3D perception algorithms for event based cameras. Stereo event data is collected from car, motorbike, hexacopter and handheld data, and fused with lidar, IMU, motion capture and GPS to provide ground truth pose and depth images." }, { "dkey": "Multi-PIE", "dval": "The Multi-PIE (Multi Pose, Illumination, Expressions) dataset consists of face images of 337 subjects taken under different pose, illumination and expressions. The pose range contains 15 discrete views, capturing a face profile-to-profile. Illumination changes were modeled using 19 flashlights located in different places of the room." } ]
We conduct a comparative evaluation of several state-of-the-art deformable face tracking methods.
deformable face tracking video
2,017
[ "CDTB", "Dialogue State Tracking Challenge", "Completion3D", "CPLFW", "THEODORE", "E2E", "RFW" ]
[ "AFW", "300W" ]
[ { "dkey": "AFW", "dval": "AFW (Annotated Faces in the Wild) is a face detection dataset that contains 205 images with 468 faces. Each face image is labeled with at most 6 landmarks with visibility labels, as well as a bounding box." }, { "dkey": "300W", "dval": "The 300-W is a face dataset that consists of 300 Indoor and 300 Outdoor in-the-wild images. It covers a large variation of identity, expression, illumination conditions, pose, occlusion and face size. The images were downloaded from google.com by making queries such as “party”, “conference”, “protests”, “football” and “celebrities”. Compared to the rest of in-the-wild datasets, the 300-W database contains a larger percentage of partially-occluded images and covers more expressions than the common “neutral” or “smile”, such as “surprise” or “scream”.\nImages were annotated with the 68-point mark-up using a semi-automatic methodology. The images of the database were carefully selected so that they represent a characteristic sample of challenging but natural face instances under totally unconstrained conditions. Thus, methods that achieve accurate performance on the 300-W database can demonstrate the same accuracy in most realistic cases.\nMany images of the database contain more than one annotated faces (293 images with 1 face, 53 images with 2 faces and 53 images with [3, 7] faces). Consequently, the database consists of 600 annotated face instances, but 399 unique images. Finally, there is a large variety of face sizes. Specifically, 49.3% of the faces have size in the range [48.6k, 2.0M] and the overall mean size is 85k (about 292 × 292) pixels." }, { "dkey": "CDTB", "dval": "dataset is recorded by several passive and active RGB-D setups and contains indoor as well as outdoor sequences acquired in direct sunlight. The sequences were recorded to contain significant object pose change, clutter, occlusion, and periods of long-term target absence to enable tracker evaluation under realistic conditions. Sequences are per-frame annotated with 13 visual attributes for detailed analysis. It contains around 100,000 samples.)" }, { "dkey": "Dialogue State Tracking Challenge", "dval": "The Dialog State Tracking Challenges 2 & 3 (DSTC2&3) were research challenge focused on improving the state of the art in tracking the state of spoken dialog systems. State tracking, sometimes called belief tracking, refers to accurately estimating the user's goal as a dialog progresses. Accurate state tracking is desirable because it provides robustness to errors in speech recognition, and helps reduce ambiguity inherent in language within a temporal process like dialog.\nIn these challenges, participants were given labelled corpora of dialogs to develop state tracking algorithms. The trackers were then evaluated on a common set of held-out dialogs, which were released, un-labelled, during a one week period.\n\nThe corpus was collected using Amazon Mechanical Turk, and consists of dialogs in two domains: restaurant information, and tourist information. Tourist information subsumes restaurant information, and includes bars, cafés etc. as well as multiple new slots. There were two rounds of evaluation using this data:\n\nDSTC 2 released a large number of training dialogs related to restaurant search. Compared to DSTC (which was in the bus timetables domain), DSTC 2 introduces changing user goals, tracking 'requested slots' as well as the new restaurants domain. Results from DSTC 2 were presented at SIGDIAL 2014.\nDSTC 3 addressed the problem of adaption to a new domain - tourist information. DSTC 3 releases a small amount of labelled data in the tourist information domain; participants will use this data plus the restaurant data from DSTC 2 for training.\nDialogs used for training are fully labelled; user transcriptions, user dialog-act semantics and dialog state are all annotated. (This corpus therefore is also suitable for studies in Spoken Language Understanding.)" }, { "dkey": "Completion3D", "dval": "The Completion3D benchmark is a dataset for evaluating state-of-the-art 3D Object Point Cloud Completion methods. Ggiven a partial 3D object point cloud the goal is to infer a complete 3D point cloud for the object." }, { "dkey": "CPLFW", "dval": "A renovation of Labeled Faces in the Wild (LFW), the de facto standard testbed for unconstraint face verification. \n\nThere are three motivations behind the construction of CPLFW benchmark as follows:\n\n1.Establishing a relatively more difficult database to evaluate the performance of real world face verification so the effectiveness of several face verification methods can be fully justified.\n\n2.Continuing the intensive research on LFW with more realistic consideration on pose intra-class variation and fostering the research on cross-pose face verification in unconstrained situation. The challenge of CPLFW emphasizes pose difference to further enlarge intra-class variance. Also, negative pairs are deliberately selected to avoid different gender or race. CPLFW considers both the large intra-class variance and the tiny inter-class variance simultaneously.\n\n3.Maintaining the data size, the face verification protocol which provides a 'same/different' benchmark and the same identities in LFW, so one can easily apply CPLFW to evaluate the performance of face verification." }, { "dkey": "THEODORE", "dval": "Recent work about synthetic indoor datasets from perspective views has shown significant improvements of object detection results with Convolutional Neural Networks(CNNs). In this paper, we introduce THEODORE: a novel, large-scale indoor dataset containing 100,000 high- resolution diversified fisheye images with 14 classes. To this end, we create 3D virtual environments of living rooms, different human characters and interior textures. Beside capturing fisheye images from virtual environments we create annotations for semantic segmentation, instance masks and bounding boxes for object detection tasks. We compare our synthetic dataset to state of the art real-world datasets for omnidirectional images. Based on MS COCO weights, we show that our dataset is well suited for fine-tuning CNNs for object detection. Through a high generalization of our models by means of image synthesis and domain randomization we reach an AP up to 0.84 for class person on High-Definition Analytics dataset." }, { "dkey": "E2E", "dval": "End-to-End NLG Challenge (E2E) aims to assess whether recent end-to-end NLG systems can generate more complex output by learning from datasets containing higher lexical richness, syntactic complexity and diverse discourse phenomena." }, { "dkey": "RFW", "dval": "To validate the racial bias of four commercial APIs and four state-of-the-art (SOTA) algorithms." } ]
A benchmark for panoramic monocular depth and
scene depth 3d vehicle pose estimation panoramic imagery images
2,018
[ "Make3D", "DIODE", "DDAD", "Virtual KITTI", "KITTI-Depth" ]
[ "CARLA", "KITTI" ]
[ { "dkey": "CARLA", "dval": "CARLA (CAR Learning to Act) is an open simulator for urban driving, developed as an open-source layer over Unreal Engine 4. Technically, it operates similarly to, as an open source layer over Unreal Engine 4 that provides sensors in the form of RGB cameras (with customizable positions), ground truth depth maps, ground truth semantic segmentation maps with 12 semantic classes designed for driving (road, lane marking, traffic sign, sidewalk and so on), bounding boxes for dynamic objects in the environment, and measurements of the agent itself (vehicle location and orientation)." }, { "dkey": "KITTI", "dval": "KITTI (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Toyota Technological Institute) is one of the most popular datasets for use in mobile robotics and autonomous driving. It consists of hours of traffic scenarios recorded with a variety of sensor modalities, including high-resolution RGB, grayscale stereo cameras, and a 3D laser scanner. Despite its popularity, the dataset itself does not contain ground truth for semantic segmentation. However, various researchers have manually annotated parts of the dataset to fit their necessities. Álvarez et al. generated ground truth for 323 images from the road detection challenge with three classes: road, vertical, and sky. Zhang et al. annotated 252 (140 for training and 112 for testing) acquisitions – RGB and Velodyne scans – from the tracking challenge for ten object categories: building, sky, road, vegetation, sidewalk, car, pedestrian, cyclist, sign/pole, and fence. Ros et al. labeled 170 training images and 46 testing images (from the visual odometry challenge) with 11 classes: building, tree, sky, car, sign, road, pedestrian, fence, pole, sidewalk, and bicyclist." }, { "dkey": "Make3D", "dval": "The Make3D dataset is a monocular Depth Estimation dataset that contains 400 