The 5th AI City Challenge

Published in 2021 IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - 5th AI City Challenge Workshop, 2021

Recommended citation: Milind Naphade, Shuo Wang, David C. Anastasiu, Zheng Tang, Ming-Ching Chang, Xiaodong Yang, Yue Yao, Liang Zheng, Pranamesh Chakraborty, Christian E. Lopez, Anuj Sharma, Qi Feng, Vitaly Ablavsky and Stan Sclaroff. "The 5th AI City Challenge". Proceedings of 2021 IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops (CVPRW 2021). 2021. https://arxiv.org/abs/2104.12233

[Paper] [Website]

Abstract

The AI City Challenge was created with two goals in mind: (1) pushing the boundaries of research and development in intelligent video analysis for smarter cities use cases, and (2) assessing tasks where the level of performance is enough to cause real-world adoption. Transportation is a segment ripe for such adoption. The fifth AI City Challenge attracted 305 participating teams across 38 countries, who leveraged city-scale real traffic data and high-quality synthetic data to compete in five challenge tracks. Track 1 addressed video-based automatic vehicle counting, where the evaluation being conducted on both algorithmic effectiveness and computational efficiency. Track 2 addressed city-scale vehicle re-identification with augmented synthetic data to substantially increase the training set for the task. Track 3 addressed city-scale multi-target multi-camera vehicle tracking. Track 4 addressed traffic anomaly detection. Track 5 was a new track addressing vehicle retrieval using natural language descriptions. The evaluation system shows a general leader board of all submitted results, and a public leader board of results limited to the contest participation rules, where teams are not allowed to use external data in their work. The public leader board shows results more close to real-world situations where annotated data is limited. Results show the promise of AI in Smarter Transportation. State-of-the-art performance for some tasks shows that these technologies are ready for adoption in real-world systems.

BibTeX

@inproceedings{Naphade21AICity21,
author = {Milind Naphade and Shuo Wang and David C. Anastasiu and Zheng Tang and Ming-Ching Chang and Xiaodong Yang and Yue Yao and Liang Zheng and Pranamesh Chakraborty and Christian E. Lopez and Anuj Sharma and Qi Feng and Vitaly Ablavsky and Stan Sclaroff},
title = {The 5th {AI} {C}ity {C}hallenge},
booktitle = {Proc. CVPR Workshops},
pages = {4263–4273},
address = {Virtual},
year = {2021}
}