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Filename: National%20Parks%20Board%2Fcites%40nparks.gov.sg%2Frn_image_picker_lib_temp_36d21bfa-3d10-4177-ab6a-7297a618ed39_1663814349026.jpg
(D / H) Always Hide Parts
Add a Species
Add a Part Type
Example Images of Species Found in WBIA
Only annotations for the species specified (top left of the page) should exist in the image. If the species is '____', annotate the most frequent or predominate species in the image. If you are uncertain as to what the specified species looks like, ask a graduate student.
African Elephant
Loxodonta
The African Elephant is distinguished by being the largest terrestrial animal, generally has grey or dark-brown baggy skin, a long trunk that acts as a nose and grabbing appendage, and showcases two white Ivory tusks. The African Elephant can be distinguished against the Asian Elephant by having much larger ears to facilitate efficient heat transfer to the air. [1]
African Wild Dog
Lycaon pictus
The African Wild Dog is canid that can be distinguished by its dog or coyote-like appearance with a dapple / spotted coat of black, tan, brown and white. The ears are round and forward facing and there is generally a black stripe running down from the ears and between the eyes. [2]
Cheetah
Acinonyx jubatus
A Cheetah is the fastest terrestrial animal and is distinguished by the very long and lean torso and elongated legs. The Cheetah is also unique in the small size of its head, the large tail for counter-balance, and dark-brown spots covering the brown to tan fur. [3]
Giraffe
Giraffa camelopardalis
A Giraffe is distinguished by, most obviously, having a very elongated neck and legs. The giraffe is also unique in that it has patches of brown islands over a white, light-yellow, or light-brown coat and showcases a very long, purple tongue. [4]
Grévy's Zebra (Grevy's / Imperial Zebra)
Equus grevyi
The Grevy's Zebra (named after Jules Grévy) are also horse-lie in structure and are distinguished from Plains Zebras by having very thin stripes that do not extend down and wrap under the belly (the underbelly is generally white). [5]
Lion (Male & Female)
Panthera leo
The Male Lion is distinguished by its large size, dark-brown or tan mane around the neck, and sleek, thin, tan coat. The Male Lion has a much larger head compared to the Cheetah and the juvenile males can usually be identified by the presence of testicles and the start of a mane. [6]
The Female Lion (Lioness) is distinguished from the Male Lion by the absence of a mane around the neck. The Lioness is also more lean and has a swayed back for hunting and stalking prey more efficiently. [7]
Plains Zebra (Common / Grant's Zebra)
Equus quagga
A Plains Zebra is the stereotypical zebra found in most zoos and children's books. The Plans Zebra has a horse-like structure and can be distinguished by thick stripes that extend down and wrap under the belly. [7]
Detection Reviewing Instructions
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When deciding to add, edit, or remove an annotation, it is important to understand to what ends WBIA will use annotations. WBIA uses the annotation's usable information (a picture is worth a thousand words) to assign keypoint descriptors (see below), which are oval regions on the image that have a lot of information in them. The algorithms in WBIA use the bounding boxes and annotations to detect animals (draw bounding boxes automatically) and distinguish animals (differentiate between two individuals) in an image. In order to capture the most information about an animal, the bounding box should satisfy the following three requirements:
- An annotation should include as much of the foreground animal as possible; this means cover the entire animal with the bounding box.
- An annotation should exclude as much of the background landscape or other animals as possible; this means fit the bounding box tightly around the animal.
- Only annotations for the species specified (top left of the page) should exist. If the species is '____', annotate the most frequent or predominate species in the image. If you are uncertain as to what the specified species looks like, ask a graduate student or click here.
For example: - A new annotation can be added by dragging the mouse cursor around the animal like a selection. To perform a selection, click the left mouse button down on the top left corner where the annotation should start, drag the mouse to the bottom right corner where the annotation should end, and release the left mouse button to add the annotation.
- You can always add a new annotation by double clicking. This is particularly helpful when adding an annotation on top (inside) of a current annotation.
- When an annotation is highlighted (by hovering the mouse cursor over the annotation), the bounding box will turn orange and the following actions will become available:
- Translation - by dragging the mouse an annotation can be moved. An annotation can also be moved (when highlighted) by using the arrow keys on the keyboard. When using the arrow keys, an annotation will be moved 1 pixel at a time. When using the arrow keys to move an annotation and the Shift key is held, the annotation is moved 10 pixels at a time.
- Scaling - by dragging one of the 8 anchors an annotation can be resized. If the Shift key is held, the annotation's aspect ratio is preserved.
- Rotation - by dragging on the rotation anchor an annotation can be rotated. If the Shift key is held, the annotation's theta is constrained to increments of 45 degrees.
- Deletion - by clicking on the ×button an annotation can be deleted. An annotation can also be deleted (when highlighted) by hitting the Esc key or the k key.
- Send to Back - when an annotation is highlighted, pressing the b key will send the annotation to the "back". This is useful (or required) when a large annotation is covering a smaller annotation and makes highlighting the smaller annotation difficult (or impossible).
- Always annotate the animals regardless of viewpoint.
- If an image has no animals in it, simply hit Accept with no annotations, because the image should have no annotations.
- A new, in-progress annotation selection can be cancelled by pressing the Esc key or the k key.
- The Space key deletes the image and does not save any viewpoint information for that image. The Enter key submits all current annotations.
- Review annotations as fast as you can while maintaining perfect accuracy.
