Skip to content

tum-traffic-dataset/tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

14 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

🔧 TUM Traffic Dataset Development Kit 🔨

🚀 The TUM Traffic Dataset (TUMTraf) is based on roadside sensor data from the 3 km long Providentia Test Field for Autonomous Driving near Munich in Germany. The dataset includes anonymized and precision-timestamped multi-modal sensor and object data in high resolution, covering a variety of traffic situations. We provide camera and LiDAR frames from overhead gantry bridges with the corresponding objects labeled with 3D bounding boxes and track IDs. The dataset contains the following subsets:

  • [DOWNLOAD] TUMTraf A9 Highway Dataset (TUMTraf-A9)
  • [DOWNLOAD] TUMTraf Intersection Dataset (TUMTraf-I)
  • [DOWNLOAD] TUMTraf Event Dataset (TUMTraf-E)
  • [DOWNLOAD] TUMTraf V2X Cooperative Perception Dataset (TUMTraf-V2X)

✨ Overview

The Development Kit provides a dataset loader for images, point clouds, labels and calibration data. The calibration loader reads the intrinsic and extrinsic calibration information. The projection matrix is then used to visualize the 2D and 3D labels on cameras images.

📢 News

🔥 Release History

The TUM Traffic Dataset contains the following releases:

  • 2024-XX: Planning to release R06 TUMTraf Accident Dataset (TUMTraf-A)
  • 2024-02: Released R05 TUMTraf Intersection Extended Dataset (TUMTraf-IE)
  • 2024-02: Released R04 TUMTraf V2X Cooperative Perception Dataset (TUMTraf-V2X)
  • 2023-12: Released R03 TUMTraf Event Dataset (TUMTraf-E)
  • 2023-06: Released R02 TUMTraf Intersection Dataset (TUMTraf-I)
  • 2022-07: Released R01 TUMTraf A9 Highway Extended Dataset (TUMTraf-A9E)
  • 2022-04: Released R00 TUMTraf A9 Highway Dataset (TUMTraf-A9)

💾 Installation

Create an anaconda environment:

conda create --name tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit python=3.9
conda activate tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit

Install the following dependencies:

conda install -c conda-forge fvcore
conda install -c conda-forge iopath

In case, you are using NVIDIA CUDA <11.6:

curl -LO https://github.com/NVIDIA/cub/archive/1.10.0.tar.gz
tar -xzf 1.10.0.tar.gz
export CUB_HOME=$PWD/cub-1.10.0

Install PyTorch3D:

pip3 install --no-index --no-cache-dir pytorch3d -f https://dl.fbaipublicfiles.com/pytorch3d/packaging/wheels/py39_cu113_pyt1121/download.html

Further information is available here: https://github.com/facebookresearch/pytorch3d/blob/main/INSTALL.md

Install requirements:

pip3 install -r requirements.txt
pip3 install --upgrade git+https://github.com/klintan/pypcd.git

Add dev kit's root directory to PYTHONPATH:

export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:/home/<USERNAME>/tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/

📃 Dataset Structure

1) TUM Traffic A9 Highway Dataset (TUMTraf-A9)

The TUM Traffic A9 Highway Dataset (TUMTraf-A9) contains 5 subsets (s00 to s04) and is structured in the following way:

The first 3 sets tum_traffic_a9_r00_s00, tum_traffic_a9_r00_s01 and tum_traffic_a9_r00_s02 contain image data (.png) from roadside cameras with corresponding label files (stored in OpenLABEL .json format) and calibration data:

├── tum_traffic_a9_dataset_r00_s00
│   ├── _images
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_16mm
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_50mm
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_16mm
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_50mm
│   ├── _labels
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_16mm
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_50mm
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_16mm
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_50mm
│   ├── _calibration
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_16mm.json
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_50mm.json
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_16mm.json
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_50mm.json

The last two sets tum_traffic_a9_r00_s03, and tum_traffic_a9_r00_s04 contain point cloud data (.pcd) from roadside LiDARs with corresponding label files (stored in OpenLABEL .json format) and calibration data:

├── tum_traffic_a9_dataset_r00_s03
│   ├── _points
│   ├── _labels

2) TUM Traffic A9 Highway Extended Dataset (TUMTraf-A9E)

The extended TUM Traffic A9 Highway Dataset additionally contains 3 subsets (s01 to s03) and is structured in the following way:

Example: tum_traffic_a9_dataset_r01_s01:

