CVAIJan 30

Stabilizing Diffusion Posterior Sampling by Noise--Frequency Continuation

arXiv:2602.00176v1h-index: 6
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses the issue of spurious artifacts and sensitivity in image restoration tasks like super-resolution and deblurring, representing a strong incremental improvement.

The paper tackles the problem of fine detail loss in diffusion posterior sampling for inverse problems by proposing a noise-frequency continuation framework, which improves motion deblurring PSNR by up to 5 dB over baselines.

Diffusion posterior sampling solves inverse problems by combining a pretrained diffusion prior with measurement-consistency guidance, but it often fails to recover fine details because measurement terms are applied in a manner that is weakly coupled to the diffusion noise level. At high noise, data-consistency gradients computed from inaccurate estimates can be geometrically incongruent with the posterior geometry, inducing early-step drift, spurious high-frequency artifacts, plus sensitivity to schedules and ill-conditioned operators. To address these concerns, we propose a noise--frequency Continuation framework that constructs a continuous family of intermediate posteriors whose likelihood enforces measurement consistency only within a noise-dependent frequency band. This principle is instantiated with a stabilized posterior sampler that combines a diffusion predictor, band-limited likelihood guidance, and a multi-resolution consistency strategy that aggressively commits reliable coarse corrections while conservatively adopting high-frequency details only when they become identifiable. Across super-resolution, inpainting, and deblurring, our method achieves state-of-the-art performance and improves motion deblurring PSNR by up to 5 dB over strong baselines.

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