single training RGB and depth map pairs, and 134 test samples. The RGB images have high resolution, while the depth maps are provided at low resolution." }, { "dkey": "DIODE", "dval": "Diode Dense Indoor/Outdoor DEpth (DIODE) is the first standard dataset for monocular depth estimation comprising diverse indoor and outdoor scenes acquired with the same hardware setup. The training set consists of 8574 indoor and 16884 outdoor samples from 20 scans each. The validation set contains 325 indoor and 446 outdoor samples with each set from 10 different scans. The ground truth density for the indoor training and validation splits are approximately 99.54% and 99%, respectively. The density of the outdoor sets are naturally lower with 67.19% for training and 78.33% for validation subsets. The indoor and outdoor ranges for the dataset are 50m and 300m, respectively." }, { "dkey": "DDAD", "dval": "DDAD is a new autonomous driving benchmark from TRI (Toyota Research Institute) for long range (up to 250m) and dense depth estimation in challenging and diverse urban conditions. It contains monocular videos and accurate ground-truth depth (across a full 360 degree field of view) generated from high-density LiDARs mounted on a fleet of self-driving cars operating in a cross-continental setting. DDAD contains scenes from urban settings in the United States (San Francisco, Bay Area, Cambridge, Detroit, Ann Arbor) and Japan (Tokyo, Odaiba)." }, { "dkey": "Virtual KITTI", "dval": "Virtual KITTI is a photo-realistic synthetic video dataset designed to learn and evaluate computer vision models for several video understanding tasks: object detection and multi-object tracking, scene-level and instance-level semantic segmentation, optical flow, and depth estimation.\n\nVirtual KITTI contains 50 high-resolution monocular videos (21,260 frames) generated from five different virtual worlds in urban settings under different imaging and weather conditions. These worlds were created using the Unity game engine and a novel real-to-virtual cloning method. These photo-realistic synthetic videos are automatically, exactly, and fully annotated for 2D and 3D multi-object tracking and at the pixel level with category, instance, flow, and depth labels (cf. below for download links)." }, { "dkey": "KITTI-Depth", "dval": "The KITTI-Depth dataset includes depth maps from projected LiDAR point clouds that were matched against the depth estimation from the stereo cameras. The depth images are highly sparse with only 5% of the pixels available and the rest is missing. The dataset has 86k training images, 7k validation images, and 1k test set images on the benchmark server with no access to the ground truth." } ]
A stereo matching algorithm including cost computation, cost aggregation, disparity computation, and disparity refinement is proposed
stereo matching image pairs
2,018
[ "DAVANet", "DIML/CVl RGB-D Dataset", "MPI Sintel", "DrivingStereo", "DispScenes", "SatStereo" ]
[ "Middlebury", "KITTI" ]
[ { "dkey": "Middlebury", "dval": "The Middlebury Stereo dataset consists of high-resolution stereo sequences with complex geometry and pixel-accurate ground-truth disparity data. The ground-truth disparities are acquired using a novel technique that employs structured lighting and does not require the calibration of the light projectors." }, { "dkey": "KITTI", "dval": "KITTI (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Toyota Technological Institute) is one of the most popular datasets for use in mobile robotics and autonomous driving. It consists of hours of traffic scenarios recorded with a variety of sensor modalities, including high-resolution RGB, grayscale stereo cameras, and a 3D laser scanner. Despite its popularity, the dataset itself does not contain ground truth for semantic segmentation. However, various researchers have manually annotated parts of the dataset to fit their necessities. Álvarez et al. generated ground truth for 323 images from the road detection challenge with three classes: road, vertical, and sky. Zhang et al. annotated 252 (140 for training and 112 for testing) acquisitions – RGB and Velodyne scans – from the tracking challenge for ten object categories: building, sky, road, vegetation, sidewalk, car, pedestrian, cyclist, sign/pole, and fence. Ros et al. labeled 170 training images and 46 testing images (from the visual odometry challenge) with 11 classes: building, tree, sky, car, sign, road, pedestrian, fence, pole, sidewalk, and bicyclist." }, { "dkey": "DAVANet", "dval": "A large-scale multi-scene dataset for stereo deblurring, containing 20,637 blurry-sharp stereo image pairs from 135 diverse sequences and their corresponding bidirectional disparities." }, { "dkey": "DIML/CVl RGB-D Dataset", "dval": "This dataset contains synchronized RGB-D frames from both Kinect v2 and Zed stereo camera. For the outdoor scene, the authors first generate disparity maps using an accurate stereo matching method and convert them using calibration parameters. A per-pixel confidence map of disparity is also provided. The scenes are captured at various places, e.g., offices, rooms, dormitory, exhibition center, street, road etc., from Yonsei University and Ewha University." }, { "dkey": "MPI Sintel", "dval": "MPI (Max Planck Institute) Sintel is a dataset for optical flow evaluation that has 1064 synthesized stereo images and ground truth data for disparity. Sintel is derived from open-source 3D animated short film Sintel. The dataset has 23 different scenes. The stereo images are RGB while the disparity is grayscale. Both have resolution of 1024×436 pixels and 8-bit per channel." }, { "dkey": "DrivingStereo", "dval": "DrivingStereo contains over 180k images covering a diverse set of driving scenarios, which is hundreds of times larger than the KITTI Stereo dataset. High-quality labels of disparity are produced by a model-guided filtering strategy from multi-frame LiDAR points." }, { "dkey": "DispScenes", "dval": "The DispScenes dataset was created to address the specific problem of disparate image matching. The image pairs in all the datasets exhibit high levels of variation in illumination and viewpoint and also contain instances of occlusion. The DispScenes dataset provides manual ground truth keypoint correspondences for all images." }, { "dkey": "SatStereo", "dval": "Provides a set of stereo-rectified images and the associated groundtruthed disparities for 10 AOIs (Area of Interest) drawn from two sources: 8 AOIs from IARPA's MVS Challenge dataset and 2 AOIs from the CORE3D-Public dataset." } ]
We estimate the geometry of a
3d room geometry object pose estimation 360-degree panorama image
2,017
[ "3DPeople Dataset", "FaceWarehouse", "OccludedPASCAL3D+", "MusicNet", "Thingi10K", "OASIS" ]
[ "PanoContext", "COCO", "SUN360" ]
[ { "dkey": "PanoContext", "dval": "The PanoContext dataset contains 500 annotated cuboid layouts of indoor environments such as bedrooms and living rooms." }, { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "SUN360", "dval": "The goal of the SUN360 panorama database is to provide academic researchers in computer vision, computer graphics and computational photography, cognition and neuroscience, human perception, machine learning and data mining, with a comprehensive collection of annotated panoramas covering 360x180-degree full view for a large variety of environmental scenes, places and the objects within. To build the core of the dataset, the authors download a huge number of high-resolution panorama images from the Internet, and group them into different place categories. Then, they designed a WebGL annotation tool for annotating the polygons and cuboids for objects in the scene." }, { "dkey": "3DPeople Dataset", "dval": "A large-scale synthetic dataset with 2.5 Million photo-realistic images of 80 subjects performing 70 activities and wearing diverse outfits." }, { "dkey": "FaceWarehouse", "dval": "FaceWarehouse is a 3D facial expression database that provides the facial geometry of 150 subjects, covering a wide range of ages and ethnic backgrounds." }, { "dkey": "OccludedPASCAL3D+", "dval": "The OccludedPASCAL3D+ is a dataset is designed to evaluate the robustness to occlusion for a number of computer vision tasks, such as object detection, keypoint detection and pose estimation. In the OccludedPASCAL3D+ dataset, we simulate partial occlusion by superimposing objects cropped from the MS-COCO dataset on top of objects from the PASCAL3D+ dataset. We only use ImageNet subset in PASCAL3D+, which has 10812 testing images." }, { "dkey": "MusicNet", "dval": "MusicNet is a collection of 330 freely-licensed classical music recordings, together with over 1 million annotated labels indicating the precise time of each note in every recording, the instrument that plays each note, and the note's position in the metrical structure of the composition. The labels are acquired from musical scores aligned to recordings by dynamic time warping. The labels are verified by trained musicians; we estimate a labeling error rate of 4%. We offer the MusicNet labels to the machine learning and music communities as a resource for training models and a common benchmark for comparing results." }, { "dkey": "Thingi10K", "dval": "Thingi10K is a dataset of 3D-Printing Models. Specifically there are 10,000 models from featured “things” on thingiverse.com, suitable for testing 3D printing techniques such as structural analysis , shape optimization, or solid geometry operations." }, { "dkey": "OASIS", "dval": "A dataset for single-image 3D in the wild consisting of annotations of detailed 3D geometry for 140,000 images." } ]
Unsupervised person re-identification.
