TY - JOUR
T1 - SCNAnet
T2 - Structure-Aware Contrastive with Noise-Augmented Network for Unsupervised Change Detection
AU - Sun, Yijie
AU - Wu, Qingxi
AU - Wang, Nan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 by the authors.
PY - 2026/5
Y1 - 2026/5
N2 - Unsupervised change detection (UCD) is a key technique in Earth observation, aiming to identify and quantify surface changes over time by analyzing multi-temporal remote sensing images without manual annotations. Unlike supervised approaches that rely on ground reference to directly guide discriminative semantic learning, UCD methods must construct their own reference. A mainstream strategy employs one temporal image as the reference and uses transformation models (e.g., style transfer networks) to align the other image in unchanged regions. Loss is then reduced by labeling hard-to-align pixels as “changes” and excluding them from the objective. However, this optimization process is dominated by style losses, which cause the model to learn to exclude regions that make only limited contributions to style-loss minimization, rather than to acquire discriminative representations of true geospatial changes. Such shortcut-driven optimization results in insufficient modeling of genuine change features and frequent misclassification of unchanged yet stylistically similar regions. To address these limitations, we propose SCNAnet, a novel framework that integrates three modules: a noise-perturbation consistency branch to suppress shortcut-driven learning, a structure-aware style transformation encoder to strengthen semantic representations of structural changes, and a frequency-attention decoder to refine the delineation of change regions. Extensive experiments on three benchmark datasets (GF-2, OSCD, and QuickBird) demonstrate the effectiveness of SCNAnet. Specifically, SCNAnet improves the F1 score by approximately 8% on the Montpellier dataset compared with the second-best method, demonstrating its effectiveness under challenging conditions.
AB - Unsupervised change detection (UCD) is a key technique in Earth observation, aiming to identify and quantify surface changes over time by analyzing multi-temporal remote sensing images without manual annotations. Unlike supervised approaches that rely on ground reference to directly guide discriminative semantic learning, UCD methods must construct their own reference. A mainstream strategy employs one temporal image as the reference and uses transformation models (e.g., style transfer networks) to align the other image in unchanged regions. Loss is then reduced by labeling hard-to-align pixels as “changes” and excluding them from the objective. However, this optimization process is dominated by style losses, which cause the model to learn to exclude regions that make only limited contributions to style-loss minimization, rather than to acquire discriminative representations of true geospatial changes. Such shortcut-driven optimization results in insufficient modeling of genuine change features and frequent misclassification of unchanged yet stylistically similar regions. To address these limitations, we propose SCNAnet, a novel framework that integrates three modules: a noise-perturbation consistency branch to suppress shortcut-driven learning, a structure-aware style transformation encoder to strengthen semantic representations of structural changes, and a frequency-attention decoder to refine the delineation of change regions. Extensive experiments on three benchmark datasets (GF-2, OSCD, and QuickBird) demonstrate the effectiveness of SCNAnet. Specifically, SCNAnet improves the F1 score by approximately 8% on the Montpellier dataset compared with the second-best method, demonstrating its effectiveness under challenging conditions.
KW - contrastive learning
KW - optimizing shortcuts
KW - remote sensing
KW - unsupervised change detection
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105038722435
U2 - 10.3390/rs18091427
DO - 10.3390/rs18091427
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105038722435
SN - 2072-4292
VL - 18
JO - Remote Sensing
JF - Remote Sensing
IS - 9
M1 - 1427
ER -