CVAIMar 10, 2025

TRCE: Towards Reliable Malicious Concept Erasure in Text-to-Image Diffusion Models

arXiv:2503.07389v213 citationsh-index: 31Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the risk of generating NSFW content in diffusion models, offering a more robust solution for safety applications, though it is incremental over existing concept erasure methods.

The paper tackles the problem of fully erasing malicious concepts in text-to-image diffusion models, which often fail with implicit prompts like metaphors, by proposing TRCE, a two-stage method that achieves reliable erasure while preserving normal generation capability, as shown in comprehensive benchmarks.

Recent advances in text-to-image diffusion models enable photorealistic image generation, but they also risk producing malicious content, such as NSFW images. To mitigate risk, concept erasure methods are studied to facilitate the model to unlearn specific concepts. However, current studies struggle to fully erase malicious concepts implicitly embedded in prompts (e.g., metaphorical expressions or adversarial prompts) while preserving the model's normal generation capability. To address this challenge, our study proposes TRCE, using a two-stage concept erasure strategy to achieve an effective trade-off between reliable erasure and knowledge preservation. Firstly, TRCE starts by erasing the malicious semantics implicitly embedded in textual prompts. By identifying a critical mapping objective(i.e., the [EoT] embedding), we optimize the cross-attention layers to map malicious prompts to contextually similar prompts but with safe concepts. This step prevents the model from being overly influenced by malicious semantics during the denoising process. Following this, considering the deterministic properties of the sampling trajectory of the diffusion model, TRCE further steers the early denoising prediction toward the safe direction and away from the unsafe one through contrastive learning, thus further avoiding the generation of malicious content. Finally, we conduct comprehensive evaluations of TRCE on multiple malicious concept erasure benchmarks, and the results demonstrate its effectiveness in erasing malicious concepts while better preserving the model's original generation ability. The code is available at: http://github.com/ddgoodgood/TRCE. CAUTION: This paper includes model-generated content that may contain offensive material.

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