person re-identification video
2,020
[ "Airport", "Partial-iLIDS", "CUHK02", "SYSU-MM01", "P-DESTRE" ]
[ "VIPeR", "Market-1501", "CUHK03" ]
[ { "dkey": "VIPeR", "dval": "The Viewpoint Invariant Pedestrian Recognition (VIPeR) dataset includes 632 people and two outdoor cameras under different viewpoints and light conditions. Each person has one image per camera and each image has been scaled to be 128×48 pixels. It provides the pose angle of each person as 0° (front), 45°, 90° (right), 135°, and 180° (back)." }, { "dkey": "Market-1501", "dval": "Market-1501 is a large-scale public benchmark dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1501 identities which are captured by six different cameras, and 32,668 pedestrian image bounding-boxes obtained using the Deformable Part Models pedestrian detector. Each person has 3.6 images on average at each viewpoint. The dataset is split into two parts: 750 identities are utilized for training and the remaining 751 identities are used for testing. In the official testing protocol 3,368 query images are selected as probe set to find the correct match across 19,732 reference gallery images." }, { "dkey": "CUHK03", "dval": "The CUHK03 consists of 14,097 images of 1,467 different identities, where 6 campus cameras were deployed for image collection and each identity is captured by 2 campus cameras. This dataset provides two types of annotations, one by manually labelled bounding boxes and the other by bounding boxes produced by an automatic detector. The dataset also provides 20 random train/test splits in which 100 identities are selected for testing and the rest for training" }, { "dkey": "Airport", "dval": "The Airport dataset is a dataset for person re-identification which consists of 39,902 images and 9,651 identities across six cameras." }, { "dkey": "Partial-iLIDS", "dval": "Partial iLIDS is a dataset for occluded person person re-identification. It contains a total of 476 images of 119 people captured by 4 non-overlapping cameras. Some images contain people occluded by other individuals or luggage." }, { "dkey": "CUHK02", "dval": "CUHK02 is a dataset for person re-identification. It contains 1,816 identities from two disjoint camera views. Each identity has two samples per camera view making a total of 7,264 images. It is used for Person Re-identification." }, { "dkey": "SYSU-MM01", "dval": "The SYSU-MM01 is a dataset collected for the Visible-Infrared Re-identification problem. The images in the dataset were obtained from 491 different persons by recording them using 4 RGB and 2 infrared cameras. Within the dataset, the persons are divided into 3 fixed splits to create training, validation and test sets. In the training set, there are 20284 RGB and 9929 infrared images of 296 persons. The validation set contains 1974 RGB and 1980 infrared images of 99 persons. The testing set consists of the images of 96 persons where 3803 infrared images are used as query and 301 randomly selected RGB images are used as gallery." }, { "dkey": "P-DESTRE", "dval": "Provides consistent ID annotations across multiple days, making it suitable for the extremely challenging problem of person search, i.e., where no clothing information can be reliably used. Apart this feature, the P-DESTRE annotations enable the research on UAV-based pedestrian detection, tracking, re-identification and soft biometric solutions." } ]
I want to train a generative model to synthesize high resolution images.
generative modeling images
2,019
[ "ConvAI2", "VGGFace2", "DIV2K", "Multi-Modal CelebA-HQ", "SNIPS", "Make3D", "T-LESS" ]
[ "CIFAR-10", "CelebA" ]
[ { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "CelebA", "dval": "CelebFaces Attributes dataset contains 202,599 face images of the size 178×218 from 10,177 celebrities, each annotated with 40 binary labels indicating facial attributes like hair color, gender and age." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "VGGFace2", "dval": "The VGGFace2 dataset is made of around 3.31 million images divided into 9131 classes, each representing a different person identity. The dataset is divided into two splits, one for the training and one for test. The latter contains around 170000 images divided into 500 identities while all the other images belong to the remaining 8631 classes available for training. While constructing the datasets, the authors focused their efforts on reaching a very low label noise and a high pose and age diversity thus, making the VGGFace2 dataset a suitable choice to train state-of-the-art deep learning models on face-related tasks. The images of the training set have an average resolution of 137x180 pixels, with less than 1% at a resolution below 32 pixels (considering the shortest side).\n\nCAUTION: Authors note that the distribution of identities in the VGG-Face dataset may not be representative of the global human population. Please be careful of unintended societal, gender, racial and other biases when training or deploying models trained on this data." }, { "dkey": "DIV2K", "dval": "DIV2K is a popular single-image super-resolution dataset which contains 1,000 images with different scenes and is splitted to 800 for training, 100 for validation and 100 for testing. It was collected for NTIRE2017 and NTIRE2018 Super-Resolution Challenges in order to encourage research on image super-resolution with more realistic degradation. This dataset contains low resolution images with different types of degradations. Apart from the standard bicubic downsampling, several types of degradations are considered in synthesizing low resolution images for different tracks of the challenges. Track 2 of NTIRE 2017 contains low resolution images with unknown x4 downscaling. Track 2 and track 4 of NTIRE 2018 correspond to realistic mild ×4 and realistic wild ×4 adverse conditions, respectively. Low-resolution images under realistic mild x4 setting suffer from motion blur, Poisson noise and pixel shifting. Degradations under realistic wild x4 setting are further extended to be of different levels from image to image." }, { "dkey": "Multi-Modal CelebA-HQ", "dval": "Multi-Modal-CelebA-HQ is a large-scale face image dataset that has 30,000 high-resolution face images selected from the CelebA dataset by following CelebA-HQ. Each image has high-quality segmentation mask, sketch, descriptive text, and image with transparent background.\n\nMulti-Modal-CelebA-HQ can be used to train and evaluate algorithms of text-to-image-generation, text-guided image manipulation, sketch-to-image generation, and GANs for face generation and editing." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "Make3D", "dval": "The Make3D dataset is a monocular Depth Estimation dataset that contains 400 single training RGB and depth map pairs, and 134 test samples. The RGB images have high resolution, while the depth maps are provided at low resolution." }, { "dkey": "T-LESS", "dval": "T-LESS is a dataset for estimating the 6D pose, i.e. translation and rotation, of texture-less rigid objects. The dataset features thirty industry-relevant objects with no significant texture and no discriminative color or reflectance properties. The objects exhibit symmetries and mutual similarities in shape and/or size. Compared to other datasets, a unique property is that some of the objects are parts of others. The dataset includes training and test images that were captured with three synchronized sensors, specifically a structured-light and a time-of-flight RGB-D sensor and a high-resolution RGB camera. There are approximately 39K training and 10K test images from each sensor. Additionally, two types of 3D models are provided for each object, i.e. a manually created CAD model and a semi-automatically reconstructed one. Training images depict individual objects against a black background. Test images originate from twenty test scenes having varying complexity, which increases from simple scenes with several isolated objects to very challenging ones with multiple instances of several objects and with a high amount of clutter and occlusion. The images were captured from a systematically sampled view sphere around the object/scene, and are annotated with accurate ground truth 6D poses of all modeled objects." } ]
We show that, for a wide range of QA models, training on an incomplete set of samples can be