- To bring up these instructions again, click on the button
- Known issues:
- Scaling an annotation that has been rotated does not behave as expected
- Translating an annotation that has been rotated does not respect the containment region correctly
- When resizing the left edge of an annotation and the cursor moves off of the image, the annotation is resized
A bounding box needs to cover the entire animal without being too large or too small - the green bounding box is ideal. The big red bounding box has too much background and can be fit tighter around the animal, whereas the two small red bounding boxes are losing information that is important (information about the top of the animal's head and its legs). The orange bounding box is slightly too large, but is also a border-line acceptable bounding box. [7]
Keypoint descriptors. The oval regions are extracted within the bounding box based on how much useful information the algorithm can find. As we can see, the keypoints really respond the zebra's face, legs and mid body. The entire body of the zebra produces good, usable, informative keypoints. The background, however, produces small, and not very important keypoints. In order to be the most productive reviewer, always keep in mind what information these keypoints are trying to capture. [7]
Assigning bounding boxes around an animal with severe occlusion can be very challenging. The green bounding boxes are obvious, but the orange and red examples can be harder to decide. For this example, all of the orange bounding boxes are border-line acceptable cases. The red bounding boxes, however, do not have very much usable information. This can be a very difficult decision and the image may have to be reviewed with the help of a graduate student. For this example, all of the red bounding boxes should be excluded because they are too small or do not capture enough information to be useful. [7]
Whenever there is large overlap in animals that share roughly the same bounding box, always add a bounding box for each animal. Even if the resulting bounding boxes are almost duplicates, it gives WBIA a useful notion of how many animals of a particular species are in the image. For this example, both bounding boxes are necessary. [7]
In the event of a significant occlusion of a portion of the animal, try your best to cover as much of the visible portions of the animal as if the occlusion did not exist. This occlusion can be due to other animals, a bush, tall grass, or (in this example) a tree bisecting the entire animal. In this example, two bounding boxes would be incorrect because it would signify that there are two animals in the image. [8]
Image Credits
[1] http://de.wikipedia.org/
[2] http://www.fauna-flora.org/
[3] http://www.napha-namibia.com/
[4] http://www.girrytrust.org/
[5] http://www.wanderlustasap.com/
[6] Tanzanian Images / Getty Images / iStockphoto
[7] http://en.wikipedia.org/
[8] http://talk2theanimals.net/
New Features for Detection Reviewing
We want to capture a simple concept that can sometimes manifest itself in very complicated ways. In particular, we ask the following question:
- Is of a distinguishable individual (i.e. free-standing or clearly in the foreground of a heard)
- Is relatively large and has decent resolution
- Is commonly located near the center of the image
- Is in focus and not blurry
- Is a part of an overlapping herd or group of animals
- Is relatively small and/or contains few pixels
- Is out of focus and is blurry (from being too far from or too close to the camera relative to the plane that is in focus)
- Is located around the edges of the image
- Is significantly (greater than 25%) occluded by other animals or objects
- Is significantly (greater than 25%) off the edge of the frame of the image
- Annotation of Interest ≠ is identifiable by any particular algorithm
- Annotation of Interest ≠ is of a desired quality
- Annotation of Interest ≠ is of a desired species
- Annotation of Interest ≠ is of a desired viewpoint
- Annotation of Interest ≠ is free of photo-bombs
Remember, not all images are guaranteed to have at least one annotation. Furthermore, for an image with a single annotation, it is not guaranteed that the solo annotation should always be an AoI.
The single AoI in this image (again, in blue) is smaller by area than in the first example. The blue annotation is in focus and clearly distinguishable, which makes it an AoI for this image. The four additional orange annotations near the top of the image are not AoIs: they are small and out of focus.
- Find the single best AoI in the image, if it exists. It is important that the best AoI is in focus and has the easiest argument for being an AoI. (For example, the right of the two blue bounding boxes in Example 3 should be chosen as the best AoI because the zebra is more central in the image and it slightly occludes the zebra in the left blue bounding box.) If no such AoI exists, continue to the next image without selecting any AoIs.
- Determine the "focus plane" that this best AoI lives within. The focus plane can be decided based on the regions of sharpness and blurriness within the image. This theoretical plane is the depth within the image that the best AoI occupies in 3D space. For example, all other objects that are also within this plane should be all have the same focus and depth within the image as the best AoI. Note that not all focus planes will be the same width; an image taken with a larger camera aperture opening will give a narrower depth of field.
- Any annotation within the focus plane should be considered as a candidate AoI and must be reviewed individually. Any annotation that satisfies the AoI properties and is also within the focus plane of the best AoIs should also be marked as an AoI.
- Any annotation that is not within the focus plane should not be considered an AoI.
- Deciding the single, best AoI in this example is subjective. The most in-focus and free-standing annotations are in the center of the image (marked in blue). For the purpose of discussion, however, we can pick the blue annotation on the right as the best AoI because it is (slightly) more central to the image.
- With the best AoI selected, the depth the focus plane for this image can be decided. This example image can be conceptually broken up into three distinct depth zones relative to the camera: in-front of the focus plane, the focus plane itself, and behind the focus plane. Note that not every image has these three distinct depth zones and some images may only have one. For this example, the bottom 1/3 of the image is in-front of the focus plane, the focus plane occupies the middle 1/3, and the top 1/3 is behind the focus plane.
- With the three focus zones defined, there are three annotations (the two blue and the cutoff orange annotation off the left border) that are within the focus plane. Next, each box is individually checked against the AoI properties. The left blue annotation is a good AoI, but the left-most orange annotation is largely cutoff and should not be considered as an AoI.
- The 4 annotations at the bottom of the image fall outside (in-front) of the focus plane and are therefore should not be considered as AoIs. The 4 annotations at the top of the image also fall outside (behind) of the focus plane and should similarly not be considered as AoIs.
- Is significantly (greater than 50%) occluded by other animals or objects
- Is significantly (greater than 50%) off the edge of the frame of the image
- Is significantly (greater than 50%) occluded by other animals or objects
- Is significantly (greater than 50%) off the edge of the frame of the image