3,275 machine learning datasets
3,275 dataset results
The DukeMTMC-reID (Duke Multi-Tracking Multi-Camera ReIDentification) dataset is a subset of the DukeMTMC for image-based person re-ID. The dataset is created from high-resolution videos from 8 different cameras. It is one of the largest pedestrian image datasets wherein images are cropped by hand-drawn bounding boxes. The dataset consists 16,522 training images of 702 identities, 2,228 query images of the other 702 identities and 17,661 gallery images.
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.
MM-Vet: Evaluating Large Multimodal Models for Integrated Capabilities
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.
The fastMRI dataset includes two types of MRI scans: knee MRIs and the brain (neuro) MRIs, and containing training, validation, and masked test sets. The deidentified imaging dataset provided by NYU Langone comprises raw k-space data in several sub-dataset groups. Curation of these data are part of an IRB approved study. Raw and DICOM data have been deidentified via conversion to the vendor-neutral ISMRMD format and the RSNA clinical trial processor, respectively. Also, each DICOM image is manually inspected for the presence of any unexpected protected health information (PHI), with spot checking of both metadata and image content. Knee MRI: Data from more than 1,500 fully sampled knee MRIs obtained on 3 and 1.5 Tesla magnets and DICOM images from 10,000 clinical knee MRIs also obtained at 3 or 1.5 Tesla. The raw dataset includes coronal proton density-weighted images with and without fat suppression. The DICOM dataset contains coronal proton density-weighted with and without fat suppr
Animal FacesHQ (AFHQ) is a dataset of animal faces consisting of 15,000 high-quality images at 512 × 512 resolution. The dataset includes three domains of cat, dog, and wildlife, each providing 5000 images. By having multiple (three) domains and diverse images of various breeds (≥ eight) per each domain, AFHQ sets a more challenging image-to-image translation problem. All images are vertically and horizontally aligned to have the eyes at the center. The low-quality images were discarded by human effort.
The PASCAL Context dataset is an extension of the PASCAL VOC 2010 detection challenge, and it contains pixel-wise labels for all training images. It contains more than 400 classes (including the original 20 classes plus backgrounds from PASCAL VOC segmentation), divided into three categories (objects, stuff, and hybrids). Many of the object categories of this dataset are too sparse and; therefore, a subset of 59 frequent classes are usually selected for use.
AffectNet is a large facial expression dataset with around 0.4 million images manually labeled for the presence of eight (neutral, happy, angry, sad, fear, surprise, disgust, contempt) facial expressions along with the intensity of valence and arousal.
The tieredImageNet dataset is a larger subset of ILSVRC-12 with 608 classes (779,165 images) grouped into 34 higher-level nodes in the ImageNet human-curated hierarchy. This set of nodes is partitioned into 20, 6, and 8 disjoint sets of training, validation, and testing nodes, and the corresponding classes form the respective meta-sets. As argued in Ren et al. (2018), this split near the root of the ImageNet hierarchy results in a more challenging, yet realistic regime with test classes that are less similar to training classes.
The Digital Retinal Images for Vessel Extraction (DRIVE) dataset is a dataset for retinal vessel segmentation. It consists of a total of JPEG 40 color fundus images; including 7 abnormal pathology cases. The images were obtained from a diabetic retinopathy screening program in the Netherlands. The images were acquired using Canon CR5 non-mydriatic 3CCD camera with FOV equals to 45 degrees. Each image resolution is 584*565 pixels with eight bits per color channel (3 channels).
DAVIS17 is a dataset for video object segmentation. It contains a total of 150 videos - 60 for training, 30 for validation, 60 for testing
Manga109 has been compiled by the Aizawa Yamasaki Matsui Laboratory, Department of Information and Communication Engineering, the Graduate School of Information Science and Technology, the University of Tokyo. The compilation is intended for use in academic research on the media processing of Japanese manga. Manga109 is composed of 109 manga volumes drawn by professional manga artists in Japan. These manga were commercially made available to the public between the 1970s and 2010s, and encompass a wide range of target readerships and genres (see the table in Explore for further details.) Most of the manga in the compilation are available at the manga library “Manga Library Z” (formerly the “Zeppan Manga Toshokan” library of out-of-print manga).
The Multi-PIE (Multi Pose, Illumination, Expressions) dataset consists of face images of 337 subjects taken under different pose, illumination and expressions. The pose range contains 15 discrete views, capturing a face profile-to-profile. Illumination changes were modeled using 19 flashlights located in different places of the room.
DOTA is a large-scale dataset for object detection in aerial images. It can be used to develop and evaluate object detectors in aerial images. The images are collected from different sensors and platforms. Each image is of the size in the range from 800 × 800 to 20,000 × 20,000 pixels and contains objects exhibiting a wide variety of scales, orientations, and shapes. The instances in DOTA images are annotated by experts in aerial image interpretation by arbitrary (8 d.o.f.) quadrilateral. We will continue to update DOTA, to grow in size and scope to reflect evolving real-world conditions. Now it has three versions:
The 20BN-SOMETHING-SOMETHING V2 dataset is a large collection of labeled video clips that show humans performing pre-defined basic actions with everyday objects. The dataset was created by a large number of crowd workers. It allows machine learning models to develop fine-grained understanding of basic actions that occur in the physical world. It contains 220,847 videos, with 168,913 in the training set, 24,777 in the validation set and 27,157 in the test set. There are 174 labels.
DocVQA consists of 50,000 questions defined on 12,000+ document images.
MPI-INF-3DHP is a 3D human body pose estimation dataset consisting of both constrained indoor and complex outdoor scenes. It records 8 actors performing 8 activities from 14 camera views. It consists on >1.3M frames captured from the 14 cameras.
Clothing1M contains 1M clothing images in 14 classes. It is a dataset with noisy labels, since the data is collected from several online shopping websites and include many mislabelled samples. This dataset also contains 50k, 14k, and 10k images with clean labels for training, validation, and testing, respectively.
DUTS is a saliency detection dataset containing 10,553 training images and 5,019 test images. All training images are collected from the ImageNet DET training/val sets, while test images are collected from the ImageNet DET test set and the SUN data set. Both the training and test set contain very challenging scenarios for saliency detection. Accurate pixel-level ground truths are manually annotated by 50 subjects.
The Shanghaitech dataset is a large-scale crowd counting dataset. It consists of 1198 annotated crowd images. The dataset is divided into two parts, Part-A containing 482 images and Part-B containing 716 images. Part-A is split into train and test subsets consisting of 300 and 182 images, respectively. Part-B is split into train and test subsets consisting of 400 and 316 images. Each person in a crowd image is annotated with one point close to the center of the head. In total, the dataset consists of 330,165 annotated people. Images from Part-A were collected from the Internet, while images from Part-B were collected on the busy streets of Shanghai.