question answering text
2,020
[ "LogiQA", "TVQA", "DOTA", "FreebaseQA", "BDD100K", "ABC Dataset", "FSDnoisy18k" ]
[ "NewsQA", "SQuAD", "TriviaQA" ]
[ { "dkey": "NewsQA", "dval": "The NewsQA dataset is a crowd-sourced machine reading comprehension dataset of 120,000 question-answer pairs.\n\n\nDocuments are CNN news articles.\nQuestions are written by human users in natural language.\nAnswers may be multiword passages of the source text.\nQuestions may be unanswerable.\nNewsQA is collected using a 3-stage, siloed process.\nQuestioners see only an article’s headline and highlights.\nAnswerers see the question and the full article, then select an answer passage.\nValidators see the article, the question, and a set of answers that they rank.\nNewsQA is more natural and more challenging than previous datasets." }, { "dkey": "SQuAD", "dval": "The Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD) is a collection of question-answer pairs derived from Wikipedia articles. In SQuAD, the correct answers of questions can be any sequence of tokens in the given text. Because the questions and answers are produced by humans through crowdsourcing, it is more diverse than some other question-answering datasets. SQuAD 1.1 contains 107,785 question-answer pairs on 536 articles. SQuAD2.0 (open-domain SQuAD, SQuAD-Open), the latest version, combines the 100,000 questions in SQuAD1.1 with over 50,000 un-answerable questions written adversarially by crowdworkers in forms that are similar to the answerable ones." }, { "dkey": "TriviaQA", "dval": "TriviaQA is a realistic text-based question answering dataset which includes 950K question-answer pairs from 662K documents collected from Wikipedia and the web. This dataset is more challenging than standard QA benchmark datasets such as Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD), as the answers for a question may not be directly obtained by span prediction and the context is very long. TriviaQA dataset consists of both human-verified and machine-generated QA subsets." }, { "dkey": "LogiQA", "dval": "LogiQA consists of 8,678 QA instances, covering multiple types of deductive reasoning. Results show that state-of-the-art neural models perform by far worse than human ceiling. The dataset can also serve as a benchmark for reinvestigating logical AI under the deep learning NLP setting." }, { "dkey": "TVQA", "dval": "The TVQA dataset is a large-scale vido dataset for video question answering. It is based on 6 popular TV shows (Friends, The Big Bang Theory, How I Met Your Mother, House M.D., Grey's Anatomy, Castle). It includes 152,545 QA pairs from 21,793 TV show clips. The QA pairs are split into the ratio of 8:1:1 for training, validation, and test sets. The TVQA dataset provides the sequence of video frames extracted at 3 FPS, the corresponding subtitles with the video clips, and the query consisting of a question and four answer candidates. Among the four answer candidates, there is only one correct answer." }, { "dkey": "DOTA", "dval": "DOTA is a large-scale dataset for object detection in aerial images. It can be used to develop and evaluate object detectors in aerial images. The images are collected from different sensors and platforms. Each image is of the size in the range from 800 × 800 to 20,000 × 20,000 pixels and contains objects exhibiting a wide variety of scales, orientations, and shapes. The instances in DOTA images are annotated by experts in aerial image interpretation by arbitrary (8 d.o.f.) quadrilateral. We will continue to update DOTA, to grow in size and scope to reflect evolving real-world conditions. Now it has three versions:\n\nDOTA-v1.0 contains 15 common categories, 2,806 images and 188, 282 instances. The proportions of the training set, validation set, and testing set in DOTA-v1.0 are 1/2, 1/6, and 1/3, respectively.\n\nDOTA-v1.5 uses the same images as DOTA-v1.0, but the extremely small instances (less than 10 pixels) are also annotated. Moreover, a new category, ”container crane” is added. It contains 403,318 instances in total. The number of images and dataset splits are the same as DOTA-v1.0. This version was released for the DOAI Challenge 2019 on Object Detection in Aerial Images in conjunction with IEEE CVPR 2019.\n\nDOTA-v2.0 collects more Google Earth, GF-2 Satellite, and aerial images. There are 18 common categories, 11,268 images and 1,793,658 instances in DOTA-v2.0. Compared to DOTA-v1.5, it further adds the new categories of ”airport” and ”helipad”. The 11,268 images of DOTA are split into training, validation, test-dev, and test-challenge sets. To avoid the problem of overfitting, the proportion of training and validation set is smaller than the test set. Furthermore, we have two test sets, namely test-dev and test-challenge. Training contains 1,830 images and 268,627 instances. Validation contains 593 images and 81,048 instances. We released the images and ground truths for training and validation sets. Test-dev contains 2,792 images and 353,346 instances. We released the images but not the ground truths. Test-challenge contains 6,053 images and 1,090,637 instances." }, { "dkey": "FreebaseQA", "dval": "FreebaseQA is a data set for open-domain QA over the Freebase knowledge graph. The question-answer pairs in this data set are collected from various sources, including the TriviaQA data set and other trivia websites (QuizBalls, QuizZone, KnowQuiz), and are matched against Freebase to generate relevant subject-predicate-object triples that were further verified by human annotators. As all questions in FreebaseQA are composed independently for human contestants in various trivia-like competitions, this data set shows richer linguistic variation and complexity than existing QA data sets, making it a good test-bed for emerging KB-QA systems." }, { "dkey": "BDD100K", "dval": "Datasets drive vision progress, yet existing driving datasets are impoverished in terms of visual content and supported tasks to study multitask learning for autonomous driving. Researchers are usually constrained to study a small set of problems on one dataset, while real-world computer vision applications require performing tasks of various complexities. We construct BDD100K, the largest driving video dataset with 100K videos and 10 tasks to evaluate the exciting progress of image recognition algorithms on autonomous driving. The dataset possesses geographic, environmental, and weather diversity, which is useful for training models that are less likely to be surprised by new conditions. Based on this diverse dataset, we build a benchmark for heterogeneous multitask learning and study how to solve the tasks together. Our experiments show that special training strategies are needed for existing models to perform such heterogeneous tasks. BDD100K opens the door for future studies in this important venue. More detail is at the dataset home page." }, { "dkey": "ABC Dataset", "dval": "The ABC Dataset is a collection of one million Computer-Aided Design (CAD) models for research of geometric deep learning methods and applications. Each model is a collection of explicitly parametrized curves and surfaces, providing ground truth for differential quantities, patch segmentation, geometric feature detection, and shape reconstruction. Sampling the parametric descriptions of surfaces and curves allows generating data in different formats and resolutions, enabling fair comparisons for a wide range of geometric learning algorithms." }, { "dkey": "FSDnoisy18k", "dval": "The FSDnoisy18k dataset is an open dataset containing 42.5 hours of audio across 20 sound event classes, including a small amount of manually-labeled data and a larger quantity of real-world noisy data. The audio content is taken from Freesound, and the dataset was curated using the Freesound Annotator. The noisy set of FSDnoisy18k consists of 15,813 audio clips (38.8h), and the test set consists of 947 audio clips (1.4h) with correct labels. The dataset features two main types of label noise: in-vocabulary (IV) and out-of-vocabulary (OOV). IV applies when, given an observed label that is incorrect or incomplete, the true or missing label is part of the target class set. Analogously, OOV means that the true or missing label is not covered by those 20 classes." } ]
I want to train a fully supervised tracker on video.
