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Understanding the objects and relations between them is indispensable to fine-grained video content analysis, which is widely studied in recent research works in multimedia and computer vision. However, existing works are limited to evaluating with either small datasets or indirect metrics, such as the performance over images. The underlying reason is that the construction of a large-scale video dataset with dense annotation is tricky and costly. In this paper, we address several main issues in annotating objects and relations in user-generated videos, and propose an annotation pipeline that can be executed at a modest cost. As a result, we present a new dataset, named VidOR, consisting of 10k videos (84 hours) together with dense annotations that localize 80 categories of objects and 50 categories of predicates in each video. We have made the training and validation set public and extendable for more tasks to facilitate future research on video object and relation recognition.
Shang et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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