├── tum_traffic_a9_dataset_r01_s03
│   ├── _images
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_16mm
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_50mm
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_16mm
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_50mm
│   ├── _labels
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_16mm
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_50mm
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_16mm
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_50mm
│   ├── _calibration
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_16mm.json
│   │   ├── s040_camera_basler_north_50mm.json
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_16mm.json
│   │   ├── s050_camera_basler_south_50mm.json

3) TUM Traffic Intersection Dataset (TUMTraf-I)

The TUM Traffic Intersection Dataset (TUMTraf-I) contains 4 subsets (s01 to s04) and is structured in the following way:

├── tum_traffic_intersection_dataset_r02_s01
│   ├── _images
│   │   ├── s110_camera_basler_south1_8mm
│   │   ├── s110_camera_basler_south2_8mm
│   ├── _labels
│   │   ├── s110_lidar_ouster_south
│   │   ├── s110_lidar_ouster_north
│   ├── _points_clouds
│   │   ├── s110_lidar_ouster_south
│   │   ├── s110_lidar_ouster_north
├── tum_traffic_intersection_dataset_r02_s02
│   ├── ...
├── tum_traffic_intersection_dataset_r02_s03
│   ├── ...
├── tum_traffic_intersection_dataset_r02_s04
│   ├── ...

4) TUM Traffic Event Dataset (TUMTraf-E)

The TUM Traffic Event Dataset (TUMTraf-E) contains 1 subsets (s01 to s04) and is structured in the following way:

├── train
│   ├── _images
│   │   ├── eb
│   │   ├── eb_transformed
│   │   ├── rgb
│   │   ├── rgb_eb_combined
│   ├── _labels
│   │   ├── ...
├── val
│   ├── ...
├── test
│   ├── ...
├── calibration
│   ├── extrinsic
│   ├── intrinsic

5) TUM Traffic V2X Cooperative Perception Dataset (TUMTraf-V2X)

The TUM Traffic V2X Cooperative Perception Dataset (TUMTraf-V2X) contains 10 sequences (s01 to s10) and is structured in the following way:

├── train
│   ├── _images
│   │   ├── s110_camera_basler_south1_8mm
│   │   ├── s110_camera_basler_south2_8mm
│   │   ├── s110_camera_basler_east_8mm
│   │   ├── s110_camera_basler_north_8mm
│   │   ├── vehicle_camera_basler_16mm
│   ├── _labels_point_clouds
│   │   ├── s110_lidar_ouster_south_and_vehicle_lidar_robosense_registered
│   ├── _points_clouds
│   │   ├── s110_lidar_ouster_south
│   │   ├── s110_lidar_ouster_south_and_vehicle_lidar_robosense_registered
│   │   ├── vehicle_lidar_robosense
├── val
│   ├── ...
├── test
│   ├── ...

🎉 Label Visualization

1.1 Visualization of labels in camera images

The following visualization script can be used to draw the 2D and/or 3D labels on camera frames:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/visualization/visualize_image_with_3d_boxes.py --camera_id s110_camera_basler_south1_8mm \
                                                                                      --lidar_id s110_lidar_ouster_south \
                                                                                      --input_folder_path_images <IMAGE_FOLDER_PATH> \
                                                                                      --input_folder_path_point_clouds <POINT_CLOUD_FOLDER_PATH> \
                                                                                      --input_folder_path_labels <LABEL_FOLDER_PATH> \
                                                                                      --viz_mode [box2d,mask,box3d,point_cloud,track_history] \
                                                                                      --viz_color_mode [by_category,by_track_id] \
                                                                                      --output_folder_path_visualization <OUTPUT_FOLDER_PATH> \
                                                                                      --detections_coordinate_system_origin [s110_base,s110_lidar_ouster_south] \
                                                                                      --labels_coordinate_system_origin [s110_base,s110_lidar_ouster_south]
Visualization south2 in camera:--viz_mode box3d,point_cloud Visualization south1 camera: --vis_mode box2d,box3d,mask,track_history

1.2 Visualization of labels in LiDAR point cloud scans

The script below draws labels on a LiDAR frame:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/visualization/visualize_point_cloud_with_3d_boxes.py --input_folder_path_point_clouds <INPUT_FOLDER_PATH_POINT_CLOUDS> \
                                                                                          --input_folder_path_labels <INPUT_FOLDER_PATH_LABELS> \
                                                                                          --save_visualization_results \
                                                                                          --output_folder_path_visualization_results <OUTPUT_FOLDER_PATH_VISUALIZATION_RESULTS> \
                                                                                          --show_hd_map
Bird's Eye View Side View

