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comments | description | keywords |
---|---|---|
true | Learn how to format your dataset for training YOLO models with Ultralytics YOLO format using our concise tutorial and example YAML files. | pose estimation, datasets, supported formats, YAML file, object class index, keypoints, ultralytics YOLO format |
Pose Estimation Datasets Overview
Supported Dataset Formats
Ultralytics YOLO format
** Label Format **
The dataset format used for training YOLO pose models is as follows:
- One text file per image: Each image in the dataset has a corresponding text file with the same name as the image file and the ".txt" extension.
- One row per object: Each row in the text file corresponds to one object instance in the image.
- Object information per row: Each row contains the following information about the object instance:
- Object class index: An integer representing the class of the object (e.g., 0 for person, 1 for car, etc.).
- Object center coordinates: The x and y coordinates of the center of the object, normalized to be between 0 and 1.
- Object width and height: The width and height of the object, normalized to be between 0 and 1.
- Object keypoint coordinates: The keypoints of the object, normalized to be between 0 and 1.
Here is an example of the label format for pose estimation task:
Format with Dim = 2
<class-index> <x> <y> <width> <height> <px1> <py1> <px2> <py2> ... <pxn> <pyn>
Format with Dim = 3
<class-index> <x> <y> <width> <height> <px1> <py1> <p1-visibility> <px2> <py2> <p2-visibility> <pxn> <pyn> <p2-visibility>
In this format, <class-index>
is the index of the class for the object,<x> <y> <width> <height>
are coordinates of boudning box, and <px1> <py1> <px2> <py2> ... <pxn> <pyn>
are the pixel coordinates of the keypoints. The coordinates are separated by spaces.
** Dataset file format **
The Ultralytics framework uses a YAML file format to define the dataset and model configuration for training Detection Models. Here is an example of the YAML format used for defining a detection dataset:
train: <path-to-training-images>
val: <path-to-validation-images>
nc: <number-of-classes>
names: [<class-1>, <class-2>, ..., <class-n>]
# Keypoints
kpt_shape: [num_kpts, dim] # number of keypoints, number of dims (2 for x,y or 3 for x,y,visible)
flip_idx: [n1, n2 ... , n(num_kpts)]
The train
and val
fields specify the paths to the directories containing the training and validation images, respectively.
The nc
field specifies the number of object classes in the dataset.
The names
field is a list of the names of the object classes. The order of the names should match the order of the object class indices in the YOLO dataset files.
NOTE: Either nc
or names
must be defined. Defining both are not mandatory
Alternatively, you can directly define class names like this:
names:
0: person
1: bicycle
(Optional) if the points are symmetric then need flip_idx, like left-right side of human or face. For example let's say there're five keypoints of facial landmark: [left eye, right eye, nose, left point of mouth, right point of mouse], and the original index is [0, 1, 2, 3, 4], then flip_idx is [1, 0, 2, 4, 3].(just exchange the left-right index, i.e 0-1 and 3-4, and do not modify others like nose in this example)
** Example **
train: data/train/
val: data/val/
nc: 2
names: ['person', 'car']
# Keypoints
kpt_shape: [17, 3] # number of keypoints, number of dims (2 for x,y or 3 for x,y,visible)
flip_idx: [0, 2, 1, 4, 3, 6, 5, 8, 7, 10, 9, 12, 11, 14, 13, 16, 15]
Usage
!!! example ""
=== "Python"
```python
from ultralytics import YOLO
# Load a model
model = YOLO('yolov8n-pose.pt') # load a pretrained model (recommended for training)
# Train the model
model.train(data='coco128-pose.yaml', epochs=100, imgsz=640)
```
=== "CLI"
```bash
# Start training from a pretrained *.pt model
yolo detect train data=coco128-pose.yaml model=yolov8n-pose.pt epochs=100 imgsz=640
```
Supported Datasets
TODO
Port or Convert label formats
COCO dataset format to YOLO format
from ultralytics.yolo.data.converter import convert_coco
convert_coco(labels_dir='../coco/annotations/', use_keypoints=True)