TAO is a federated dataset for Tracking Any Object, containing 2,907 high resolution videos, captured in diverse environments, which are half a minute long on average. We adopt a bottom-up approach for discovering a large vocabulary of 833 categories, an order of magnitude more than prior tracking benchmarks. To this end, we ask annotators to label tracks for objects that move at any point in the video, and give names to them post factum. Our vocabulary is both significantly larger and qualitatively different from existing tracking datasets. To ensure scalability of annotation, we employ a federated approach that focuses manual effort on labeling tracks for those relevant objects in a video (e.g. those that move). We perform an extensive evaluation of state-of-the-art tracking methods and make a number of important discoveries regarding large-vocabulary tracking in an open-world. In particular, we show that existing single- and multi-object trackers struggle when applied to this scenario, and that detection-based, multi-object trackers are in fact competitive with user-initialized ones. We hope that our dataset and analysis will boost further progress in the tracking community.
Please use the following citation when referencing the dataset:
@article{dave2020tao,
title={TAO: A Large-Scale Benchmark for Tracking Any Object},
author={Dave, Achal and Khurana, Tarasha and Tokmakov, Pavel and Schmid, Cordelia and Ramanan,
Deva},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2005.10356},
year={2020}
}