tracking video
2,020
[ "SNIPS", "YouTube-8M", "FaceForensics", "Dialogue State Tracking Challenge", "OTB-2015" ]
[ "GOT-10k", "VOT2018" ]
[ { "dkey": "GOT-10k", "dval": "The GOT-10k dataset contains more than 10,000 video segments of real-world moving objects and over 1.5 million manually labelled bounding boxes. The dataset contains more than 560 classes of real-world moving objects and 80+ classes of motion patterns." }, { "dkey": "VOT2018", "dval": "VOT2018 is a dataset for visual object tracking. It consists of 60 challenging videos collected from real-life datasets." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "YouTube-8M", "dval": "The YouTube-8M dataset is a large scale video dataset, which includes more than 7 million videos with 4716 classes labeled by the annotation system. The dataset consists of three parts: training set, validate set, and test set. In the training set, each class contains at least 100 training videos. Features of these videos are extracted by the state-of-the-art popular pre-trained models and released for public use. Each video contains audio and visual modality. Based on the visual information, videos are divided into 24 topics, such as sports, game, arts & entertainment, etc" }, { "dkey": "FaceForensics", "dval": "FaceForensics is a video dataset consisting of more than 500,000 frames containing faces from 1004 videos that can be used to study image or video forgeries. All videos are downloaded from Youtube and are cut down to short continuous clips that contain mostly frontal faces. This dataset has two versions:\n\n\n\nSource-to-Target: where the authors reenact over 1000 videos with new facial expressions extracted from other videos, which e.g. can be used to train a classifier to detect fake images or videos.\n\n\n\nSelfreenactment: where the authors use Face2Face to reenact the facial expressions of videos with their own facial expressions as input to get pairs of videos, which e.g. can be used to train supervised generative refinement models." }, { "dkey": "Dialogue State Tracking Challenge", "dval": "The Dialog State Tracking Challenges 2 & 3 (DSTC2&3) were research challenge focused on improving the state of the art in tracking the state of spoken dialog systems. State tracking, sometimes called belief tracking, refers to accurately estimating the user's goal as a dialog progresses. Accurate state tracking is desirable because it provides robustness to errors in speech recognition, and helps reduce ambiguity inherent in language within a temporal process like dialog.\nIn these challenges, participants were given labelled corpora of dialogs to develop state tracking algorithms. The trackers were then evaluated on a common set of held-out dialogs, which were released, un-labelled, during a one week period.\n\nThe corpus was collected using Amazon Mechanical Turk, and consists of dialogs in two domains: restaurant information, and tourist information. Tourist information subsumes restaurant information, and includes bars, cafés etc. as well as multiple new slots. There were two rounds of evaluation using this data:\n\nDSTC 2 released a large number of training dialogs related to restaurant search. Compared to DSTC (which was in the bus timetables domain), DSTC 2 introduces changing user goals, tracking 'requested slots' as well as the new restaurants domain. Results from DSTC 2 were presented at SIGDIAL 2014.\nDSTC 3 addressed the problem of adaption to a new domain - tourist information. DSTC 3 releases a small amount of labelled data in the tourist information domain; participants will use this data plus the restaurant data from DSTC 2 for training.\nDialogs used for training are fully labelled; user transcriptions, user dialog-act semantics and dialog state are all annotated. (This corpus therefore is also suitable for studies in Spoken Language Understanding.)" }, { "dkey": "OTB-2015", "dval": "OTB-2015, also referred as Visual Tracker Benchmark, is a visual tracking dataset. It contains 100 commonly used video sequences for evaluating visual tracking." } ]
This model uses the evidence from multiple passages to generate answers.
open-domain question answering text
2,017
[ "CoQA", "DuoRC", "BoolQ", "CNN/Daily Mail", "UIT-ViQuAD", "FEVER", "Natural Questions" ]
[ "QUASAR-T", "SearchQA", "TriviaQA" ]
[ { "dkey": "QUASAR-T", "dval": "QUASAR-T is a large-scale dataset aimed at evaluating systems designed to comprehend a natural language query and extract its answer from a large corpus of text. It consists of 43,013 open-domain trivia questions and their answers obtained from various internet sources. ClueWeb09 serves as the background corpus for extracting these answers. The answers to these questions are free-form spans of text, though most are noun phrases." }, { "dkey": "SearchQA", "dval": "SearchQA was built using an in-production, commercial search engine. It closely reflects the full pipeline of a (hypothetical) general question-answering system, which consists of information retrieval and answer synthesis." }, { "dkey": "TriviaQA", "dval": "TriviaQA is a realistic text-based question answering dataset which includes 950K question-answer pairs from 662K documents collected from Wikipedia and the web. This dataset is more challenging than standard QA benchmark datasets such as Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD), as the answers for a question may not be directly obtained by span prediction and the context is very long. TriviaQA dataset consists of both human-verified and machine-generated QA subsets." }, { "dkey": "CoQA", "dval": "CoQA is a large-scale dataset for building Conversational Question Answering systems. The goal of the CoQA challenge is to measure the ability of machines to understand a text passage and answer a series of interconnected questions that appear in a conversation.\n\nCoQA contains 127,000+ questions with answers collected from 8000+ conversations. Each conversation is collected by pairing two crowdworkers to chat about a passage in the form of questions and answers. The unique features of CoQA include 1) the questions are conversational; 2) the answers can be free-form text; 3) each answer also comes with an evidence subsequence highlighted in the passage; and 4) the passages are collected from seven diverse domains. CoQA has a lot of challenging phenomena not present in existing reading comprehension datasets, e.g., coreference and pragmatic reasoning." }, { "dkey": "DuoRC", "dval": "DuoRC contains 186,089 unique question-answer pairs created from a collection of 7680 pairs of movie plots where each pair in the collection reflects two versions of the same movie.\n\nWhy another RC dataset?\n\nDuoRC pushes the NLP community to address challenges on incorporating knowledge and reasoning in neural architectures for reading comprehension. It poses several interesting challenges such as:\n\n\nDuoRC using parallel plots is especially designed to contain a large number of questions with low lexical overlap between questions and their corresponding passages\nIt requires models to go beyond the content of the given passage itself and incorporate world-knowledge, background knowledge, and common-sense knowledge to arrive at the answer\nIt revolves around narrative passages from movie plots describing complex events and therefore naturally require complex reasoning (e.g. temporal reasoning, entailment, long-distance anaphoras, etc.) across multiple sentences to infer the answer to questions\nSeveral of the questions in DuoRC, while seeming relevant, cannot actually be answered from the given passage. This requires the model to detect the unanswerability of questions. This aspect is important for machines to achieve in industrial settings in particular" }, { "dkey": "BoolQ", "dval": "BoolQ is a question answering dataset for yes/no questions containing 15942 examples. These questions are naturally occurring – they are generated in unprompted and unconstrained settings.\nEach example is a triplet of (question, passage, answer), with the title of the page as optional additional context.\n\nQuestions are gathered from anonymized, aggregated queries to the Google search engine. Queries that are likely to be yes/no questions are heuristically identified and questions are only kept if a Wikipedia page is returned as one of the first five results, in which case the question and Wikipedia page are given to a human annotator for further processing. Annotators label question/article pairs in a three-step process. First, they decide if the question is good, meaning it is comprehensible, unambiguous, and requesting factual information. This judgment is made before the annotator sees the Wikipedia page. Next, for good questions, annotators find a passage within the document that contains enough information to answer the question. Annotators can mark questions as “not answerable” if the Wikipedia article does not contain the requested information. Finally, annotators mark whether the question’s answer is “yes” or “no”. Only questions that were marked as having a yes/no answer are used, and each question is paired with the selected passage instead of the entire document." }, { "dkey": "CNN/Daily Mail", "dval": "CNN/Daily Mail is a dataset for text summarization. Human generated abstractive summary bullets were generated from news stories in CNN and Daily Mail websites as questions (with one of the entities hidden), and stories as the corresponding passages from which the system is expected to answer the fill-in the-blank question. The authors released the scripts that crawl, extract and generate pairs of passages and questions from these websites.\n\nIn all, the corpus has 286,817 training pairs, 13,368 validation pairs and 11,487 test pairs, as defined by their scripts. The source documents in the training set have 766 words spanning 29.74 sentences on an average while the summaries consist of 53 words and 3.72 sentences." }, { "dkey": "UIT-ViQuAD", "dval": "A new dataset for the low-resource language as Vietnamese to evaluate MRC models. This dataset comprises over 23,000 human-generated question-answer pairs based on 5,109 passages of 174 Vietnamese articles from Wikipedia." }, { "dkey": "FEVER", "dval": "FEVER is a publicly available dataset for fact extraction and verification against textual sources.\n\nIt consists of 185,445 claims manually verified against the introductory sections of Wikipedia pages and classified as SUPPORTED, REFUTED or NOTENOUGHINFO. For the first two classes, systems and annotators need to also return the combination of sentences forming the necessary evidence supporting or refuting the claim.\n\nThe claims were generated by human annotators extracting claims from Wikipedia and mutating them in a variety of ways, some of which were meaning-altering. The verification of each claim was conducted in a separate annotation process by annotators who were aware of the page but not the sentence from which original claim was\nextracted and thus in 31.75% of the claims more than one sentence was considered appropriate evidence. Claims require composition of evidence from multiple sentences in 16.82% of cases. Furthermore, in 12.15% of the claims, this evidence was taken from multiple pages." }, { "dkey": "Natural Questions", "dval": "The Natural Questions corpus is a question answering dataset containing 307,373 training examples, 7,830 development examples, and 7,842 test examples. Each example is comprised of a google.com query and a corresponding Wikipedia page. Each Wikipedia page has a passage (or long answer) annotated on the page that answers the question and one or more short spans from the annotated passage containing the actual answer. The long and the short answer annotations can however be empty. If they are both empty, then there is no answer on the page at all. If the long answer annotation is non-empty, but the short answer annotation is empty, then the annotated passage answers the question but no explicit short answer could be found. Finally 1% of the documents have a passage annotated with a short answer that is “yes” or “no”, instead of a list of short spans." } ]
I want to train a supervised model for multi-person pose estimation from images.
