MsEdF: A Multi-stream Encoder-decoder Framework for Remote Sensing Image Captioning
This work addresses the challenge of accurately describing complex spatial patterns in remote sensing images, which is incremental as it builds on existing encoder-decoder architectures.
The authors tackled the problem of remote sensing image captioning by proposing a multi-stream encoder-decoder framework that fuses complementary image features and refines semantic modeling, achieving improved performance over baseline models on three benchmark datasets.
Remote sensing images contain complex spatial patterns and semantic structures, which makes the captioning model difficult to accurately describe. Encoder-decoder architectures have become the widely used approach for RSIC by translating visual content into descriptive text. However, many existing methods rely on a single-stream architecture, which weakens the model to accurately describe the image. Such single-stream architectures typically struggle to extract diverse spatial features or capture complex semantic relationships, limiting their effectiveness in scenes with high intraclass similarity or contextual ambiguity. In this work, we propose a novel Multi-stream Encoder-decoder Framework (MsEdF) which improves the performance of RSIC by optimizing both the spatial representation and language generation of encoder-decoder architecture. The encoder fuses information from two complementary image encoders, thereby promoting feature diversity through the integration of multiscale and structurally distinct cues. To improve the capture of context-aware descriptions, we refine the input sequence's semantic modeling on the decoder side using a stacked GRU architecture with an element-wise aggregation scheme. Experiments on three benchmark RSIC datasets show that MsEdF outperforms several baseline models.