The Adience dataset, published in 2014, contains 26,580 photos across 2,284 subjects with a binary gender label and one label from eight different age groups, partitioned into five splits. The key principle of the data set is to capture the images as close to real world conditions as possible, including all variations in appearance, pose, lighting condition and image quality, to name a few.
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This dataset contains 118,081 short video clips extracted from 202 movies. Each video has a caption, either extracted from the movie script or from transcribed DVS (descriptive video services) for the visually impaired. The validation set contains 7408 clips and evaluation is performed on a test set of 1000 videos from movies disjoint from the training and val sets.
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The MegaDepth dataset is a dataset for single-view depth prediction that includes 196 different locations reconstructed from COLMAP SfM/MVS.
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RobustBench is a benchmark of adversarial robustness, which as accurately as possible reflects the robustness of the considered models within a reasonable computational budget. To this end, we start by considering the image classification task and introduce restrictions (possibly loosened in the future) on the allowed models.
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.
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This shared task focuses on identifying unusual, previously-unseen entities in the context of emerging discussions. Named entities form the basis of many modern approaches to other tasks (like event clustering and summarisation), but recall on them is a real problem in noisy text - even among annotators. This drop tends to be due to novel entities and surface forms. Take for example the tweet “so.. kktny in 30 mins?” - even human experts find entity kktny hard to detect and resolve. This task will evaluate the ability to detect and classify novel, emerging, singleton named entities in noisy text.
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Sensory ecologists have found that this s background matching camouflage strategy works by deceiving the visual perceptual system of the observer. Naturally, addressing concealed object detection (COD) requires a significant amount of visual perception knowledge. Understanding COD has not only scientific value in itself, but it also important for applications in many fundamental fields, such as computer vision (e.g., for search-and-rescue work, or rare species discovery), medicine (e.g., polyp segmentation, lung infection segmentation), agriculture (e.g., locust detection to prevent invasion), and art (e.g., recreational art). The high intrinsic similarities between the targets and non-targets make COD far more challenging than traditional object segmentation/detection. Although it has gained increased attention recently, studies on COD still remain scarce, mainly due to the lack of a sufficiently large dataset and a standard benchmark like Pascal-VOC, ImageNet, MS-COCO, ADE20K, and DA
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CMU Panoptic is a large scale dataset providing 3D pose annotations (1.5 millions) for multiple people engaging social activities. It contains 65 videos (5.5 hours) with multi-view annotations, but only 17 of them are in multi-person scenario and have the camera parameters.
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SimpleQuestions is a large-scale factoid question answering dataset. It consists of 108,442 natural language questions, each paired with a corresponding fact from Freebase knowledge base. Each fact is a triple (subject, relation, object) and the answer to the question is always the object. The dataset is divided into training, validation, and test sets with 75,910, 10,845 and 21,687 questions respectively.
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A large-scale natural dataset in English to measure stereotypical biases in four domains: gender, profession, race, and religion.
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.
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Aff-Wild is a dataset for emotion recognition from facial images in a variety of head poses, illumination conditions and occlusions.
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The LUNA challenges provide datasets for automatic nodule detection algorithms using the largest publicly available reference database of chest CT scans, the LIDC-IDRI data set. In LUNA16, participants develop their algorithm and upload their predictions on 888 CT scans in one of the two tracks: 1) the complete nodule detection track where a complete CAD system should be developed, or 2) the false positive reduction track where a provided set of nodule candidates should be classified.
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MCTest is a freely available set of stories and associated questions intended for research on the machine comprehension of text.
The MRQA (Machine Reading for Question Answering) dataset is a dataset for evaluating the generalization capabilities of reading comprehension systems.
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SHAPES is a dataset of synthetic images designed to benchmark systems for understanding of spatial and logical relations among multiple objects. The dataset consists of complex questions about arrangements of colored shapes. The questions are built around compositions of concepts and relations, e.g. Is there a red shape above a circle? or Is a red shape blue?. Questions contain between two and four attributes, object types, or relationships. There are 244 questions and 15,616 images in total, with all questions having a yes and no answer (and corresponding supporting image). This eliminates the risk of learning biases.
Argoverse 2 (AV2) is a collection of three datasets for perception and forecasting research in the self-driving domain. The annotated Sensor Dataset contains 1,000 sequences of multimodal data, encompassing high-resolution imagery from seven ring cameras, and two stereo cameras in addition to lidar point clouds, and 6-DOF map-aligned pose. Sequences contain 3D cuboid annotations for 26 object categories, all of which are sufficiently-sampled to support training and evaluation of 3D perception models. The Lidar Dataset contains 20,000 sequences of unlabeled lidar point clouds and map-aligned pose. This dataset is the largest ever collection of lidar sensor data and supports self-supervised learning and the emerging task of point cloud forecasting. Finally, the Motion Forecasting Dataset contains 250,000 scenarios mined for interesting and challenging interactions be- tween the autonomous vehicle and other actors in each local scene. Models are tasked with the prediction of future motion
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CORe50 is a dataset designed for assessing Continual Learning techniques in an Object Recognition context.
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Permuted MNIST is an MNIST variant that consists of 70,000 images of handwritten digits from 0 to 9, where 60,000 images are used for training, and 10,000 images for test. The difference of this dataset from the original MNIST is that each of the ten tasks is the multi-class classification of a different random permutation of the input pixels.
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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.
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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.
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OTB2013 is the previous version of the current OTB2015 Visual Tracker Benchmark. It contains only 50 tracking sequences, as opposed to the 100 sequences in the current version of the benchmark.
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The Chairs dataset contains rendered images of around 1000 different three-dimensional chair models.
