CVSep 11, 2019

AnimalWeb: A Large-Scale Hierarchical Dataset of Annotated Animal Faces

arXiv:1909.04951v158 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This dataset addresses a bottleneck for researchers developing automated systems to interpret animal faces, which could improve animal healthcare and psychology understanding.

The authors tackled the lack of annotated animal face datasets by introducing AnimalWeb, a large-scale hierarchical dataset with 21.9K faces from 334 species, annotated with 9 landmarks. Benchmarking results show it presents challenging and unique attributes for advancing computer vision algorithms in animal facial analysis.

Being heavily reliant on animals, it is our ethical obligation to improve their well-being by understanding their needs. Several studies show that animal needs are often expressed through their faces. Though remarkable progress has been made towards the automatic understanding of human faces, this has regrettably not been the case with animal faces. There exists significant room and appropriate need to develop automatic systems capable of interpreting animal faces. Among many transformative impacts, such a technology will foster better and cheaper animal healthcare, and further advance animal psychology understanding. We believe the underlying research progress is mainly obstructed by the lack of an adequately annotated dataset of animal faces, covering a wide spectrum of animal species. To this end, we introduce a large-scale, hierarchical annotated dataset of animal faces, featuring 21.9K faces from 334 diverse species and 21 animal orders across biological taxonomy. These faces are captured `in-the-wild' conditions and are consistently annotated with 9 landmarks on key facial features. The proposed dataset is structured and scalable by design; its development underwent four systematic stages involving rigorous, manual annotation effort of over 6K man-hours. We benchmark it for face alignment using the existing art under novel problem settings. Results showcase its challenging nature, unique attributes and present definite prospects for novel, adaptive, and generalized face-oriented CV algorithms. We further benchmark the dataset for face detection and fine-grained recognition tasks, to demonstrate multi-task applications and room for improvement. Experiments indicate that this dataset will push the algorithmic advancements across many related CV tasks and encourage the development of novel systems for animal facial behaviour monitoring. We will make the dataset publicly available.

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