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.
10,363 PAPERS • 93 BENCHMARKS
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.
3,362 PAPERS • 54 BENCHMARKS
The Common Objects in COntext-stuff (COCO-stuff) dataset is a dataset for scene understanding tasks like semantic segmentation, object detection and image captioning. It is constructed by annotating the original COCO dataset, which originally annotated things while neglecting stuff annotations. There are 164k images in COCO-stuff dataset that span over 172 categories including 80 things, 91 stuff, and 1 unlabeled class.
269 PAPERS • 20 BENCHMARKS
Dark Zurich is an image dataset containing a total of 8779 images captured at nighttime, twilight, and daytime, along with the respective GPS coordinates of the camera for each image. These GPS annotations are used to construct cross-time-of-day correspondences, i.e., to match each nighttime or twilight image to its daytime counterpart.
48 PAPERS • 3 BENCHMARKS
Powered by the ImageNet dataset, unsupervised learning on large-scale data has made significant advances for classification tasks. There are two major challenges to allowing such an attractive learning modality for segmentation tasks: i) a large-scale benchmark for assessing algorithms is missing; ii) unsupervised shape representation learning is difficult. We propose a new problem of large-scale unsupervised semantic segmentation (LUSS) with a newly created benchmark dataset to track the research progress. Based on the ImageNet dataset, we propose the ImageNet-S dataset with 1.2 million training images and 50k high-quality semantic segmentation annotations for evaluation. Our benchmark has a high data diversity and a clear task objective. We also present a simple yet effective baseline method that works surprisingly well for LUSS. In addition, we benchmark related un/weakly/fully supervised methods accordingly, identifying the challenges and possible directions of LUSS.
31 PAPERS • 6 BENCHMARKS
The Segmentation of Underwater IMagery (SUIM) dataset contains over 1500 images with pixel annotations for eight object categories: fish (vertebrates), reefs (invertebrates), aquatic plants, wrecks/ruins, human divers, robots, and sea-floor. The images have been rigorously collected during oceanic explorations and human-robot collaborative experiments, and annotated by human participants.
27 PAPERS • 2 BENCHMARKS
Nighttime Driving is a dataset of road scenes consisting of 35,000 images ranging from daytime to twilight time and to nighttime.
23 PAPERS • 2 BENCHMARKS
The Segmenting and Tracking Every Pixel (STEP) benchmark consists of 21 training sequences and 29 test sequences. It is based on the KITTI Tracking Evaluation and the Multi-Object Tracking and Segmentation (MOTS) benchmark. This benchmark extends the annotations to the Segmenting and Tracking Every Pixel (STEP) task. [Copy-pasted from http://www.cvlibs.net/datasets/kitti/eval_step.php]
20 PAPERS • 2 BENCHMARKS