Skip to content
OnMSFT.com
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • News
  • How-to
  • Feature stories
  • Deals
  • Microsoft / office 365
  • Reviews
Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • News
  • How-to
  • Feature stories
  • Deals
  • Microsoft / office 365
  • Reviews
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Google Research ties with Microsoft in COCO image captioning contest

Google Research ties with Microsoft in COCO image captioning contest

Brad Stephenson Brad Stephenson
September 17, 2019
1 min read

Microsoft’s COCO image captioning contest

The Google Research team has just tied first with Microsoft Research in Microsoft’s COCO (Common Objects in Context) image captioning contest where entrants were required to incorporate the Microsoft COCO dataset with their own programming to produce image recognition results that appeared as close to how a human would describe a picture as possible. Each entrant’s results were graded on their similarity to the human generated results, average correctness and amount of details in the description itself.

Microsoft COCO is a new image recognition, segmentation, and captioning dataset that is designed to recognize multiple objects and sections of an image while distinguishing their unique context. The dataset can create five separate descriptions of the image which has several uses, though the most obvious one being the improvement of image search results in search engines like Google or Microsoft’s Bing. For more details on Microsoft COCO, further challenges and download information, make sure to check out its official website.

Further reading: Bing Image Search, Bing Images, Google, Microsoft, Microsoft Research

Share this article:
Tags:
Bing Image Search Bing Images Google Microsoft Microsoft Research
Previous Article CIMtrek Partners With HubOne Next Article Delivery.com app lets you order food from your Windows Phone

Related Articles

Chrome tests Google Drive file uploads in the AI Mode compose box

April 14, 2026
Gemini image creation using right click desktop Chrome

Chrome lets you remake images with Gemini on desktop using just a right-click

April 13, 2026
Samsung Display crosses 5 million QD-OLED monitor shipments as demand grows fast, with new panels and strong premium market expansion worldwide.

Samsung Display Ships 5 Million QD-OLED Monitor Panels in Four Years

April 9, 2026

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Chrome tests Google Drive file uploads in the AI Mode compose box
  • Chrome lets you remake images with Gemini on desktop using just a right-click
  • Samsung Display Ships 5 Million QD-OLED Monitor Panels in Four Years
  • Intel Arc Pro B70 Teardown Reveals Blower Cooler and Early Board Design Details
  • Users Modify RTX 5090 Lightning Z Hardware to Unlock MSI’s Restricted 2500W BIOS

Recent Comments

  1. XxRIVTYxX on Intel Says It Tried to Help Before Crimson Desert Dropped Arc Support
  2. Gaurav Kumar on Chrome Prepares Nudge to ‘Move Tabs to the Side’ as Vertical Tabs Near Release
OnMSFT.com

The Tech News Site

Categories

  • Windows
  • Surface
  • Xbox
  • How-To
  • OnPodcast
  • Gaming
  • Edge
  • Teams

Recent Posts

  • Chrome tests Google Drive file uploads in the AI Mode compose box
  • Chrome lets you remake images with Gemini on desktop using just a right-click
  • Samsung Display Ships 5 Million QD-OLED Monitor Panels in Four Years
  • Intel Arc Pro B70 Teardown Reveals Blower Cooler and Early Board Design Details
  • Users Modify RTX 5090 Lightning Z Hardware to Unlock MSI’s Restricted 2500W BIOS

Quick Links

  • About OnMSFT.com
  • Contact OnMSFT
  • Join Our Team
  • Privacy Policy
© 2010–2026 OnMSFT.com LLC. All rights reserved.
About OnMSFT.comContact OnMSFTPrivacy Policy