✴️️ Data Split

The script below splits the dataset into train and val:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/preprocessing/create_train_val_split.py --input_folder_path_dataset <INPUT_FOLDER_PATH_DATASET> \
                                                                               --input_folder_path_data_split_root <INPUT_FOLDER_PATH_DATA_SPLIT_ROOT>

Example:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/preprocessing/create_train_val_split.py --input_folder_path_dataset /home/<USERNAME>/tum_traffic_intersection_dataset_r02 \
                                                                               --input_folder_path_data_split_root <INPUT_FOLDER_PATH_DATA_SPLIT_ROOT> 

☁️ Point Cloud Registration

The following script can be used to register point clouds from two different LiDARs:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/registration/point_cloud_registration.py --folder_path_point_cloud_source <INPUT_FOLDER_PATH_POINT_CLOUDS_SOURCE> \
                                                             --folder_path_point_cloud_target <INPUT_FOLDER_PATH_POINT_CLOUDS_TARGET> \
                                                             --save_registered_point_clouds \
                                                             --output_folder_path_registered_point_clouds <OUTPUT_FOLDER_PATH_POINT_CLOUDS>

registered_point_cloud

🧹 Data Cleaning

A LiDAR preprocessing module reduces noise in point cloud scans:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/preprocessing/remove_noise_from_point_clouds.py --input_folder_path_point_clouds <INPUT_FOLDER_PATH_POINT_CLOUDS> \
                                                                                       --output_folder_path_point_clouds <OUTPUT_FOLDER_PATH_POINT_CLOUDS>

noise_removal

⚡ Label Conversion

In addition, a data converter/exporter enables you to convert the labels from OpenLABEL format into other formats like KITTI, nuScenes, OpenPCDet, COCO or YOLO and the other way round.

OpenLABEL to YOLO

The following script converts the OpenLABEL labels into YOLO labels:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/converter/conversion_openlabel_to_yolo.py --input_folder_path_labels <INPUT_FOLDER_PATH_LABELS> \
                                                                                 --output_folder_path_labels <OUTPUT_FOLDER_PATH_LABELS>

OpenLABEL to KITTI

The following script converts the OpenLABEL labels into KITTI labels:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/converter/conversion_openlabel_to_kitti.py --root-dir <DATASET_ROOT_DIR> \
                                                                                  --out-dir <OUTPUT_FOLDER_PATH_LABELS> \
                                                                                  --file-name-format [name,num]

OpenLABEL to nuScenes

The following script converts the OpenLABEL labels into nuScenes labels:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/converter/conversion_openlabel_to_nuscenes.py --root-path <DATASET_ROOT_DIR> \
                                                                                     --out-dir <OUTPUT_FOLDER_PATH_LABELS>
                                                                                 

⭐ Evaluation

Finally, some model evaluation scripts are provided to benchmark your models on the TUMTraf Dataset.

3D Object Detection Evaluation

Usage:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/eval/evaluation.py --camera_id <CAMERA_ID> --file_path_calibration_data <FILE_PATH_CALIBRATION_DATA> --folder_path_ground_truth /path/to/ground_truth --folder_path_predictions /path/to/predictions --object_min_points 5 [--use_superclasses] --prediction_type lidar3d_supervised --prediction_format openlabel --use_ouster_lidar_only

Example:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/eval/evaluation.py --camera_id s110_camera_basler_south1_8mm --file_path_calibration_data /home/user/tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/calib/s110_camera_basler_south1_8mm.json --folder_path_ground_truth /home/user/tum-traffic-intersection-dataset/test/labels_point_clouds --folder_path_predictions /home/user/tum-traffic-intersection-dataset/test/predictions --object_min_points 5 --prediction_type lidar3d_supervised --prediction_format openlabel --use_ouster_lidar_only

Data format of predictions can be KITTI or OpenLABEL.

  1. KITTI format: One .txt file per frame with the following content (one line per predicted object): class x y z l w h rotation_z.
    Example:
Car 16.0162 -28.9316 -6.45308 2.21032 3.74579 1.18687 2.75634
Car 17.926 -19.4624 -7.0266 1.03365 0.97037 0.435425 0.82854
  1. OpenLABEL format: One .json file per frame.

Example call to compare one ground truth file with one prediction file visually:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/eval/evaluation.py --folder_path_ground_truth ~/tum_traffic_a9_dataset_r01_test/labels/1651673050_454284855_s110_lidar_ouster_south.json \
                                                          --folder_path_predictions ~/predictions/1651673050_454284855_s110_lidar_ouster_south.json \ 
                                                          --object_min_points 5

Example call to evaluate the whole set if ground truth bounding boxes enclose more than 5 points:

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/eval/evaluation.py --folder_path_ground_truth ~/tum_traffic_dataset_r01_test_set/labels \
                                                          --folder_path_predictions ~/detections \
                                                          --object_min_points 5

Final result when evaluating the InfraDet3D camera-LiDAR fusion model on the TUM Traffic Intersection Dataset (test set):

Class Occurrence (pred/gt) Precision Recall AP@0.1
CAR 2018/1003 71.75 87.33 71.64
TRUCK 228/203 91.20 85.03 91.03
TRAILER 116/132 73.48 71.06 72.95
VAN 55/67 76.95 70.26 76.48
MOTORCYCLE 27/31 82.72 70.71 82.37
BUS 34/32 99.93 100.00 99.93
PEDESTRIAN 144/128 31.37 25.49 30.00
BICYCLE 177/67 36.02 80.77 35.93
EMERGENCY_VEHICLE 1/0 0.00 0.00 0.00
OTHER 1/4 25.49 6.37 24.00
Total (10 classes) 2801/1704 58.89 59.70 58.43
Total (6 classes) 2628/1464 68.83 74.89 68.48

The PointPillars model was trained on registered point clouds from 2 LiDARs with boxes that contain a minimum of 5 points. For the camera modality (MonoDet3D) only Car and Bicycle detections were processed.

2D Object Detection Evaluation

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/eval/evaluation_2d_ultralytics_mAP.py --image_folder_path <IMAGE_FOLDER_PATH> \
                                                                             --path_to_ground_truth <PATH_TO_GROUND_TRUTH> \
                                                                             --path_to_predictions <PATH_TO_PREDICTIONS> \
                                                                             --prediction_format openlabel \
                                                                             --plots \
                                                                             --save_dir <SAVE_DIR>

2D Segmentation Evaluation

python tum-traffic-dataset-dev-kit/src/eval/evaluation_yolo_seg_models.py --yolo_version yolov8 \
                                                                          --conf 0.25 \
                                                                          --imgsz 640 \
                                                                          --path_to_model_weight <PATH_TO_MODEL_WEIGHT> \
                                                                          --data_yaml <DATA_YAML_PATH> \
                                                                          --show_meanIoU

🙌 Acknowledgements

The dev-kit was created in the context of the Providentia++ project funded by the German Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure (BMVI) and the AUTOtech.agil project funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). The authors would like to thank the project partners for their support.

📝 Citation

@inproceedings{zimmermann20193d,
  title={3D BAT: A Semi-Automatic, Web-based 3D Annotation Toolbox for Full-Surround, Multi-Modal Data Streams},
  author={Zimmer, Walter and Rangesh, Akshay and Trivedi, Mohan M.},
  booktitle={2019 IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium (IV)},
  pages={1--8},
  year={2019},
  organization={IEEE}
}

@inproceedings{cress2022a9,
  author={Creß, Christian and Zimmer, Walter and Strand, Leah and Fortkord, Maximilian and Dai, Siyi and Lakshminarasimhan, Venkatnarayanan and Knoll, Alois},
  booktitle={2022 IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium (IV)}, 
  title={A9-Dataset: Multi-Sensor Infrastructure-Based Dataset for Mobility Research}, 
  year={2022},
  volume={},
  number={},
  pages={965-970},
  doi={10.1109/IV51971.2022.9827401}
}

@inproceedings{zimmer2023tumtraf,
  title={TUMTraf Intersection Dataset: All You Need for Urban 3D Camera-LiDAR Roadside Perception [Best Student Paper Award]},
  author={Zimmer, Walter and Cre{\ss}, Christian and Nguyen, Huu Tung and Knoll, Alois C},
  publisher = {IEEE},
  booktitle={2023 IEEE Intelligent Transportation Systems ITSC},
  year={2023}
}

@inproceedings{zimmer2024tumtrafv2x,
  title={TUMTraf V2X Cooperative Perception Dataset},
  author={Zimmer, Walter and Wardana, Gerhard Arya and Sritharan, Suren and Zhou, Xingcheng and Song, Rui and Knoll, Alois C.},
  publisher={IEEE/CVF},
  booktitle={2024 IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR)},
  year={2024}
}

📜 License

The TUM Traffic Dataset Development Kit scripts are released under MIT license as found in the license file. The TUM Traffic Dataset (TUMTraf) dataset itself is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). By downloading the dataset you agree to the terms of this license.

✉️ Contact

Please feel free to contact us with any questions, suggestions or comments:

Walter Zimmer (walter.zimmer@tum.de)
Christian Creß (christian.cress@tum.de)
Xingcheng Zhou (xingcheng.zhou@tum.de)