HowTo100M is a large-scale dataset of narrated videos with an emphasis on instructional videos where content creators teach complex tasks with an explicit intention of explaining the visual content on screen. HowTo100M features a total of:
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The TVQA dataset is a large-scale video 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.
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The ActivityNet-QA dataset contains 58,000 human-annotated QA pairs on 5,800 videos derived from the popular ActivityNet dataset. The dataset provides a benchmark for testing the performance of VideoQA models on long-term spatio-temporal reasoning.
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NExT-QA is a VideoQA benchmark targeting the explanation of video contents. It challenges QA models to reason about the causal and temporal actions and understand the rich object interactions in daily activities. It supports both multi-choice and open-ended QA tasks. The videos are untrimmed and the questions usually invoke local video contents for answers.
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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.
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The TGIF-QA dataset contains 165K QA pairs for the animated GIFs from the TGIF dataset [Li et al. CVPR 2016]. The question & answer pairs are collected via crowdsourcing with a carefully designed user interface to ensure quality. The dataset can be used to evaluate video-based Visual Question Answering techniques.
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The Tumblr GIF (TGIF) dataset contains 100K animated GIFs and 120K sentences describing visual content of the animated GIFs. The animated GIFs have been collected from Tumblr, from randomly selected posts published between May and June of 2015. The dataset provides the URLs of animated GIFs. The sentences are collected via crowdsourcing, with a carefully designed annotation interface that ensures high quality dataset. There is one sentence per animated GIF for the training and validation splits, and three sentences per GIF for the test split. The dataset can be used to evaluate animated GIF/video description techniques.
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TVQA+ contains 310.8K bounding boxes, linking depicted objects to visual concepts in questions and answers.
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VALUE is a Video-And-Language Understanding Evaluation benchmark to test models that are generalizable to diverse tasks, domains, and datasets. It is an assemblage of 11 VidL (video-and-language) datasets over 3 popular tasks: (i) text-to-video retrieval; (ii) video question answering; and (iii) video captioning. VALUE benchmark aims to cover a broad range of video genres, video lengths, data volumes, and task difficulty levels. Rather than focusing on single-channel videos with visual information only, VALUE promotes models that leverage information from both video frames and their associated subtitles, as well as models that share knowledge across multiple tasks.
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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.
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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.
Action Genome Question Answering (AGQA) is a benchmark for compositional spatio-temporal reasoning. AGQA contains 192M unbalanced question answer pairs for 9.6K videos. It also contains a balanced subset of 3.9M question answer pairs, 3 orders of magnitude larger than existing benchmarks, that minimizes bias by balancing the answer distributions and types of question structures.
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Video Instruction Dataset is used to train Video-ChatGPT. It consists of 100,000 high-quality video instruction pairs. employs a combination of human-assisted and semi-automatic annotation techniques, aiming to produce high-quality video instruction data. These methods create question-answer pairs related to
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SUTD-TrafficQA (Singapore University of Technology and Design - Traffic Question Answering) is a dataset which takes the form of video QA based on 10,080 in-the-wild videos and annotated 62,535 QA pairs, for benchmarking the cognitive capability of causal inference and event understanding models in complex traffic scenarios. Specifically, the dataset proposes 6 challenging reasoning tasks corresponding to various traffic scenarios, so as to evaluate the reasoning capability over different kinds of complex yet practical traffic events.
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How to capture the present knowledge from surrounding situations and perform reasoning accordingly is crucial and challenging for machine intelligence. STAR Benchmark is a novel benchmark for Situated Reasoning, which provides 60K challenging situated questions in four types of tasks, 140K situated hypergraphs, symbolic situation programs, and logic-grounded diagnosis for real-world video situations. (Data Download, STAR Leaderboard)
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We contribute an IntentQA dataset with diverse intents in daily social activities.
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VLEP contains 28,726 future event prediction examples (along with their rationales) from 10,234 diverse TV Show and YouTube Lifestyle Vlog video clips. Each example (see Figure 1) consists of a Premise Event (a short video clip with dialogue), a Premise Summary (a text summary of the premise event), and two potential natural language Future Events (along with Rationales) written by people. These clips are on average 6.1 seconds long and are harvested from diverse event-rich sources, i.e., TV show and YouTube Lifestyle Vlog videos.
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.
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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.
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A dataset of 69,270,581 video clip, question and answer triplets (v, q, a). HowToVQA69M is two orders of magnitude larger than any of the currently available VideoQA datasets.
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TutorialVQA is a new type of dataset used to find answer spans in tutorial videos. The dataset includes about 6,000 triples, comprised of videos, questions, and answer spans manually collected from screencast tutorial videos with spoken narratives for a photo-editing software.
Video Localized Narratives is a new form of multimodal video annotations connecting vision and language. The annotations are created from videos with Localized Narratives, capturing even complex events involving multiple actors interacting with each other and with several passive objects. It contains annotations of 20k videos of the OVIS, UVO, and Oops datasets, totalling 1.7M words.
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Click to add a brief description of the dataset (Markdown and LaTeX enabled).
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WildQA is a video understanding dataset of videos recorded in outside settings. The dataset can be used to evaluate models for video question answering.
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We construct a fine-grained video-text dataset with 12K annotated high-resolution videos (~400k clips). The annotation of this dataset is inspired by the video script. If we want to make a video, we have to first write a script to organize how to shoot the scenes in the videos. To shoot a scene, we need to decide the content, shot type (medium shot, close-up, etc), and how the camera moves (panning, tilting, etc). Therefore, we extend video captioning to video scripting by annotating the videos in the format of video scripts. Different from the previous video-text datasets, we densely annotate the entire videos without discarding any scenes and each scene has a caption with ~145 words. Besides the vision modality, we transcribe the voice-over into text and put it along with the video title to give more background information for annotating the videos.
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