ArtELingo: A Million Emotion Annotations of WikiArt with Emphasis on Diversity over Language and Culture
Mohamed, Youssef, Abdelfattah, Mohamed, Alhuwaider, Shyma, Li, Feifan, Zhang, Xiangliang, Church, Kenneth Ward, Elhoseiny, Mohamed
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
This paper introduces ArtELingo, a new benchmark and dataset, designed to encourage work on diversity across languages and cultures. Following ArtEmis, a collection of 80k artworks from WikiArt with 0.45M emotion labels and English-only captions, ArtELingo adds another 0.79M annotations in Arabic and Chinese, plus 4.8K in Spanish to evaluate "cultural-transfer" performance. More than 51K artworks have 5 annotations or more in 3 languages. This diversity makes it possible to study similarities and differences across languages and cultures. Further, we investigate captioning tasks, and find diversity improves the performance of baseline models. ArtELingo is publicly available at https://www.artelingo.org/ with standard splits and baseline models. We hope our work will help ease future research on multilinguality and culturally-aware AI.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Nov-19-2022
- Country:
- South America (0.04)
- North America
- Dominican Republic (0.04)
- Central America (0.04)
- United States
- Minnesota > Hennepin County
- Minneapolis (0.14)
- Louisiana > Orleans Parish
- New Orleans (0.04)
- Minnesota > Hennepin County
- Europe
- Czechia > Prague (0.04)
- Spain > Catalonia
- Barcelona Province > Barcelona (0.04)
- Middle East > Malta
- Port Region > Southern Harbour District > Valletta (0.04)
- Belgium > Brussels-Capital Region
- Brussels (0.04)
- Asia
- Singapore (0.04)
- Middle East (0.04)
- China > Hong Kong (0.04)
- Japan
- Kyūshū & Okinawa > Kyūshū
- Miyazaki Prefecture > Miyazaki (0.04)
- Honshū > Kansai
- Osaka Prefecture > Osaka (0.04)
- Kyūshū & Okinawa > Kyūshū
- Africa > Middle East
- Egypt (0.04)
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.50)
- Technology: