Publication | Closed Access
The American Sign Language Lexicon Video Dataset
159
Citations
20
References
2008
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringPrinted DictionariesVideo RetrievalCorpus LinguisticsVideo InterpretationSpeech RecognitionNatural Language ProcessingImage AnalysisVisual GroundingPattern RecognitionLanguage StudiesGesture ProcessingMachine TranslationAmerican Sign LanguageMachine VisionVision Language ModelVideo UnderstandingGesture RecognitionComputer VisionSign LanguageComputer Vision SystemAmerican Sign Language LinguisticsLinguistics
The lack of a written representation for American sign language (ASL) makes it difficult to do something as commonplace as looking up an unknown word in a dictionary. The majority of printed dictionaries organize ASL signs (represented in drawings or pictures) based on their nearest English translation; so unless one already knows the meaning of a sign, dictionary look-up is not a simple proposition. In this paper we introduce the ASL lexicon video dataset, a large and expanding public dataset containing video sequences of thousands of distinct ASL signs, as well as annotations of those sequences, including start/end frames and class label of every sign. This dataset is being created as part of a project to develop a computer vision system that allows users to look up the meaning of an ASL sign. At the same time, the dataset can be useful for benchmarking a variety of computer vision and machine learning methods designed for learning and/or indexing a large number of visual classes, and especially approaches for analyzing gestures and human communication.
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