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". The 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.
136 PAPERS • 7 BENCHMARKS
Assembly101 is a new procedural activity dataset featuring 4321 videos of people assembling and disassembling 101 "take-apart" toy vehicles. Participants work without fixed instructions, and the sequences feature rich and natural variations in action ordering, mistakes, and corrections. Assembly101 is the first multi-view action dataset, with simultaneous static (8) and egocentric (4) recordings. Sequences are annotated with more than 100K coarse and 1M fine-grained action segments, and 18M 3D hand poses. We benchmark on three action understanding tasks: recognition, anticipation and temporal segmentation. Additionally, we propose a novel task of detecting mistakes. The unique recording format and rich set of annotations allow us to investigate generalization to new toys, cross-view transfer, long-tailed distributions, and pose vs. appearance. We envision that Assembly101 will serve as a new challenge to investigate various activity understanding problems.
38 PAPERS • 4 BENCHMARKS
CholecT50 is a dataset of endoscopic videos of laparoscopic cholecystectomy surgery introduced to enable research on fine-grained action recognition in laparoscopic surgery. It is annotated with triplet information in the form of <instrument, verb, target>. The dataset is a collection of 50 videos consisting of 45 videos from the Cholec80 dataset and 5 videos from an in-house dataset of the same surgical procedure.
20 PAPERS • 7 BENCHMARKS
Animal Kingdom is a large and diverse dataset that provides multiple annotated tasks to enable a more thorough understanding of natural animal behaviors. The wild animal footage used in the dataset records different times of the day in an extensive range of environments containing variations in backgrounds, viewpoints, illumination and weather conditions. More specifically, the dataset contains 50 hours of annotated videos to localize relevant animal behavior segments in long videos for the video grounding task, 30K video sequences for the fine-grained multi-label action recognition task, and 33K frames for the pose estimation task, which correspond to a diverse range of animals with 850 species across 6 major animal classes.
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CholecT45 is a subset of CholecT50 consisting of 45 videos from the Cholec80 dataset. It is the first public release of part of CholecT50 dataset. CholecT50 is a dataset of 50 endoscopic videos of laparoscopic cholecystectomy surgery introduced to enable research on fine-grained action recognition in laparoscopic surgery. It is annotated with 100 triplet classes in the form of <instrument, verb, target>.
13 PAPERS • 2 BENCHMARKS
Home Action Genome is a large-scale multi-view video database of indoor daily activities. Every activity is captured by synchronized multi-view cameras, including an egocentric view. There are 30 hours of vides with 70 classes of daily activities and 453 classes of atomic actions.
7 PAPERS • 2 BENCHMARKS
We consider the task of identifying human actions visible in online videos. We focus on the widely spread genre of lifestyle vlogs, which consist of videos of people performing actions while verbally describing them. Our goal is to identify if actions mentioned in the speech description of a video are visually present.
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PETRAW data set was composed of 150 sequences of peg transfer training sessions. The objective of the peg transfer session is to transfer 6 blocks from the left to the right and back. Each block must be extracted from a peg with one hand, transferred to the other hand, and inserted in a peg at the other side of the board. All cases were acquired by a non-medical expert on the LTSI Laboratory from the University of Rennes. The data set was divided into a training data set composed of 90 cases and a test data set composed of 60 cases. A case was composed of kinematic data, a video, semantic segmentation of each frame, and workflow annotation.
3 PAPERS • 6 BENCHMARKS
MetaVD is a Meta Video Dataset for enhancing human action recognition datasets. It provides human-annotated relationship labels between action classes across human action recognition datasets. MetaVD is proposed in the following paper: Yuya Yoshikawa, Yutaro Shigeto, and Akikazu Takeuchi. "MetaVD: A Meta Video Dataset for enhancing human action recognition datasets." Computer Vision and Image Understanding 212 (2021): 103276. [link]
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Audiovisual Moments in Time (AVMIT) is a large-scale dataset of audiovisual action events. The dataset includes the annotation of 57,177 audiovisual videos from the Moments in Time dataset, each independently evaluated by 3 of 11 trained participants. Each annotation pertains to whether the labelled audiovisual action event is present and whether it is the most prominent feature of the video. The dataset also provides a curated test set of 960 videos across 16 classes, suitable for comparative experiments involving computational models and human participants, specifically when addressing research questions where audiovisual correspondence is of critical importance.
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Existing image/video datasets for cattle behavior recognition are mostly small, lack well-defined labels, or are collected in unrealistic controlled environments. This limits the utility of machine learning (ML) models learned from them. Therefore, we introduce a new dataset, called Cattle Visual Behaviors (CVB), that consists of 502 video clips, each fifteen seconds long, captured in natural lighting conditions, and annotated with eleven visually perceptible behaviors of grazing cattle. By creating and sharing CVB, our aim is to develop improved models capable of recognizing all important cattle behaviors accurately and to assist other researchers and practitioners in developing and evaluating new ML models for cattle behavior classification using video data. The dataset is presented in the form of following three sub-directories. 1. raw_frames: contains 450 frames in each sub folder representing a 15 second video taken at a frame rate of 30 FPS. 2. annotations: contains the json file
Understanding comprehensive assembly knowledge from videos is critical for futuristic ultra-intelligent industry. To enable technological breakthrough, we present HA-ViD – an assembly video dataset that features representative industrial assembly scenarios, natural procedural knowledge acquisition process, and consistent human-robot shared annotations. Specifically, HA-ViD captures diverse collaboration patterns of real-world assembly, natural human behaviors and learning progression during assembly, and granulate action annotations to subject, action verb, manipulated object, target object, and tool. We provide 3222 multi-view and multi-modality videos, 1.5M frames, 96K temporal labels and 2M spatial labels. We benchmark four foundational video understanding tasks: action recognition, action segmentation, object detection and multi-object tracking. Importantly, we analyze their performance and the further reasoning steps for comprehending knowledge in assembly progress, process effici
We introduce a RGB+S dataset named “Industrial Human Action Recognition Dataset” (InHARD) from a real-world setting for industrial human action recognition with over 2 million frames, collected from 16 distinct subjects. This dataset contains 13 different industrial action classes and over 4800 action samples. The introduction of this dataset should allow us the study and development of various learning techniques for the task of human actions analysis inside industrial environments involving human robot collaborations.
VFD-2000 is a video fight detection dataset containing more than 2000 videos. YouTube is the data source. Specific scenarios are searched using “fight” as a search keyword, for example, “street fight”, “beach fight”, and “violence in the restaurant”. 200 videos under 20 different scenes are collected.
Human activity recognition and clinical biomechanics are challenging problems in physical telerehabilitation medicine. However, most publicly available datasets on human body movements cannot be used to study both problems in an out-of-the-lab movement acquisition setting. The objective of the VIDIMU dataset is to pave the way towards affordable patient tracking solutions for remote daily life activities recognition and kinematic analysis.
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