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The NTU RGB-D (Nanyang Technological University's Red Blue Green and Depth information) dataset is a large dataset containing recordings of labeled human activities. [1] This dataset consists of 56,880 action samples containing 4 different modalities (RGB videos, depth map sequences, 3D skeletal data, infrared videos) of data for each sample.
Linnaeus 5 dataset Images of 5 classes of objects. Classes labelled, training set splits created. 8000 Images Classification 2017 [40] Chaladze & Kalatozishvili 11K Hands 11,076 hand images (1600 x 1200 pixels) of 190 subjects, of varying ages between 18 – 75 years old, for gender recognition and biometric identification. None 11,076 hand images
NTU RGB-D dataset; O. Overhead Imagery Research Data Set; T. Textures: A Photographic Album for Artists and Designers ... This page was last edited on 5 May 2023, at ...
"The Taskmaster corpus consists of THREE datasets, Taskmaster-1 (TM-1), Taskmaster-2 (TM-2), and Taskmaster-3 (TM-3), comprising over 55,000 spoken and written task-oriented dialogs in over a dozen domains." [338] Taskmaster-1: goal-oriented conversational dataset. It includes 13,215 task-based dialogs comprising six domains.
There is also a 1 nm-interval dataset of CIE 1931 and CIE 1964 provided by Wyszecki 1982. [12] A CIE publication in 1986 appears also to have a 1 nm dataset, probably using the same data. [13] Like the regular 5 nm dataset, this dataset is also derived from interpolation.
Full RGB version at 120×80-pixels for comparison (e.g. as a film scan, Foveon or pixel shift image might appear) Bryce Bayer 's patent (U.S. Patent No. 3,971,065 [ 6 ] ) in 1976 called the green photosensors luminance-sensitive elements and the red and blue ones chrominance-sensitive elements .
The set of images in the MNIST database was created in 1994. Previously, NIST released two datasets: Special Database 1 (NIST Test Data I, or SD-1); and Special Database 3 (or SD-2). They were released on two CD-ROMs. SD-1 was the test set, and it contained digits written by high school students, 58,646 images written by 500 different writers.
RGB channels roughly follow the color receptors in the human eye, and are used in computer displays and image scanners. If the RGB image is 24-bit (the industry standard as of 2005), each channel has 8 bits, for red, green, and blue—in other words, the image is composed of three images (one for each channel), where each image can store ...