Are you sure you want to delete this access key?
comments | description | keywords |
---|---|---|
true | Test and debug segmentation models on small, versatile COCO8-Seg instance segmentation dataset, now available for use with YOLOv8 and Ultralytics HUB. | Ultralytics, COCO8-Seg, instance segmentation dataset, segmentation models, new detection approaches, COCO train 2017 set |
Ultralytics COCO8-Seg is a small, but versatile instance segmentation dataset composed of the first 8 images of the COCO train 2017 set, 4 for training and 4 for validation. This dataset is ideal for testing and debugging segmentation models, or for experimenting with new detection approaches. With 8 images, it is small enough to be easily manageable, yet diverse enough to test training pipelines for errors and act as a sanity check before training larger datasets.
This dataset is intended for use with Ultralytics HUB and YOLOv8.
A YAML (Yet Another Markup Language) file is used to define the dataset configuration. It contains information about the dataset's paths, classes, and other relevant information. In the case of the COCO8-Seg dataset, the coco8-seg.yaml
file is maintained at https://github.com/ultralytics/ultralytics/blob/main/ultralytics/datasets/coco8-seg.yaml.
!!! example "ultralytics/datasets/coco8-seg.yaml"
```yaml
--8<-- "ultralytics/datasets/coco8-seg.yaml"
```
To train a YOLOv8n-seg model on the COCO8-Seg dataset for 100 epochs with an image size of 640, you can use the following code snippets. For a comprehensive list of available arguments, refer to the model Training page.
!!! example "Train Example"
=== "Python"
```python
from ultralytics import YOLO
# Load a model
model = YOLO('yolov8n-seg.pt') # load a pretrained model (recommended for training)
# Train the model
model.train(data='coco8-seg.yaml', epochs=100, imgsz=640)
```
=== "CLI"
```bash
# Start training from a pretrained *.pt model
yolo detect train data=coco8-seg.yaml model=yolov8n.pt epochs=100 imgsz=640
```
Here are some examples of images from the COCO8-Seg dataset, along with their corresponding annotations:
The example showcases the variety and complexity of the images in the COCO8-Seg dataset and the benefits of using mosaicing during the training process.
If you use the COCO dataset in your research or development work, please cite the following paper:
@misc{lin2015microsoft,
title={Microsoft COCO: Common Objects in Context},
author={Tsung-Yi Lin and Michael Maire and Serge Belongie and Lubomir Bourdev and Ross Girshick and James Hays and Pietro Perona and Deva Ramanan and C. Lawrence Zitnick and Piotr Dollár},
year={2015},
eprint={1405.0312},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CV}
}
We would like to acknowledge the COCO Consortium for creating and maintaining this valuable resource for the computer vision community. For more information about the COCO dataset and its creators, visit the COCO dataset website.
Press p or to see the previous file or, n or to see the next file
Browsing data directories saved to S3 is possible with DAGsHub. Let's configure your repository to easily display your data in the context of any commit!
ultralytics is now integrated with AWS S3!
Are you sure you want to delete this access key?
Browsing data directories saved to Google Cloud Storage is possible with DAGsHub. Let's configure your repository to easily display your data in the context of any commit!
ultralytics is now integrated with Google Cloud Storage!
Are you sure you want to delete this access key?
Browsing data directories saved to Azure Cloud Storage is possible with DAGsHub. Let's configure your repository to easily display your data in the context of any commit!
ultralytics is now integrated with Azure Cloud Storage!
Are you sure you want to delete this access key?
Browsing data directories saved to S3 compatible storage is possible with DAGsHub. Let's configure your repository to easily display your data in the context of any commit!
ultralytics is now integrated with your S3 compatible storage!
Are you sure you want to delete this access key?