Datasets:
The full dataset viewer is not available (click to read why). Only showing a preview of the rows.
Error code: JobManagerCrashedError
Need help to make the dataset viewer work? Make sure to review how to configure the dataset viewer, and open a discussion for direct support.
image
image |
---|
Dataset Card for GQA-35k
The GQA (Visual Reasoning in the Real World) dataset is a large-scale visual question answering dataset that includes scene graph annotations for each image.
This is a FiftyOne dataset with 35000 samples.
Note: This is a 35,000 sample subset which does not contain questions, only the scene graph annotations as detection-level attributes.
You can find the recipe notebook for creating the dataset here
Installation
If you haven't already, install FiftyOne:
pip install -U fiftyone
Usage
import fiftyone as fo
import fiftyone.utils.huggingface as fouh
# Load the dataset
# Note: other available arguments include 'max_samples', etc
dataset = fouh.load_from_hub("Voxel51/GQA-Scene-Graph")
# Launch the App
session = fo.launch_app(dataset)
Dataset Details
Dataset Description
Scene Graph Annotations
Each of the 113K images in GQA is associated with a detailed scene graph describing the objects, attributes and relations present.
The scene graphs are based on a cleaner version of the Visual Genome scene graphs.
For each image, the scene graph is provided as a dictionary (sceneGraph) containing:
- Image metadata like width, height, location, weather
- A dictionary (objects) mapping each object ID to its name, bounding box coordinates, attributes, and relations[6]
- Relations are represented as triples specifying the predicate (e.g. "holding", "on", "left of") and the target object ID[6]
Curated by: Drew Hudson & Christopher Manning
Shared by: Harpreet Sahota, Hacker-in-Residence at Voxel51
Language(s) (NLP): en
License:
GQA annotations (scene graphs, questions, programs) licensed under CC BY 4.0
Images sourced from Visual Genome may have different licensing terms
Dataset Sources
- Repository: https://cs.stanford.edu/people/dorarad/gqa/
- Paper : https://arxiv.org/pdf/1902.09506
- Demo: https://cs.stanford.edu/people/dorarad/gqa/vis.html
Dataset Structure
Here's the information presented as a markdown table:
Field | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
location | str | Optional. The location of the image, e.g. kitchen, beach. |
weather | str | Optional. The weather in the image, e.g. sunny, cloudy. |
objects | dict | A dictionary from objectId to its object. |
object | dict | A visual element in the image (node). |
name | str | The name of the object, e.g. person, apple or sky. |
x | int | Horizontal position of the object bounding box (top left). |
y | int | Vertical position of the object bounding box (top left). |
w | int | The object bounding box width in pixels. |
h | int | The object bounding box height in pixels. |
attributes | [str] | A list of all the attributes of the object, e.g. blue, small, running. |
relations | [dict] | A list of all outgoing relations (edges) from the object (source). |
relation | dict | A triple representing the relation between source and target objects. |
Note: I've used non-breaking spaces (
) to indent the nested fields in the 'Field' column to represent the hierarchy. This helps to visually distinguish the nested structure within the table.
Citation
BibTeX:
@article{Hudson_2019,
title={GQA: A New Dataset for Real-World Visual Reasoning and Compositional Question Answering},
ISBN={9781728132938},
url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/CVPR.2019.00686},
DOI={10.1109/cvpr.2019.00686},
journal={2019 IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR)},
publisher={IEEE},
author={Hudson, Drew A. and Manning, Christopher D.},
year={2019},
month={Jun}
}
- Downloads last month
- 3,911