multi-person pose estimation images
2,016
[ "PoseTrack", "MuPoTS-3D", "MuCo-3DHP", "LSP", "MVSEC", "NYU-VP", "V-COCO" ]
[ "MPII", "COCO" ]
[ { "dkey": "MPII", "dval": "The MPII Human Pose Dataset for single person pose estimation is composed of about 25K images of which 15K are training samples, 3K are validation samples and 7K are testing samples (which labels are withheld by the authors). The images are taken from YouTube videos covering 410 different human activities and the poses are manually annotated with up to 16 body joints." }, { "dkey": "COCO", "dval": "The MS COCO (Microsoft Common Objects in Context) dataset is a large-scale object detection, segmentation, key-point detection, and captioning dataset. The dataset consists of 328K images.\n\nSplits:\nThe first version of MS COCO dataset was released in 2014. It contains 164K images split into training (83K), validation (41K) and test (41K) sets. In 2015 additional test set of 81K images was released, including all the previous test images and 40K new images.\n\nBased on community feedback, in 2017 the training/validation split was changed from 83K/41K to 118K/5K. The new split uses the same images and annotations. The 2017 test set is a subset of 41K images of the 2015 test set. Additionally, the 2017 release contains a new unannotated dataset of 123K images.\n\nAnnotations:\nThe dataset has annotations for\n\n\nobject detection: bounding boxes and per-instance segmentation masks with 80 object categories,\ncaptioning: natural language descriptions of the images (see MS COCO Captions),\nkeypoints detection: containing more than 200,000 images and 250,000 person instances labeled with keypoints (17 possible keypoints, such as left eye, nose, right hip, right ankle),\nstuff image segmentation – per-pixel segmentation masks with 91 stuff categories, such as grass, wall, sky (see MS COCO Stuff),\npanoptic: full scene segmentation, with 80 thing categories (such as person, bicycle, elephant) and a subset of 91 stuff categories (grass, sky, road),\ndense pose: more than 39,000 images and 56,000 person instances labeled with DensePose annotations – each labeled person is annotated with an instance id and a mapping between image pixels that belong to that person body and a template 3D model.\nThe annotations are publicly available only for training and validation images." }, { "dkey": "PoseTrack", "dval": "The PoseTrack dataset is a large-scale benchmark for multi-person pose estimation and tracking in videos. It requires not only pose estimation in single frames, but also temporal tracking across frames. It contains 514 videos including 66,374 frames in total, split into 300, 50 and 208 videos for training, validation and test set respectively. For training videos, 30 frames from the center are annotated. For validation and test videos, besides 30 frames from the center, every fourth frame is also annotated for evaluating long range articulated tracking. The annotations include 15 body keypoints location, a unique person id and a head bounding box for each person instance." }, { "dkey": "MuPoTS-3D", "dval": "MuPoTs-3D (Multi-person Pose estimation Test Set in 3D) is a dataset for pose estimation composed of more than 8,000 frames from 20 real-world scenes with up to three subjects. The poses are annotated with a 14-point skeleton model." }, { "dkey": "MuCo-3DHP", "dval": "MuCo-3DHP is a large scale training data set showing real images of sophisticated multi-person interactions and occlusions." }, { "dkey": "LSP", "dval": "The Leeds Sports Pose (LSP) dataset is widely used as the benchmark for human pose estimation. The original LSP dataset contains 2,000 images of sportspersons gathered from Flickr, 1000 for training and 1000 for testing. Each image is annotated with 14 joint locations, where left and right joints are consistently labelled from a person-centric viewpoint. The extended LSP dataset contains additional 10,000 images labeled for training.\n\nImage: Sumer et al" }, { "dkey": "MVSEC", "dval": "The Multi Vehicle Stereo Event Camera (MVSEC) dataset is a collection of data designed for the development of novel 3D perception algorithms for event based cameras. Stereo event data is collected from car, motorbike, hexacopter and handheld data, and fused with lidar, IMU, motion capture and GPS to provide ground truth pose and depth images." }, { "dkey": "NYU-VP", "dval": "NYU-VP is a new dataset for multi-model fitting, vanishing point (VP) estimation in this case. Each image is annotated with up to eight vanishing points, and pre-extracted line segments are provided which act as data points for a robust estimator. Due to its size, the dataset is the first to allow for supervised learning of a multi-model fitting task." }, { "dkey": "V-COCO", "dval": "Verbs in COCO (V-COCO) is a dataset that builds off COCO for human-object interaction detection. V-COCO provides 10,346 images (2,533 for training, 2,867 for validating and 4,946 for testing) and 16,199 person instances. Each person has annotations for 29 action categories and there are no interaction labels including objects." } ]
We propose a new approach to learn image generative models using GANs and VAEs. We show that these two
image generation
2,017
[ "Localized Narratives", "BDD100K", "iFakeFaceDB", "Multi-PIE", "THEODORE" ]
[ "CIFAR-10", "CelebA" ]
[ { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "CelebA", "dval": "CelebFaces Attributes dataset contains 202,599 face images of the size 178×218 from 10,177 celebrities, each annotated with 40 binary labels indicating facial attributes like hair color, gender and age." }, { "dkey": "Localized Narratives", "dval": "We propose Localized Narratives, a new form of multimodal image annotations connecting vision and language. We ask annotators to describe an image with their voice while simultaneously hovering their mouse over the region they are describing. Since the voice and the mouse pointer are synchronized, we can localize every single word in the description. This dense visual grounding takes the form of a mouse trace segment per word and is unique to our data. We annotated 849k images with Localized Narratives: the whole COCO, Flickr30k, and ADE20K datasets, and 671k images of Open Images, all of which we make publicly available. We provide an extensive analysis of these annotations showing they are diverse, accurate, and efficient to produce. We also demonstrate their utility on the application of controlled image captioning." }, { "dkey": "BDD100K", "dval": "Datasets drive vision progress, yet existing driving datasets are impoverished in terms of visual content and supported tasks to study multitask learning for autonomous driving. Researchers are usually constrained to study a small set of problems on one dataset, while real-world computer vision applications require performing tasks of various complexities. We construct BDD100K, the largest driving video dataset with 100K videos and 10 tasks to evaluate the exciting progress of image recognition algorithms on autonomous driving. The dataset possesses geographic, environmental, and weather diversity, which is useful for training models that are less likely to be surprised by new conditions. Based on this diverse dataset, we build a benchmark for heterogeneous multitask learning and study how to solve the tasks together. Our experiments show that special training strategies are needed for existing models to perform such heterogeneous tasks. BDD100K opens the door for future studies in this important venue. More detail is at the dataset home page." }, { "dkey": "iFakeFaceDB", "dval": "iFakeFaceDB is a face image dataset for the study of synthetic face manipulation detection, comprising about 87,000 synthetic face images generated by the Style-GAN model and transformed with the GANprintR approach. All images were aligned and resized to the size of 224 x 224." }, { "dkey": "Multi-PIE", "dval": "The Multi-PIE (Multi Pose, Illumination, Expressions) dataset consists of face images of 337 subjects taken under different pose, illumination and expressions. The pose range contains 15 discrete views, capturing a face profile-to-profile. Illumination changes were modeled using 19 flashlights located in different places of the room." }, { "dkey": "THEODORE", "dval": "Recent work about synthetic indoor datasets from perspective views has shown significant improvements of object detection results with Convolutional Neural Networks(CNNs). In this paper, we introduce THEODORE: a novel, large-scale indoor dataset containing 100,000 high- resolution diversified fisheye images with 14 classes. To this end, we create 3D virtual environments of living rooms, different human characters and interior textures. Beside capturing fisheye images from virtual environments we create annotations for semantic segmentation, instance masks and bounding boxes for object detection tasks. We compare our synthetic dataset to state of the art real-world datasets for omnidirectional images. Based on MS COCO weights, we show that our dataset is well suited for fine-tuning CNNs for object detection. Through a high generalization of our models by means of image synthesis and domain randomization we reach an AP up to 0.84 for class person on High-Definition Analytics dataset." } ]
