2009:SpecialTagatuneEvaluation
Contents
Special Tagatune Submission System Open
Before submitting your system please read the MIREX submission instructions:
2009:MIREX_2009_Submission_Instructions
We will be using the same system as used for conventional MIREX evaluations, which can be accessed at:
https://www.music-ir.org/evaluation/MIREX/submission/
What is Tagatune?
Tagatune is a two-player game designed to extract information about music. In each round of the game, two players are each shown a song, either they are shown the same song or two different songs. Each player describes his given song by typing in any number of tags, which are immediately revealed to the partner. After reviewing each otherΓÇÖs tags, the players must each decide whether they have been given the same piece of music as their partner. After both players have voted, the game reveals the true answer (whether the songs given to the pair of players are the same or different) and prepares the next round. Tagatune is live at www.gwap.com
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~elaw/tagatune.jpg
Since Tagatune is a two-player game, when no partner is available for a player, a bot (a computer program or algorithm) is instituted to play against that player. In each round of the game, the bot generates a set of appropriate tags for a song and reveals these tags to the player. The player then decides his votes for same or different by comparing what he is listening to and the tags revealed by his bot partner. If the songs given to the bot and the player are identical, and the tags generated by the bot are accurate for the song, then the player will have a high probability of guessing correctly that the songs are the same. Otherwise, we would expect the player to make more mistakes in making this judgment. In short, the hypothesis is that better algorithms generate tags that are more fitting descriptions of songs, which in turn, allows players to have a higher chance of guessing correctly.
What is the goal of the MIREX Special Tagatune Evaluation?
The goal of the MIREX Special Tagatune Evaluation competition is to investigate a new method of evaluating music tagging algorithms, by using them as bots in Tagatune, and measuring the number of mistakes players make in guessing whether they are listening to the same or different songs (we will call this the Tagatune metric) when paired against different algorithm bots. We are particularly interested in whether there is a statistical correlation between the ranking of the algorithms induced by the Tagatune metric versus the classical metrics used in MIREX. For the motivation behind this evaluation, see this paper.
There are three main steps to this evaluation.
Step 1: Algorithm to Tags
All submitted algorithms will be
(a) trained using the Tagatune training set and tested on the Tagatune test set,
(b) trained using the MIREX 2008 training set (MajorMiner data) and tested on the Tagatune test set.
The trained algorithm must generate a set of tags for each of the songs in the test set, and rank the tags in a particular order (e.g. by confidence, saliency, relevance etc). This part of the evaluation is very similar, if not identical, to the MIREX 2008 Audio Tag Classification task.
Step 2: Tagatune Experiments
These tags will subsequently be displayed to players of Tagatune in a controlled experiment as well as an internet-wide experiment. The number of mistakes players make in guessing whether the songs are same or different is recorded for each algorithm.
Step 3: Ranking
All submitted algorithms will receive two rankings:
(1) ranking using the MIREX metrics
(2) ranking using the Tagatune metric
The Tagatune Dataset
The Tagatune training and test set consist of music clips that are 29 seconds long, and are associated with 6622 tracks, 517 albums and 270 artists. The genres include classical, new age, electronica, rock, pop, world, jazz, blues, metal, punk etc. The tags used in the experiments are each associated with more than fifty songs, where each song is associated with a tag by more than two players independently. The following table shows the minimum, maximum and average number of songs associated with any tags in the training set, test set and the complete set used in this evaluation.
Training Set | Test Set | Complete Set | |
MIN | 18 | 15 | 50 |
MAX | 2103 | 3767 | 5870 |
AVG | 212 | 288 | 502 |
Number of samples in training set: 9598
Number of samples in test set: 13194
The following is a list of 160 tags found in the Tagatune dataset.
no voice | singer | duet | hard rock |
world | harpsichord | sitar | chorus |
female opera | male vocal | vocals | clarinet |
heavy | silence | beats | funky |
no strings | chimes | foreign | no piano |
horns | classical | female | spacey |
jazz | guitar | quiet | no beat |
banjo | electric | solo | violins |
folk | female voice | wind | ambient |
new age | synth | funk | no singing |
middle eastern | trumpet | percussion | drum |
airy | voice | repetitive | birds |
strings | bass | harpsicord | medieval |
male voice | girl | acoustic | loud |
classic | string | drums | electronic |
not classical | chanting | no violin | not rock |
no guitar | organ | no vocal | talking |
choral | weird | opera | fast |
electric guitar | male singer | man singing | classical guitar |
country | violin | electro | tribal |
dark | male opera | no vocals | irish |
electronica | horn | operatic | arabic |
low | instrumental | trance | chant |
strange | heavy metal | modern | bells |
man | deep | fast beat | hard |
harp | no flute | pop | lute |
female vocal | oboe | mellow | orchestral |
light | piano | celtic | male vocals |
orchestra | eastern | old | flutes |
punk | spanish | sad | sax |
slow | male | blues | vocal |
indian | india | woman | woman singing |
rock | dance | piano solo | guitars |
no drums | jazzy | singing | cello |
calm | female vocals | voices | techno |
clapping | house | flute | not opera |
not english | oriental | beat | upbeat |
soft | noise | choir | female singer |
rap | metal | hip hop | water |
baroque | women | fiddle | english |
NOTE: An interesting effect of Tagatune is that we have collected many negative tags, which indicates the absence of an instrument (e.g. no piano, no guitar) or the genre that the song does not belong to (e.g. not classical, not rock). Participants of this evaluation might want to tailor their algorithms to take advantage of these negative tags that are not available on the MIREX 2008 dataset.
Submission Format
The submission format is identical to the one for Audio Tag Classification task in MIREX 2008 except for the audio formats, detailed descriptions to be found here: https://www.music-ir.org/mirex/2008/index.php/Audio_Tag_Classification.
Audio Formats
Participating algorithms will have to read audio in the following format:
Γû¬ Sample rate: 44 KHz
Γû¬ Sample size: 16 bit
Γû¬ Number of channels: 2 (stereo)
Γû¬ Encoding: WAV (decoded from MP3 files by IMIRSEL)
Γû¬ Duration: 10 or 29 second clips
NOTE: Participants should make sure that their algorithms can be trained on audio files that are of a certain duration, but then tested on audio files that are of a different duration. For example, in Step 1(b) of the evaluation, algorithms are trained on the 10s audio files from the MajorMiner dataset and tested on the 29s audio files from the Tagatune dataset.
Deadlines and Timeline
Submission opening date: Dec 15, 2008
Submission closing date: Jan 30, 2009
Organizers
J. Stephen Downie
Edith Law
Kris West
Michael Mandel
Mert Bay
Andreas F. Ehmann
M. Cameron Jones
Results
The results of the competition is detailed in the paper Evaluation of Algorithms Using Games: The Case of Music Tagging. The detailed results (Thanks to Kris West) are posted here: https://www.music-ir.org/mirex/2009/index.php/Audio_Tag_Classification_Tagatune_Results