DAVE: Diverse Atomic Visual Elements Dataset with High Representation of Vulnerable Road Users in Complex and Unpredictable Environments
Most existing traffic video datasets including Waymo are structured, focusing predominantly on Western traffic, which hinders global applicability. Specifically, most Asian scenarios are far more complex, involving numerous objects with distinct motions and behaviors. Addressing this gap, we present...
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Zusammenfassung: | Most existing traffic video datasets including Waymo are structured, focusing
predominantly on Western traffic, which hinders global applicability.
Specifically, most Asian scenarios are far more complex, involving numerous
objects with distinct motions and behaviors. Addressing this gap, we present a
new dataset, DAVE, designed for evaluating perception methods with high
representation of Vulnerable Road Users (VRUs: e.g. pedestrians, animals,
motorbikes, and bicycles) in complex and unpredictable environments. DAVE is a
manually annotated dataset encompassing 16 diverse actor categories (spanning
animals, humans, vehicles, etc.) and 16 action types (complex and rare cases
like cut-ins, zigzag movement, U-turn, etc.), which require high reasoning
ability. DAVE densely annotates over 13 million bounding boxes (bboxes) actors
with identification, and more than 1.6 million boxes are annotated with both
actor identification and action/behavior details. The videos within DAVE are
collected based on a broad spectrum of factors, such as weather conditions, the
time of day, road scenarios, and traffic density. DAVE can benchmark video
tasks like Tracking, Detection, Spatiotemporal Action Localization,
Language-Visual Moment retrieval, and Multi-label Video Action Recognition.
Given the critical importance of accurately identifying VRUs to prevent
accidents and ensure road safety, in DAVE, vulnerable road users constitute
41.13% of instances, compared to 23.71% in Waymo. DAVE provides an invaluable
resource for the development of more sensitive and accurate visual perception
algorithms in the complex real world. Our experiments show that existing
methods suffer degradation in performance when evaluated on DAVE, highlighting
its benefit for future video recognition research. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.20042 |