FigureQA: An annotated figure dataset for visual reasoning
- Samira Ebrahimi Kahou ,
- Adam Atkinson ,
- Vincent Michalski ,
- Akos Kadar ,
- Adam Trischler ,
- Yoshua Bengio
Visually grounded interaction and language workshop, NIPS 2017 |
We introduce FigureQA, a visual reasoning corpus of over one million question-answer pairs grounded in over 100,000 images. The images are synthetic, scientific-style figures from five classes: line plots, dot-line plots, vertical and horizontal bar graphs, and pie charts. We formulate our reasoning task by generating questions from 15 templates; questions concern various relationships between plot elements and examine characteristics like the maximum, the minimum, area-under-the-curve, smoothness, and intersection. To resolve, such questions often require reference to multiple plot elements and synthesis of information distributed spatially throughout a figure. To facilitate the training of machine learning systems, the corpus also includes side data that can be used to formulate auxiliary objectives. In particular, we provide the numerical data used to generate each figure as well as bounding-box annotations for all plot elements. We study the proposed visual reasoning task by training several models, including the recently proposed Relation Network as strong baseline. Preliminary results indicate that the task poses a significant machine learning challenge. We envision FigureQA as a first step towards developing models that can intuitively recognize patterns from visual representations of data.
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FigureQA Dataset
March 7, 2018
Answering questions about a given image is a difficult task, requiring both an understanding of the image and the accompanying query. Microsoft Montreal's FigureQA dataset introduces a new visual reasoning task for research, specific to graphical plots and figures. The task comes with an additional twist: all of the questions are relational, requiring the comparison of several or all elements of the underlying plot.