We introduce MABe22, a large-scale, multi-agent video and trajectory benchmark to assess the quality of learned behavior representations. This dataset is collected from a variety of biology experiments, and includes triplets of interacting mice (4.7 million frames video+pose tracking data, 10 million frames pose only), symbiotic beetle-ant interactions (10 million frames video data), and groups of interacting flies (4.4 million frames of pose tracking data). Accompanying these data, we introduce a panel of real-life downstream analysis tasks to assess the quality of learned representations by evaluating how well they preserve information about the experimental conditions (e.g. strain, time of day, optogenetic stimulation) and animal behavior. We test multiple state-of-the-art self-supervised video and trajectory representation learning methods to demonstrate the use of our benchmark, revealing that methods developed using human action datasets do not fully translate to animal datasets. We hope that our benchmark and dataset encourage a broader exploration of behavior representation learning methods across species and settings.
MABe22: A Multi-Species Multi-Task Benchmark for Learned Representations of Behavior
A large-scale multi-agent video and trajectory benchmark assesses learned behavior representations across different species and experimental conditions.
- Year
- 2022
- Venue
- arXiv 2022
- Authors
- 23
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2207.10553ARXIV-DEFAULT
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23Yisong YueJennifer J. SunMarkus MarksHeng JiaPietro PeronaAnn KennedyAndrew UlmerDipam ChakrabortyBrian GeutherEdward HayesVivek KumarSebastian OleszkoZachary PartridgeMilan PeelmanAlice RobieCatherine E. SchretterKeith SheppardChao SunParam UttarwarJulian M. WagnerEric WernerJoseph ParkerKristin Branson