Autonomous Vision Article 2020

HOTA: A Higher Order Metric for Evaluating Multi-Object Tracking

Hota

Multi-Object Tracking (MOT) has been notoriously difficult to evaluate. Previous metrics overemphasize the importance of either detection or association. To address this, we present a novel MOT evaluation metric, HOTA (Higher Order Tracking Accuracy), which explicitly balances the effect of performing accurate detection, association and localization into a single unified metric for comparing trackers. HOTA decomposes into a family of sub-metrics which are able to evaluate each of five basic error types separately, which enables clear analysis of tracking performance. We evaluate the effectiveness of HOTA on the MOTChallenge benchmark, and show that it is able to capture important aspects of MOT performance not previously taken into account by established metrics. Furthermore, we show HOTA scores better align with human visual evaluation of tracking performance.

Author(s): Jonathon Luiten and Aljosa Osep and Patrick Dendorfer and Philip Torr and Andreas Geiger and Laura Leal-Taixe and Bastian Leibe
Journal: International Journal of Computer Vision
Volume: 129
Number (issue): 2
Pages: 548--578
Year: 2020
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
DOI: 10.1007/s11263-020-01375-2
State: Published
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive
Links:

BibTex

@article{Luiten2020IJCV,
  title = {HOTA: A Higher Order Metric for Evaluating Multi-Object Tracking},
  journal = {International Journal of Computer Vision},
  abstract = {Multi-Object Tracking (MOT) has been notoriously difficult to evaluate. Previous metrics overemphasize the importance of either detection or association. To address this, we present a novel MOT evaluation metric, HOTA (Higher Order Tracking Accuracy), which explicitly balances the effect of performing accurate detection, association and localization into a single unified metric for comparing trackers. HOTA decomposes into a family of sub-metrics which are able to evaluate each of five basic error types separately, which enables clear analysis of tracking performance. We evaluate the effectiveness of HOTA on the MOTChallenge benchmark, and show that it is able to capture important aspects of MOT performance not previously taken into account by established metrics. Furthermore, we show HOTA scores better align with human visual evaluation of tracking performance.},
  volume = {129},
  number = {2},
  pages = {548--578},
  year = {2020},
  slug = {luiten2020ijcv},
  author = {Luiten, Jonathon and Osep, Aljosa and Dendorfer, Patrick and Torr, Philip and Geiger, Andreas and Leal-Taixe, Laura and Leibe, Bastian}
}