GANs have shown great potential in generating high quality images. However, training GANs is difficult. In this paper,
generation images
2,017
[ "Multi-Modal CelebA-HQ", "C&Z", "Dayton", "iFakeFaceDB", "TableBank" ]
[ "CIFAR-10", "LSUN" ]
[ { "dkey": "CIFAR-10", "dval": "The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, 10 classes) is a subset of the Tiny Images dataset and consists of 60000 32x32 color images. The images are labelled with one of 10 mutually exclusive classes: airplane, automobile (but not truck or pickup truck), bird, cat, deer, dog, frog, horse, ship, and truck (but not pickup truck). There are 6000 images per class with 5000 training and 1000 testing images per class.\n\nThe criteria for deciding whether an image belongs to a class were as follows:\n\n\nThe class name should be high on the list of likely answers to the question “What is in this picture?”\nThe image should be photo-realistic. Labelers were instructed to reject line drawings.\nThe image should contain only one prominent instance of the object to which the class refers.\nThe object may be partially occluded or seen from an unusual viewpoint as long as its identity is still clear to the labeler." }, { "dkey": "LSUN", "dval": "The Large-scale Scene Understanding (LSUN) challenge aims to provide a different benchmark for large-scale scene classification and understanding. The LSUN classification dataset contains 10 scene categories, such as dining room, bedroom, chicken, outdoor church, and so on. For training data, each category contains a huge number of images, ranging from around 120,000 to 3,000,000. The validation data includes 300 images, and the test data has 1000 images for each category." }, { "dkey": "Multi-Modal CelebA-HQ", "dval": "Multi-Modal-CelebA-HQ is a large-scale face image dataset that has 30,000 high-resolution face images selected from the CelebA dataset by following CelebA-HQ. Each image has high-quality segmentation mask, sketch, descriptive text, and image with transparent background.\n\nMulti-Modal-CelebA-HQ can be used to train and evaluate algorithms of text-to-image-generation, text-guided image manipulation, sketch-to-image generation, and GANs for face generation and editing." }, { "dkey": "C&Z", "dval": "One of the first datasets (if not the first) to highlight the importance of bias and diversity in the community, which started a revolution afterwards. Introduced in 2014 as integral part of a thesis of Master of Science [1,2] at Carnegie Mellon and City University of Hong Kong. It was later expanded by adding synthetic images generated by a GAN architecture at ETH Zürich (in HDCGAN by Curtó et al. 2017). Being then not only the pioneer of talking about the importance of balanced datasets for learning and vision but also for being the first GAN augmented dataset of faces. \n\nThe original description goes as follows:\n\nA bias-free dataset, containing human faces from different ethnical groups in a wide variety of illumination conditions and image resolutions. C&Z is enhanced with HDCGAN synthetic images, thus being the first GAN augmented dataset of faces.\n\nDataset: https://github.com/curto2/c\n\nSupplement (with scripts to handle the labels): https://github.com/curto2/graphics\n\n[1] https://www.curto.hk/c/decurto.pdf\n\n[2] https://www.zarza.hk/z/dezarza.pdf" }, { "dkey": "Dayton", "dval": "The Dayton dataset is a dataset for ground-to-aerial (or aerial-to-ground) image translation, or cross-view image synthesis. It contains images of road views and aerial views of roads. There are 76,048 images in total and the train/test split is 55,000/21,048. The images in the original dataset have 354×354 resolution." }, { "dkey": "iFakeFaceDB", "dval": "iFakeFaceDB is a face image dataset for the study of synthetic face manipulation detection, comprising about 87,000 synthetic face images generated by the Style-GAN model and transformed with the GANprintR approach. All images were aligned and resized to the size of 224 x 224." }, { "dkey": "TableBank", "dval": "To address the need for a standard open domain table benchmark dataset, the author propose a novel weak supervision approach to automatically create the TableBank, which is orders of magnitude larger than existing human labeled datasets for table analysis. Distinct from traditional weakly supervised training set, our approach can obtain not only large scale but also high quality training data.\n\nNowadays, there are a great number of electronic documents on the web such as Microsoft Word (.docx) and Latex (.tex) files. These online documents contain mark-up tags for tables in their source code by nature. Intuitively, one can manipulate these source code by adding bounding box using the mark-up language within each document. For Word documents, the internal Office XML code can be modified where the borderline of each table is identified. For Latex documents, the tex code can be also modified where bounding boxes of tables are recognized. In this way, high-quality labeled data is created for a variety of domains such as business documents, official fillings, research papers etc, which is tremendously beneficial for large-scale table analysis tasks.\n\nThe TableBank dataset totally consists of 417,234 high quality labeled tables as well as their original documents in a variety of domains." } ]
I want to train an interactive model for object segmentation using click annotations.
interactive object segmentation images
2,018
[ "MECCANO", "COCO-Tasks", "Criteo", "HICO-DET" ]
[ "SBD", "KITTI" ]
[ { "dkey": "SBD", "dval": "The Semantic Boundaries Dataset (SBD) is a dataset for predicting pixels on the boundary of the object (as opposed to the inside of the object with semantic segmentation). The dataset consists of 11318 images from the trainval set of the PASCAL VOC2011 challenge, divided into 8498 training and 2820 test images. This dataset has object instance boundaries with accurate figure/ground masks that are also labeled with one of 20 Pascal VOC classes." }, { "dkey": "KITTI", "dval": "KITTI (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and Toyota Technological Institute) is one of the most popular datasets for use in mobile robotics and autonomous driving. It consists of hours of traffic scenarios recorded with a variety of sensor modalities, including high-resolution RGB, grayscale stereo cameras, and a 3D laser scanner. Despite its popularity, the dataset itself does not contain ground truth for semantic segmentation. However, various researchers have manually annotated parts of the dataset to fit their necessities. Álvarez et al. generated ground truth for 323 images from the road detection challenge with three classes: road, vertical, and sky. Zhang et al. annotated 252 (140 for training and 112 for testing) acquisitions – RGB and Velodyne scans – from the tracking challenge for ten object categories: building, sky, road, vegetation, sidewalk, car, pedestrian, cyclist, sign/pole, and fence. Ros et al. labeled 170 training images and 46 testing images (from the visual odometry challenge) with 11 classes: building, tree, sky, car, sign, road, pedestrian, fence, pole, sidewalk, and bicyclist." }, { "dkey": "MECCANO", "dval": "The MECCANO dataset is the first dataset of egocentric videos to study human-object interactions in industrial-like settings.\nThe MECCANO dataset has been acquired in an industrial-like scenario in which subjects built a toy model of a motorbike. We considered 20 object classes which include the 16 classes categorizing the 49 components, the two tools (screwdriver and wrench), the instructions booklet and a partial_model class.\n\nAdditional details related to the MECCANO:\n\n20 different subjects in 2 countries (IT, U.K.)\nVideo Acquisition: 1920x1080 at 12.00 fps\n11 training videos and 9 validation/test videos\n8857 video segments temporally annotated indicating the verbs which describe the actions performed\n64349 active objects annotated with bounding boxes\n12 verb classes, 20 objects classes and 61 action classes" }, { "dkey": "COCO-Tasks", "dval": "Comprises about 40,000 images where the most suitable objects for 14 tasks have been annotated." }, { "dkey": "Criteo", "dval": "Criteo contains 7 days of click-through data, which is widely used for CTR prediction benchmarking. There are 26 anonymous categorical fields and 13 continuous fields in Criteo dataset." }, { "dkey": "HICO-DET", "dval": "HICO-DET is a dataset for detecting human-object interactions (HOI) in images. It contains 47,776 images (38,118 in train set and 9,658 in test set), 600 HOI categories constructed by 80 object categories and 117 verb classes. HICO-DET provides more than 150k annotated human-object pairs. V-COCO provides 10,346 images (2,533 for training, 2,867 for validating and 4,946 for testing) and 16,199 person instances. Each person has annotations for 29 action categories and there are no interaction labels including objects." } ]
