Survey on Remote Sensing Scene Classification: From Traditional Methods to Large Generative AI Models
arXiv:2603.26751v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: Remote sensing scene classification has experienced a paradigmatic transformation from traditional handcrafted feature methods to sophisticated artificial intelligence systems that now form the backbone of modern Earth observation applications. This comprehensive survey examines the complete methodological evolution, systematically tracing development from classical texture descriptors and machine learning classifiers through the deep learning revolution to current state-of-the-art foundation models and generative AI approaches. We chronicle the pivotal shift from manual feature engineering to automated hierarchical representation learning via convolutional neural networks, followed by advanced architectures including Vision Transformers, graph neural networks, and hybrid frameworks. The survey provides in-depth coverage of breakthrough developments in self-supervised foundation models and vision-language systems, highlighting exceptional performance in zero-shot and few-shot learning scenarios. Special emphasis is placed on generative AI innovations that tackle persistent challenges through synthetic data generation and advanced feature learning strategies. We analyze contemporary obstacles including annotation costs, multimodal data fusion complexities, interpretability demands, and ethical considerations, alongside current trends in edge computing deployment, federated learning frameworks, and sustainable AI practices. Based on comprehensive analysis of recent advances and gaps, we identify key future research priorities: advancing hyperspectral and multi-temporal analysis capabilities, developing robust cross-domain generalization methods, and establishing standardized evaluation protocols to accelerate scientific progress in remote sensing scene classification systems.