Abstract

Semantic segmentation with cross-domain adaptation in remote-sensing images (RSIs) is crucial and mitigates the expense of manually labeling target data. However, the performance of existing unsupervised domain adaptation (UDA) methods is still significantly impacted by domain bias, leading to a considerable gap compared to supervised trained models. To address this, our work focuses on semi-supervised domain adaptation, selecting a small subset of target annotations through active learning (AL) that maximize information to improve domain adaptation. Overall, we propose a novel active bidirectional self-training network (ABSNet) for cross-domain semantic segmentation in RSIs. ABSNet consists of two sub-stages: a multi-prototype active region selection (MARS) stage and a source-weighted class-balanced self-training (SCBS) stage. The MARS approach captures the diversity in labeled source data by introducing multi-prototype density estimation based on Gaussian mixture models. We then measure inter-domain similarity to select complementary and representative target samples. Through fine-tuning with the selected active samples, we propose an enhanced self-training strategy SCBS, designed for weighted training on source data, aiming to avoid the negative effects of interfering samples. We conduct extensive experiments on the LoveDA and ISPRS datasets to validate the superiority of our method over existing state-of-the-art domain-adaptive semantic segmentation methods.

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