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The NLPR dataset for salient object detection consists of 1,000 image pairs captured by a standard Microsoft Kinect with a resolution of 640×480. The images include indoor and outdoor scenes (e.g., offices, campuses, streets and supermarkets).
SCC Data Set
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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.
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A dataset of large scale alignments between Wikipedia abstracts and Wikidata triples. T-REx consists of 11 million triples aligned with 3.09 million Wikipedia abstracts (6.2 million sentences).
The UCF-Crime dataset is a large-scale dataset of 128 hours of videos. It consists of 1900 long and untrimmed real-world surveillance videos, with 13 realistic anomalies including Abuse, Arrest, Arson, Assault, Road Accident, Burglary, Explosion, Fighting, Robbery, Shooting, Stealing, Shoplifting, and Vandalism. These anomalies are selected because they have a significant impact on public safety.
WinoBias contains 3,160 sentences, split equally for development and test, created by researchers familiar with the project. Sentences were created to follow two prototypical templates but annotators were encouraged to come up with scenarios where entities could be interacting in plausible ways. Templates were selected to be challenging and designed to cover cases requiring semantics and syntax separately.
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The FER+ dataset is an extension of the original FER dataset, where the images have been re-labelled into one of 8 emotion types: neutral, happiness, surprise, sadness, anger, disgust, fear, and contempt.
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LIAR is a publicly available dataset for fake news detection. A decade-long of 12.8K manually labeled short statements were collected in various contexts from POLITIFACT.COM, which provides detailed analysis report and links to source documents for each case. This dataset can be used for fact-checking research as well. Notably, this new dataset is an order of magnitude larger than previously largest public fake news datasets of similar type. The LIAR dataset4 includes 12.8K human labeled short statements from POLITIFACT.COM’s API, and each statement is evaluated by a POLITIFACT.COM editor for its truthfulness.
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Click to add a brief description of the dataset (Markdown and LaTeX enabled).
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Functional Map of the World (fMoW) is a dataset that aims to inspire the development of machine learning models capable of predicting the functional purpose of buildings and land use from temporal sequences of satellite images and a rich set of metadata features.
Conceptual 12M (CC12M) is a dataset with 12 million image-text pairs specifically meant to be used for vision-and-language pre-training.
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A new dataset with abstractive dialogue summaries.
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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).
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We observe that satellite imagery is a powerful source of information as it contains more structured and uniform data, compared to traditional images. Although computer vision community has been accomplishing hard tasks on everyday image datasets using deep learning, satellite images are only recently gaining attention for maps and population analysis. This workshop aims at bringing together a diverse set of researchers to advance the state-of-the-art in satellite image analysis.
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FreiHAND is a 3D hand pose dataset which records different hand actions performed by 32 people. For each hand image, MANO-based 3D hand pose annotations are provided. It currently contains 32,560 unique training samples and 3960 unique samples for evaluation. The training samples are recorded with a green screen background allowing for background removal. In addition, it applies three different post processing strategies to training samples for data augmentation. However, these post processing strategies are not applied to evaluation samples.
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HumanML3D is a 3D human motion-language dataset that originates from a combination of HumanAct12 and Amass dataset. It covers a broad range of human actions such as daily activities (e.g., 'walking', 'jumping'), sports (e.g., 'swimming', 'playing golf'), acrobatics (e.g., 'cartwheel') and artistry (e.g., 'dancing'). Overall, HumanML3D dataset consists of 14,616 motions and 44,970 descriptions composed by 5,371 distinct words. The total length of motions amounts to 28.59 hours. The average motion length is 7.1 seconds, while average description length is 12 words.
KILT (Knowledge Intensive Language Tasks) is a benchmark consisting of 11 datasets representing 5 types of tasks:
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NELL-995 KG Completion Dataset
WikiHow is a dataset of more than 230,000 article and summary pairs extracted and constructed from an online knowledge base written by different human authors. The articles span a wide range of topics and represent high diversity styles.
The smallNORB dataset is a datset for 3D object recognition from shape. It contains images of 50 toys belonging to 5 generic categories: four-legged animals, human figures, airplanes, trucks, and cars. The objects were imaged by two cameras under 6 lighting conditions, 9 elevations (30 to 70 degrees every 5 degrees), and 18 azimuths (0 to 340 every 20 degrees). The training set is composed of 5 instances of each category (instances 4, 6, 7, 8 and 9), and the test set of the remaining 5 instances (instances 0, 1, 2, 3, and 5).
CrowS-Pairs has 1508 examples that cover stereotypes dealing with nine types of bias, like race, religion, and age. In CrowS-Pairs a model is presented with two sentences: one that is more stereotyping and another that is less stereotyping. The data focuses on stereotypes about historically disadvantaged groups and contrasts them with advantaged groups.
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The DFDC (Deepfake Detection Challenge) is a dataset for deepface detection consisting of more than 100,000 videos.
The Georgia Tech Egocentric Activities (GTEA) dataset contains seven types of daily activities such as making sandwich, tea, or coffee. Each activity is performed by four different people, thus totally 28 videos. For each video, there are about 20 fine-grained action instances such as take bread, pour ketchup, in approximately one minute.
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A-OKVQA is crowdsourced visual question answering dataset composed of a diverse set of about 25K questions requiring a broad base of commonsense and world knowledge to answer.
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The CSIQ database consists of 30 original images, each is distorted using six different types of distortions at four to five different levels of distortion. CSIQ images are subjectively rated base on a linear displacement of the images across four calibrated LCD monitors placed side by side with equal viewing distance to the observer. The database contains 5000 subjective ratings from 35 different observers, and ratings are reported in the form of DMOS.