SGMA: Semantic-Guided Modality-Aware Segmentation for Remote Sensing with Incomplete Multimodal Data
This work addresses the problem of incomplete multimodal data in remote sensing for researchers and practitioners working with multimodal Earth observation systems, providing an incremental yet significant improvement over existing methods.
The authors tackled the problem of incomplete multimodal semantic segmentation for remote sensing, achieving significant improvements in fragile modalities through their proposed SGMA framework. SGMA consistently outperformed state-of-the-art methods across multiple datasets and backbones.
Multimodal semantic segmentation integrates complementary information from diverse sensors for remote sensing Earth observation. However, practical systems often encounter missing modalities due to sensor failures or incomplete coverage, termed Incomplete Multimodal Semantic Segmentation (IMSS). IMSS faces three key challenges: (1) multimodal imbalance, where dominant modalities suppress fragile ones; (2) intra-class variation in scale, shape, and orientation across modalities; and (3) cross-modal heterogeneity with conflicting cues producing inconsistent semantic responses. Existing methods rely on contrastive learning or joint optimization, which risk over-alignment, discarding modality-specific cues or imbalanced training, favoring robust modalities, while largely overlooking intra-class variation and cross-modal heterogeneity. To address these limitations, we propose the Semantic-Guided Modality-Aware (SGMA) framework, which ensures balanced multimodal learning while reducing intra-class variation and reconciling cross-modal inconsistencies through semantic guidance. SGMA introduces two complementary plug-and-play modules: (1) Semantic-Guided Fusion (SGF) module extracts multi-scale, class-wise semantic prototypes that capture consistent categorical representations across modalities, estimates per-modality robustness based on prototype-feature alignment, and performs adaptive fusion weighted by robustness scores to mitigate intra-class variation and cross-modal heterogeneity; (2) Modality-Aware Sampling (MAS) module leverages robustness estimations from SGF to dynamically reweight training samples, prioritizing challenging samples from fragile modalities to address modality imbalance. Extensive experiments across multiple datasets and backbones demonstrate that SGMA consistently outperforms state-of-the-art methods, with particularly significant improvements in fragile modalities.