4.7 Article

SUN Database: Exploring a Large Collection of Scene Categories

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER VISION
Volume 119, Issue 1, Pages 3-22

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11263-014-0748-y

Keywords

Scene recognition; Scene detection; Scene descriptor; Scene typicality; Scene and object; Visual context

Funding

  1. Google Research Award
  2. NSF [1016862]
  3. NSF CAREER Award [0747120, 1149853]
  4. ONR [MURI N000141010933]
  5. Foxconn
  6. NSF Graduate Research fellowship
  7. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr
  8. Div Of Information & Intelligent Systems [1016862] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. Div Of Information & Intelligent Systems
  10. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr [1149853, 0747120] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Progress in scene understanding requires reasoning about the rich and diverse visual environments that make up our daily experience. To this end, we propose the Scene Understanding database, a nearly exhaustive collection of scenes categorized at the same level of specificity as human discourse. The database contains 908 distinct scene categories and 131,072 images. Given this data with both scene and object labels available, we perform in-depth analysis of co-occurrence statistics and the contextual relationship. To better understand this large scale taxonomy of scene categories, we perform two human experiments: we quantify human scene recognition accuracy, and we measure how typical each image is of its assigned scene category. Next, we perform computational experiments: scene recognition with global image features, indoor versus outdoor classification, and scene detection, in which we relax the assumption that one image depicts only one scene category. Finally, we relate human experiments to machine performance and explore the relationship between human and machine recognition errors and the relationship between image typicality and machine recognition accuracy.

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