This is a dataset of 40,000+ question-answer pairs about 13
reading comprehension text
2,018
[ "TrecQA", "KnowIT VQA", "DAQUAR", "QuAC", "VisDial", "CoQA", "WikiQA" ]
[ "NarrativeQA", "SQuAD" ]
[ { "dkey": "NarrativeQA", "dval": "The NarrativeQA dataset includes a list of documents with Wikipedia summaries, links to full stories, and questions and answers." }, { "dkey": "SQuAD", "dval": "The Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD) is a collection of question-answer pairs derived from Wikipedia articles. In SQuAD, the correct answers of questions can be any sequence of tokens in the given text. Because the questions and answers are produced by humans through crowdsourcing, it is more diverse than some other question-answering datasets. SQuAD 1.1 contains 107,785 question-answer pairs on 536 articles. SQuAD2.0 (open-domain SQuAD, SQuAD-Open), the latest version, combines the 100,000 questions in SQuAD1.1 with over 50,000 un-answerable questions written adversarially by crowdworkers in forms that are similar to the answerable ones." }, { "dkey": "TrecQA", "dval": "Text Retrieval Conference Question Answering (TrecQA) is a dataset created from the TREC-8 (1999) to TREC-13 (2004) Question Answering tracks. There are two versions of TrecQA: raw and clean. Both versions have the same training set but their development and test sets differ. The commonly used clean version of the dataset excludes questions in development and test sets with no answers or only positive/negative answers. The clean version has 1,229/65/68 questions and 53,417/1,117/1,442 question-answer pairs for the train/dev/test split." }, { "dkey": "KnowIT VQA", "dval": "KnowIT VQA is a video dataset with 24,282 human-generated question-answer pairs about The Big Bang Theory. The dataset combines visual, textual and temporal coherence reasoning together with knowledge-based questions, which need of the experience obtained from the viewing of the series to be answered." }, { "dkey": "DAQUAR", "dval": "DAQUAR (DAtaset for QUestion Answering on Real-world images) is a dataset of human question answer pairs about images." }, { "dkey": "QuAC", "dval": "Question Answering in Context is a large-scale dataset that consists of around 14K crowdsourced Question Answering dialogs with 98K question-answer pairs in total. Data instances consist of an interactive dialog between two crowd workers: (1) a student who poses a sequence of freeform questions to learn as much as possible about a hidden Wikipedia text, and (2) a teacher who answers the questions by providing short excerpts (spans) from the text." }, { "dkey": "VisDial", "dval": "Visual Dialog (VisDial) dataset contains human annotated questions based on images of MS COCO dataset. This dataset was developed by pairing two subjects on Amazon Mechanical Turk to chat about an image. One person was assigned the job of a ‘questioner’ and the other person acted as an ‘answerer’. The questioner sees only the text description of an image (i.e., an image caption from MS COCO dataset) and the original image remains hidden to the questioner. Their task is to ask questions about this hidden image to “imagine the scene better”. The answerer sees the image, caption and answers the questions asked by the questioner. The two of them can continue the conversation by asking and answering questions for 10 rounds at max.\n\nVisDial v1.0 contains 123K dialogues on MS COCO (2017 training set) for training split, 2K dialogues with validation images for validation split and 8K dialogues on test set for test-standard set. The previously released v0.5 and v0.9 versions of VisDial dataset (corresponding to older splits of MS COCO) are considered deprecated." }, { "dkey": "CoQA", "dval": "CoQA is a large-scale dataset for building Conversational Question Answering systems. The goal of the CoQA challenge is to measure the ability of machines to understand a text passage and answer a series of interconnected questions that appear in a conversation.\n\nCoQA contains 127,000+ questions with answers collected from 8000+ conversations. Each conversation is collected by pairing two crowdworkers to chat about a passage in the form of questions and answers. The unique features of CoQA include 1) the questions are conversational; 2) the answers can be free-form text; 3) each answer also comes with an evidence subsequence highlighted in the passage; and 4) the passages are collected from seven diverse domains. CoQA has a lot of challenging phenomena not present in existing reading comprehension datasets, e.g., coreference and pragmatic reasoning." }, { "dkey": "WikiQA", "dval": "The WikiQA corpus is a publicly available set of question and sentence pairs, collected and annotated for research on open-domain question answering. In order to reflect the true information need of general users, Bing query logs were used as the question source. Each question is linked to a Wikipedia page that potentially has the answer. Because the summary section of a Wikipedia page provides the basic and usually most important information about the topic, sentences in this section were used as the candidate answers. The corpus includes 3,047 questions and 29,258 sentences, where 1,473 sentences were labeled as answer sentences to their corresponding questions." } ]
I want to find a better way to deal with `blind overconfidence' in the input attention
salient object detection image
2,019
[ "SNIPS", "Frames Dataset", "ConvAI2", "VizWiz-Captions" ]
[ "DUTS", "ECSSD" ]
[ { "dkey": "DUTS", "dval": "DUTS is a saliency detection dataset containing 10,553 training images and 5,019 test images. All training images are collected from the ImageNet DET training/val sets, while test images are collected from the ImageNet DET test set and the SUN data set. Both the training and test set contain very challenging scenarios for saliency detection. Accurate pixel-level ground truths are manually annotated by 50 subjects." }, { "dkey": "ECSSD", "dval": "The Extended Complex Scene Saliency Dataset (ECSSD) is comprised of complex scenes, presenting textures and structures common to real-world images. ECSSD contains 1,000 intricate images and respective ground-truth saliency maps, created as an average of the labeling of five human participants." }, { "dkey": "SNIPS", "dval": "The SNIPS Natural Language Understanding benchmark is a dataset of over 16,000 crowdsourced queries distributed among 7 user intents of various complexity:\n\n\nSearchCreativeWork (e.g. Find me the I, Robot television show),\nGetWeather (e.g. Is it windy in Boston, MA right now?),\nBookRestaurant (e.g. I want to book a highly rated restaurant in Paris tomorrow night),\nPlayMusic (e.g. Play the last track from Beyoncé off Spotify),\nAddToPlaylist (e.g. Add Diamonds to my roadtrip playlist),\nRateBook (e.g. Give 6 stars to Of Mice and Men),\nSearchScreeningEvent (e.g. Check the showtimes for Wonder Woman in Paris).\nThe training set contains of 13,084 utterances, the validation set and the test set contain 700 utterances each, with 100 queries per intent." }, { "dkey": "Frames Dataset", "dval": "This dataset is dialog dataset collected in a Wizard-of-Oz fashion. Two humans talked to each other via a chat interface. One was playing the role of the user and the other one was playing the role of the conversational agent. The latter is called a wizard as a reference to the Wizard of Oz, the man behind the curtain. The wizards had access to a database of 250+ packages, each composed of a hotel and round-trip flights. The users were asked to find the best deal. This resulted in complex dialogues where a user would often consider different options, compare packages, and progressively build the description of her ideal trip." }, { "dkey": "ConvAI2", "dval": "The ConvAI2 NeurIPS competition aimed at finding approaches to creating high-quality dialogue agents capable of meaningful open domain conversation. The ConvAI2 dataset for training models is based on the PERSONA-CHAT dataset. The speaker pairs each have assigned profiles coming from a set of 1155 possible personas (at training time), each consisting of at least 5 profile sentences, setting aside 100 never seen before personas for validation. As the original PERSONA-CHAT test set was released, a new hidden test set consisted of 100 new personas and over 1,015 dialogs was created by crowdsourced workers.\n\nTo avoid modeling that takes advantage of trivial word overlap, additional rewritten sets of the same train and test personas were crowdsourced, with related sentences that are rephrases, generalizations or specializations, rendering the task much more challenging. For example “I just got my nails done” is revised as “I love to pamper myself on a regular basis” and “I am on a diet now” is revised as “I need to lose weight.”\n\nThe training, validation and hidden test sets consists of 17,878, 1,000 and 1,015 dialogues, respectively." }, { "dkey": "VizWiz-Captions", "dval": "Consists of over 39,000 images originating from people who are blind that are each paired with five captions." } ]