TLD: A Vehicle Tail Light signal Dataset and Benchmark
Understanding other drivers' intentions is crucial for safe driving. The role of taillights in conveying these intentions is underemphasized in current autonomous driving systems. Accurately identifying taillight signals is essential for predicting vehicle behavior and preventing collisions. Op...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding other drivers' intentions is crucial for safe driving. The role
of taillights in conveying these intentions is underemphasized in current
autonomous driving systems. Accurately identifying taillight signals is
essential for predicting vehicle behavior and preventing collisions.
Open-source taillight datasets are scarce, often small and inconsistently
annotated. To address this gap, we introduce a new large-scale taillight
dataset called TLD. Sourced globally, our dataset covers diverse traffic
scenarios. To our knowledge, TLD is the first dataset to separately annotate
brake lights and turn signals in real driving scenarios. We collected 17.78
hours of driving videos from the internet. This dataset consists of 152k
labeled image frames sampled at a rate of 2 Hz, along with 1.5 million
unlabeled frames interspersed throughout. Additionally, we have developed a
two-stage vehicle light detection model consisting of two primary modules: a
vehicle detector and a taillight classifier. Initially, YOLOv10 and DeepSORT
captured consecutive vehicle images over time. Subsequently, the two
classifiers work simultaneously to determine the states of the brake lights and
turn signals. A post-processing procedure is then used to eliminate noise
caused by misidentifications and provide the taillight states of the vehicle
within a given time frame. Our method shows exceptional performance on our
dataset, establishing a benchmark for vehicle taillight detection. The dataset
is available at https://huggingface.co/datasets/ChaiJohn/TLD/tree/main |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.02508 |