As in all intelligent learning situations, you need lots of data to define the context, more than you think you need. But smaller amounts can help you start defining the process.
How Do Autonomous Vehicles Learn to Drive? Download This Self-Driving Dataset and See for Yourself By ZDNet in CACM
The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley) has made available a massive dataset used by engineers in the development of driverless auto technologies, featuring more than 100,000 high-definition video sequences that represent different driving situations.
The downloadable BDD100K dataset is part of the university's DeepDrive project, and it also contains global-positioning system locations, inertial measurement unit data, and timestamps across 1,100 hours.
Such datasets are needed to train systems on how to deal with different environments and driving conditions.
The BDD100K also has two-dimensional bounding boxes that have annotated approximately 100,000 images with notable objects such as traffic signs, pedestrians, bicycles, other vehicles, trains, and traffic lights. .... "
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