CVMar 10

OmniEarth: A Benchmark for Evaluating Vision-Language Models in Geospatial Tasks

arXiv:2603.09471v138.72 citationsh-index: 4Has Code
Predicted impact top 10% in CV · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
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This provides a benchmark for researchers and practitioners in remote sensing to evaluate vision-language models, though it is incremental as it builds on existing benchmark concepts for a specific domain.

The authors tackled the lack of a systematic benchmark for evaluating vision-language models in remote sensing by introducing OmniEarth, which includes 9,275 images and 44,210 instructions, and found that existing models struggle with geospatially complex tasks.

Vision-Language Models (VLMs) have demonstrated effective perception and reasoning capabilities on general-domain tasks, leading to growing interest in their application to Earth observation. However, a systematic benchmark for comprehensively evaluating remote sensing vision-language models (RSVLMs) remains lacking. To address this gap, we introduce OmniEarth, a benchmark for evaluating RSVLMs under realistic Earth observation scenarios. OmniEarth organizes tasks along three capability dimensions: perception, reasoning, and robustness. It defines 28 fine-grained tasks covering multi-source sensing data and diverse geospatial contexts. The benchmark supports two task formulations: multiple-choice VQA and open-ended VQA. The latter includes pure text outputs for captioning tasks, bounding box outputs for visual grounding tasks, and mask outputs for segmentation tasks. To reduce linguistic bias and examine whether model predictions rely on visual evidence, OmniEarth adopts a blind test protocol and a quintuple semantic consistency requirement. OmniEarth includes 9,275 carefully quality-controlled images, including proprietary satellite imagery from Jilin-1 (JL-1), along with 44,210 manually verified instructions. We conduct a systematic evaluation of contrastive learning-based models, general closed-source and open-source VLMs, as well as RSVLMs. Results show that existing VLMs still struggle with geospatially complex tasks, revealing clear gaps that need to be addressed for remote sensing applications. OmniEarth is publicly available at https://huggingface.co/datasets/sjeeudd/OmniEarth.

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