Author Archives: Ankit Das - Page 2
In recent times, Language Modelling has gained momentum in the field of Natural Language Processing. So, it is essential for us to think of new models and strategies for quicker and better preparation of language models. Nonetheless, because of the complexity of language, we have to deal with some of the problems in the dataset. With an increase in the size of the dataset, there is an increase in the normal number of times a word shows up in that dataset.
The post Datasets for Language Modelling in NLP using TensorFlow and PyTorch appeared first on Analytics India Magazine.
Internet Movie Database (IMDb) is an online information base committed to a wide range of data about a wide scope of film substance, for example, movies, TV and web-based streaming shows, etc. The IMDb dataset contains 50,000 surveys, permitting close to 30 audits for each film.
The post Guide to IMDb Movie Dataset With Python Implementation appeared first on Analytics India Magazine.
Moment in Time is one of the biggest human-commented video datasets catching visual and discernible short occasions created by people, creatures, articles and nature. It was developed in 2018 by the researchers: Mathew Monfort, Alex Andonian, Bolei Zhou and Kandan Ramakrishnan. The dataset comprises more than 1,000,000 3-second recordings relating to 339 unique action words
The post Moment in Time: The Biggest Short Video Dataset For Data Scientists appeared first on Analytics India Magazine.
HMDB-51 is an activity video information dataset with 51 activity classifications, which altogether contain around 7,000 physically clarified cuts separated from an assortment of sources going from digitized motion pictures to YouTube.
The post One Of The Most Benchmarked Human Motion Recognition Dataset In Deep Learning appeared first on Analytics India Magazine.
ActivityNet is an enormous dataset that covers exercises that are generally pertinent to how people invest their energy in their everyday living. It was developed in 2015 by the researchers: Fabian Caba Heilbron, Victor Escorcia, Bernard Ghanemand Juan Carlos Niebles1. ActivityNet gives tests from 203 movement classes with a normal of 137 untrimmed recordings per class and 1.41 movement occurrences per video, for an aggregate of 849 video hours.
The post Have you Heard About the Video Dataset of Day to day Human Activities appeared first on Analytics India Magazine.
Kinetics datasets are taken from Youtube recordings. The activities are human focussed and cover a wide scope of classes including human-object communications, for example mowing lawn, washing dishes, humans Actions e.g. drawing, drinking, laughing, pumping fist; human-human interactions, e.g. hugging, kissing, shaking hands.
The post Deep Dive Into Kinetics: An Intensive Dataset On Action Classification Developed By Deepmind appeared first on Analytics India Magazine.
UCF-101 dataset has 101 actions and 13320 clips of human actions, collected from youtube were first introduced in 2012 by researchers: Khurram Soomro, Amir Roshan Zamir and Mubarak Shah of Center for Research in Computer Vision, Orlando, FL 32816, USA. The clips in the action class are divided into 25 groups. Each group contains 4-7 clips. Clips in each group share some common features like background or actor.
The post How To Use UCF101, The Largest Dataset Of Human Actions appeared first on Analytics India Magazine.
The Kaplan–Meier estimator is an estimator used in survival analysis by using the lifetime data. In medical research, it is frequently used to gauge the part of patients living for a specific measure of time after treatment.
The post Quick Guide To Survival Analysis Using Kaplan Meier Curve (With Python Code) appeared first on Analytics India Magazine.
The Kaplan–Meier estimator is an estimator used in survival analysis by using the lifetime data. In medical research, it is frequently used to gauge the part of patients living for a specific measure of time after treatment.
The post Quick Guide To Survival Analysis Using Kaplan Meier Curve (With Python Code) appeared first on Analytics India Magazine.
The Kaplan–Meier estimator is an estimator used in survival analysis by using the lifetime data. In medical research, it is frequently used to gauge the part of patients living for a specific measure of time after treatment.
The post Quick Guide To Survival Analysis Using Kaplan Meier Curve (With Python Code) appeared first on Analytics India Magazine.