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Auteurs principaux: Jansen, Jan, Shelamoff, Victor, Gros, Charley, Windsor, Thomas, Hill, Nicole A, Barnes, David K, Bowden, David A, Gutt, Julian, Bax, Narissa, Downey, Rachel V, Eléaume, Marc P, Post, Alexandra L, Griffiths, Huw J, Linse, Katrin, Piepenburg, Dieter, Purser, Autun, Smith, Craig R, Ziegler, Amanda, Johnson, Craig R
Format: Artículo científico
Langue:en
Publié: Scientific data 2026
Accès en ligne:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42236466/
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author Jansen, Jan
Shelamoff, Victor
Gros, Charley
Windsor, Thomas
Hill, Nicole A
Barnes, David K
Bowden, David A
Gutt, Julian
Bax, Narissa
Downey, Rachel V
Eléaume, Marc P
Post, Alexandra L
Griffiths, Huw J
Linse, Katrin
Piepenburg, Dieter
Purser, Autun
Smith, Craig R
Ziegler, Amanda
Johnson, Craig R
author_facet Jansen, Jan
Shelamoff, Victor
Gros, Charley
Windsor, Thomas
Hill, Nicole A
Barnes, David K
Bowden, David A
Gutt, Julian
Bax, Narissa
Downey, Rachel V
Eléaume, Marc P
Post, Alexandra L
Griffiths, Huw J
Linse, Katrin
Piepenburg, Dieter
Purser, Autun
Smith, Craig R
Ziegler, Amanda
Johnson, Craig R
Jansen, Jan
Shelamoff, Victor
Gros, Charley
Windsor, Thomas
Hill, Nicole A
Barnes, David K
Bowden, David A
Gutt, Julian
Bax, Narissa
Downey, Rachel V
Eléaume, Marc P
Post, Alexandra L
Griffiths, Huw J
Linse, Katrin
Piepenburg, Dieter
Purser, Autun
Smith, Craig R
Ziegler, Amanda
Johnson, Craig R
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents The Antarctic Seafloor Annotated Imagery Database. Jansen, Jan Shelamoff, Victor Gros, Charley Windsor, Thomas Hill, Nicole A Barnes, David K Bowden, David A Gutt, Julian Bax, Narissa Downey, Rachel V Eléaume, Marc P Post, Alexandra L Griffiths, Huw J Linse, Katrin Piepenburg, Dieter Purser, Autun Smith, Craig R Ziegler, Amanda Johnson, Craig R Marine imagery can be a comparatively cost-effective way to collect data on seafloor organisms, biodiversity and habitat morphology. However, annotating these images to extract detailed biological information is time-consuming and expensive, and reference libraries of consistently annotated seafloor images are rarely publicly available. Here, we present the Antarctic Seafloor Annotated Imagery Database (AS-AID), a result of a multinational collaboration to collate and annotate seafloor imagery datasets from 21 Antarctic research campaigns between 1985 and 2019. AS-AID is comprised of 52,491 georeferenced downward facing seafloor images of which 3,599 have been labelled with a total of 632,252 expert annotations. Annotations are based on the Collaborative and Automated Tools for Analysis of Marine Imagery (CATAMI) classification scheme and have been reviewed by experts. In addition, because the pixel location of each annotation within each image is available, annotations can be viewed easily and customised to suit individual research priorities. This dataset can be used to investigate species distributions, community patterns, provide a reference to assess change through time, and can be used to train algorithms to automatically detect and annotate marine fauna.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_42236466
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2026
publisher Scientific data
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle The Antarctic Seafloor Annotated Imagery Database.
Jansen, Jan
Shelamoff, Victor
Gros, Charley
Windsor, Thomas
Hill, Nicole A
Barnes, David K
Bowden, David A
Gutt, Julian
Bax, Narissa
Downey, Rachel V
Eléaume, Marc P
Post, Alexandra L
Griffiths, Huw J
Linse, Katrin
Piepenburg, Dieter
Purser, Autun
Smith, Craig R
Ziegler, Amanda
Johnson, Craig R
The Antarctic Seafloor Annotated Imagery Database. Jansen, Jan Shelamoff, Victor Gros, Charley Windsor, Thomas Hill, Nicole A Barnes, David K Bowden, David A Gutt, Julian Bax, Narissa Downey, Rachel V Eléaume, Marc P Post, Alexandra L Griffiths, Huw J Linse, Katrin Piepenburg, Dieter Purser, Autun Smith, Craig R Ziegler, Amanda Johnson, Craig R Marine imagery can be a comparatively cost-effective way to collect data on seafloor organisms, biodiversity and habitat morphology. However, annotating these images to extract detailed biological information is time-consuming and expensive, and reference libraries of consistently annotated seafloor images are rarely publicly available. Here, we present the Antarctic Seafloor Annotated Imagery Database (AS-AID), a result of a multinational collaboration to collate and annotate seafloor imagery datasets from 21 Antarctic research campaigns between 1985 and 2019. AS-AID is comprised of 52,491 georeferenced downward facing seafloor images of which 3,599 have been labelled with a total of 632,252 expert annotations. Annotations are based on the Collaborative and Automated Tools for Analysis of Marine Imagery (CATAMI) classification scheme and have been reviewed by experts. In addition, because the pixel location of each annotation within each image is available, annotations can be viewed easily and customised to suit individual research priorities. This dataset can be used to investigate species distributions, community patterns, provide a reference to assess change through time, and can be used to train algorithms to automatically detect and annotate marine fauna.
title The Antarctic Seafloor Annotated Imagery Database.
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42236466/