Visual Commonsense Reasoning (VCR) is a large-scale dataset for cognition-level visual understanding. Given a challenging question about an image, machines need to present two sub-tasks: answer correctly and provide a rationale justifying its answer. The VCR dataset contains over 212K (training), 26K (validation) and 25K (testing) questions, answers and rationales derived from 110K movie scenes.
158 PAPERS • 13 BENCHMARKS
Science Question Answering (ScienceQA) is a new benchmark that consists of 21,208 multimodal multiple choice questions with diverse science topics and annotations of their answers with corresponding lectures and explanations. Out of the questions in ScienceQA, 10,332 (48.7%) have an image context, 10,220 (48.2%) have a text context, and 6,532 (30.8%) have both. Most questions are annotated with grounded lectures (83.9%) and detailed explanations (90.5%). The lecture and explanation provide general external knowledge and specific reasons, respectively, for arriving at the correct answer. To the best of our knowledge, ScienceQA is the first large-scale multimodal dataset that annotates lectures and explanations for the answers.
141 PAPERS • 1 BENCHMARK
Current visual question answering (VQA) tasks mainly consider answering human-annotated questions for natural images in the daily-life context. Icon question answering (IconQA) is a benchmark which aims to highlight the importance of abstract diagram understanding and comprehensive cognitive reasoning in real-world diagram word problems. For this benchmark, a large-scale IconQA dataset is built that consists of three sub-tasks: multi-image-choice, multi-text-choice, and filling-in-the-blank. Compared to existing VQA benchmarks, IconQA requires not only perception skills like object recognition and text understanding, but also diverse cognitive reasoning skills, such as geometric reasoning, commonsense reasoning, and arithmetic reasoning.
23 PAPERS • 1 BENCHMARK
Geo-Diverse Visual Commonsense Reasoning (GD-VCR) is a new dataset to test vision-and-language models' ability to understand cultural and geo-location-specific commonsense.
3 PAPERS • 1 BENCHMARK
WHOOPS! Is a dataset and benchmark for visual commonsense. The dataset is comprised of purposefully commonsense-defying images created by designers using publicly-available image generation tools like Midjourney. It contains commonsense-defying image from a wide range of reasons, deviations from expected social norms and everyday knowledge.
2 PAPERS • 4 BENCHMARKS
Synthetic datasets have successfully been used to probe visual question-answering datasets for their reasoning abilities. CLEVR, for example, tests a range of visual reasoning abilities. The questions in CLEVR focus on comparisons of shapes, colors, and sizes, numerical reasoning, and existence claims. This paper introduces a minimally biased, diagnostic visual question-answering dataset, QLEVR, that goes beyond existential and numerical quantification and focus on more complex quantifiers and their combinations, e.g., asking whether there are more than two red balls that are smaller than at least three blue balls in an image. We describe how the dataset was created and present a first evaluation of state-of-the-art visual question-answering models, showing that QLEVR presents a formidable challenge to our current models.
1 PAPER • 1 BENCHMARK
Visual Commonsense Immorality benchmark is a benchmark designed to evaluate commonsense immorality. It contains 2,172 immoral images for general and extensive immoral image detection.
1 PAPER • NO BENCHMARKS YET