CVAICLMar 31

ResAdapt: Adaptive Resolution for Efficient Multimodal Reasoning

arXiv:2603.28610100.04 citationsh-index: 12Has Code
AI Analysis

This addresses efficiency bottlenecks in multimodal reasoning for AI researchers and practitioners, offering a novel method to improve performance under aggressive compression.

The paper tackles the problem of visual token growth in Multimodal Large Language Models by proposing ResAdapt, an input-side adaptation framework that allocates visual budget per frame before encoding, resulting in up to 16x more frames at the same budget with over 15% performance gain.

Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) achieve stronger visual understanding by scaling input fidelity, yet the resulting visual token growth makes jointly sustaining high spatial resolution and long temporal context prohibitive. We argue that the bottleneck lies not in how post-encoding representations are compressed but in the volume of pixels the encoder receives, and address it with ResAdapt, an Input-side adaptation framework that learns how much visual budget each frame should receive before encoding. ResAdapt couples a lightweight Allocator with an unchanged MLLM backbone, so the backbone retains its native visual-token interface while receiving an operator-transformed input. We formulate allocation as a contextual bandit and train the Allocator with Cost-Aware Policy Optimization (CAPO), which converts sparse rollout feedback into a stable accuracy-cost learning signal. Across budget-controlled video QA, temporal grounding, and image reasoning tasks, ResAdapt improves low-budget operating points and often lies on or near the efficiency-accuracy frontier, with the clearest gains on reasoning-intensive benchmarks under aggressive compression. Notably, ResAdapt supports up to 16x more frames at the same visual budget while delivering over 15% performance gain. Code is available at https://github.com/Xnhyacinth/ResAdapt.

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