Accelerating Score-based Generative Models for High-Resolution Image Synthesis
This addresses a critical bottleneck for researchers and practitioners in generative AI by enabling faster high-resolution image generation, though it is incremental as it builds on existing SGM frameworks.
The paper tackles the slow sampling problem in score-based generative models for high-resolution image synthesis by introducing Target Distribution Aware Sampling (TDAS), which accelerates state-of-the-art models by up to 18.4x on 1024x1024 tasks while maintaining image quality.
Score-based generative models (SGMs) have recently emerged as a promising class of generative models. The key idea is to produce high-quality images by recurrently adding Gaussian noises and gradients to a Gaussian sample until converging to the target distribution, a.k.a. the diffusion sampling. To ensure stability of convergence in sampling and generation quality, however, this sequential sampling process has to take a small step size and many sampling iterations (e.g., 2000). Several acceleration methods have been proposed with focus on low-resolution generation. In this work, we consider the acceleration of high-resolution generation with SGMs, a more challenging yet more important problem. We prove theoretically that this slow convergence drawback is primarily due to the ignorance of the target distribution. Further, we introduce a novel Target Distribution Aware Sampling (TDAS) method by leveraging the structural priors in space and frequency domains. Extensive experiments on CIFAR-10, CelebA, LSUN, and FFHQ datasets validate that TDAS can consistently accelerate state-of-the-art SGMs, particularly on more challenging high resolution (1024x1024) image generation tasks by up to 18.4x, whilst largely maintaining the synthesis quality. With fewer sampling iterations, TDAS can still generate good quality images. In contrast, the existing methods degrade drastically or even fails completely