Semantic segmentation of transmission-line point clouds is fundamental to intelligent power inspection and grid asset management, as segmentation accuracy directly influences defect detection and facility assessment tasks. However, transmission-line point clouds collected across different voltage levels often show significant variations in density and geometric structure due to heterogeneous LiDAR sensors and flight configurations. Combined with the high cost of large-scale manual annotation, these factors limit the scalability of existing supervised segmentation methods. To overcome these challenges, we propose a geometry-consistency-guided unsupervised domain adaptation framework tailored for cross-voltage transmission-line point-cloud segmentation. The framework employs KPConvX as the backbone and integrates three progressive components. First, a geometric consistency constraint enhances robustness to spatial variations and enables extraction of structural features invariant across voltage levels. Second, a domain feature alignment module reduces distribution shifts through global feature transformation. Third, a minimum-entropy-based pseudo-label refinement strategy improves the reliability of pseudo-labels during self-training. Experiments on a multi-voltage transmission-line dataset demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method. With the KPConvX backbone, the framework achieves 66.1% mean Intersection over Union (mIoU) and 94.3% overall accuracy on the unlabeled 110 kV target domain, exceeding the source-only baseline by 15.6% mIoU and outperforming several state-of-the-art UDA methods. This work provides an efficient, annotation-friendly solution for cross-voltage point-cloud segmentation and offers a promising direction for domain adaptation in complex power-grid environments.
Ji et al. (Thu,) studied this question.