When humans navigate a crowed space such as a university campus or the sidewalks of a busy street, they follow common sense rules based on social etiquette. In order to enable the design of new algorithms that can fully take advantage of these rules to better solve tasks such as target tracking or trajectory forecasting, we need to have access to better data. To that end, we contribute the very first large scale dataset (to the best of our knowledge) that collects images and videos of various types of agents (not just pedestrians, but also bicyclists, skateboarders, cars, buses, and golf carts) that navigate in a real world outdoor environment such as a university campus. In the above images, pedestrians are labeled in pink, bicyclists in red, skateboarders in orange, and cars in green.
Please use the following citation when referencing the dataset:
@inproceedings{robicquet2016learning,
title={Learning social etiquette: Human trajectory understanding in crowded scenes},
author={Robicquet, Alexandre and Sadeghian, Amir and Alahi, Alexandre and Savarese, Silvio},
booktitle={European conference on computer vision},
pages={549--565},
year={2016},
organization={Springer}
}