Vojtech Cermak

CV
h-index19
3papers
11citations
Novelty18%
AI Score35

3 Papers

CVAug 24, 2024Code
FungiTastic: A multi-modal dataset and benchmark for image categorization

Lukas Picek, Klara Janouskova, Vojtech Cermak et al.

We introduce a new, challenging benchmark and a dataset, FungiTastic, based on fungal records continuously collected over a twenty-year span. The dataset is labelled and curated by experts and consists of about 350k multimodal observations of 6k fine-grained categories (species). The fungi observations include photographs and additional data, e.g., meteorological and climatic data, satellite images, and body part segmentation masks. FungiTastic is one of the few benchmarks that include a test set with DNA-sequenced ground truth of unprecedented label reliability. The benchmark is designed to support (i) standard closed-set classification, (ii) open-set classification, (iii) multi-modal classification, (iv) few-shot learning, (v) domain shift, and many more. We provide tailored baselines for many use cases, a multitude of ready-to-use pre-trained models on https://huggingface.co/collections/BVRA/fungitastic-66a227ce0520be533dc6403b, and a framework for model training. The documentation and the baselines are available at https://github.com/BohemianVRA/FungiTastic/ and https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/picekl/fungitastic.

PEApr 22
Centering Ecological Goals in Automated Identification of Individual Animals

Lukas Picek, Timm Haucke, Lukáš Adam et al.

Recognizing individual animals over time is central to many ecological and conservation questions, including estimating abundance, survival, movement, and social structure. Recent advances in automated identification from images and even acoustic data suggest that this process could be greatly accelerated, yet their promise has not translated well into ecological practice. We argue that the main barrier is not the performance of the automated methods themselves, but a mismatch between how those methods are typically developed and evaluated, and how ecological data is actually collected, processed, reviewed, and used. Future progress, therefore, will depend less on algorithmic gains alone than on recognizing that the usefulness of automated identification is grounded in ecological context: it depends on what question is being asked, what data are available, and what kinds of mistakes matter. Only by centering these questions can we move toward automated identification of individuals that is not only accurate but also ecologically useful, transparent, and trustworthy.

CVJun 5, 2025
CzechLynx: A Dataset for Individual Identification and Pose Estimation of the Eurasian Lynx

Lukas Picek, Elisa Belotti, Michal Bojda et al.

We introduce CzechLynx, the first large-scale, open-access dataset for individual identification, 2D pose estimation, and instance segmentation of the Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx). CzechLynx includes more than 30k camera trap images annotated with segmentation masks, identity labels, and 20-point skeletons and covers 219 unique individuals across 15 years of systematic monitoring in two geographically distinct regions: Southwest Bohemia and the Western Carpathians. To increase the data variability, we create a complementary synthetic set with more than 100k photorealistic images generated via a Unity-based pipeline and diffusion-driven text-to-texture modeling, covering diverse environments, poses, and coat-pattern variations. To allow testing generalization across spatial and temporal domains, we define three tailored evaluation protocols/splits: (i) geo-aware, (ii) time-aware open-set, and (iii) time-aware closed-set. This dataset is targeted to be instrumental in benchmarking state-of-the-art models and the development of novel methods for not just individual animal re-identification.