Diffusion-based Text-to-Image (T2I) models have achieved impressive success in generating high-quality images from textual prompts. While large language models (LLMs) effectively leverage Direct Preference Optimization (DPO) for fine-tuning on human preference data without the need for reward models, diffusion models have not been extensively explored in this area. Current preference learning methods applied to T2I diffusion models immediately adapt existing techniques from LLMs. However, this direct adaptation introduces an estimated loss specific to T2I diffusion models. This estimation can potentially lead to suboptimal performance through our empirical results. In this work, we propose Direct Score Preference Optimization (DSPO), a novel algorithm that aligns the pretraining and fine-tuning objectives of diffusion models by leveraging score matching, the same objective used during pretraining. It introduces a new perspective on preference learning for diffusion models. Specifically, DSPO distills the score function of human-preferred image distributions into pretrained diffusion models, fine-tuning the model to generate outputs that align with human preferences. We theoretically show that DSPO shares the same optimization direction as reinforcement learning algorithms in diffusion models under certain conditions. Our experimental results demonstrate that DSPO outperforms preference learning baselines for T2I diffusion models in human preference evaluation tasks and enhances both visual appeal and prompt alignment of generated images.
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This content will become publicly available on December 10, 2025
Calibrated Self-Rewarding Vision Language Models
Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs) have made substantial progress by integrating pre-trained large language models (LLMs) and vision models through instruction tuning. Despite these advancements, LVLMs often exhibit the hallucination phenomenon, where generated text responses appear linguistically plausible but contradict the input image, indicating a misalignment between image and text pairs. This misalignment arises because the model tends to prioritize textual information over visual input, even when both the language model and visual representations are of high quality. Existing methods leverage additional models or human annotations to curate preference data and enhance modality alignment through preference optimization. These approaches are resource-intensive and may not effectively reflect the target LVLM's preferences, making the curated preferences easily distinguishable. Our work addresses these challenges by proposing the Calibrated Self-Rewarding (CSR) approach, which enables the model to self-improve by iteratively generating candidate responses, evaluating the reward for each response, and curating preference data for fine-tuning. In the reward modeling, we employ a step-wise strategy and incorporate visual constraints into the self-rewarding process to place greater emphasis on visual input. Empirical results demonstrate that CSR significantly enhances performance and reduces hallucinations across twelve benchmarks and tasks, achieving substantial improvements over existing methods by 7.62%. Our empirical results are further supported by rigorous theoretical analysis, under mild assumptions, verifying the effectiveness of introducing visual constraints into the self-rewarding paradigm. Additionally, CSR shows compatibility with different vision-language models and the ability to incrementally improve performance through iterative fine-tuning.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2340241
- PAR ID:
- 10601197
- Publisher / Repository:
- NeurIPS
- Date Published:
- ISBN:
- 9798331314385
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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