Telegram Group & Telegram Channel
💠 Compositional Learning Journal Club

Join us this week for an in-depth discussion on Compositional Learning in the context of cutting-edge text-to-image generative models. We will explore recent breakthroughs and challenges, focusing on how these models handle compositional tasks and where improvements can be made.

🌟 This Week's Presentation:

📌 Title:
A Cat Is A Cat (Not A Dog!): Unraveling Information Mix-ups in Text-to-Image Encoders through Causal Analysis and Embedding Optimization

🎙️ Presenter: Amir Kasaei

🧠 Abstract:
This work presents an in-depth analysis of the causal structure in the text encoder of text-to-image (T2I) diffusion models, highlighting its role in introducing information bias and loss. While prior research has mainly addressed these issues during the denoising stage, this study focuses on the underexplored contribution of text embeddings—particularly in multi-object generation scenarios. The authors investigate how text embeddings influence the final image output and why models often favor the first-mentioned object, leading to imbalanced representations. To mitigate this, they propose a training-free text embedding balance optimization method that improves information balance in Stable Diffusion by 125.42%. Additionally, a new automatic evaluation metric is introduced, offering a more accurate assessment of information loss with an 81% concordance rate with human evaluations. This metric better captures object presence and accuracy compared to existing measures like CLIP-based text-image similarity scores.

📄 Paper:
A Cat Is A Cat (Not A Dog!): Unraveling Information Mix-ups in Text-to-Image Encoders through Causal Analysis and Embedding Optimization

Session Details:
- 📅 Date: Tuesday
- 🕒 Time: 5:00 - 6:00 PM
- 🌐 Location: Online at vc.sharif.edu/ch/rohban

We look forward to your participation! ✌️



tg-me.com/RIMLLab/211
Create:
Last Update:

💠 Compositional Learning Journal Club

Join us this week for an in-depth discussion on Compositional Learning in the context of cutting-edge text-to-image generative models. We will explore recent breakthroughs and challenges, focusing on how these models handle compositional tasks and where improvements can be made.

🌟 This Week's Presentation:

📌 Title:
A Cat Is A Cat (Not A Dog!): Unraveling Information Mix-ups in Text-to-Image Encoders through Causal Analysis and Embedding Optimization

🎙️ Presenter: Amir Kasaei

🧠 Abstract:
This work presents an in-depth analysis of the causal structure in the text encoder of text-to-image (T2I) diffusion models, highlighting its role in introducing information bias and loss. While prior research has mainly addressed these issues during the denoising stage, this study focuses on the underexplored contribution of text embeddings—particularly in multi-object generation scenarios. The authors investigate how text embeddings influence the final image output and why models often favor the first-mentioned object, leading to imbalanced representations. To mitigate this, they propose a training-free text embedding balance optimization method that improves information balance in Stable Diffusion by 125.42%. Additionally, a new automatic evaluation metric is introduced, offering a more accurate assessment of information loss with an 81% concordance rate with human evaluations. This metric better captures object presence and accuracy compared to existing measures like CLIP-based text-image similarity scores.

📄 Paper:
A Cat Is A Cat (Not A Dog!): Unraveling Information Mix-ups in Text-to-Image Encoders through Causal Analysis and Embedding Optimization

Session Details:
- 📅 Date: Tuesday
- 🕒 Time: 5:00 - 6:00 PM
- 🌐 Location: Online at vc.sharif.edu/ch/rohban

We look forward to your participation! ✌️

BY RIML Lab




Share with your friend now:
tg-me.com/RIMLLab/211

View MORE
Open in Telegram


RIML Lab Telegram | DID YOU KNOW?

Date: |

Telegram Auto-Delete Messages in Any Chat

Some messages aren’t supposed to last forever. There are some Telegram groups and conversations where it’s best if messages are automatically deleted in a day or a week. Here’s how to auto-delete messages in any Telegram chat. You can enable the auto-delete feature on a per-chat basis. It works for both one-on-one conversations and group chats. Previously, you needed to use the Secret Chat feature to automatically delete messages after a set time. At the time of writing, you can choose to automatically delete messages after a day or a week. Telegram starts the timer once they are sent, not after they are read. This won’t affect the messages that were sent before enabling the feature.

The S&P 500 slumped 1.8% on Monday and Tuesday, thanks to China Evergrande, the Chinese property company that looks like it is ready to default on its more-than $300 billion in debt. Cries of the next Lehman Brothers—or maybe the next Silverado?—echoed through the canyons of Wall Street as investors prepared for the worst.

RIML Lab from jp


Telegram RIML Lab
FROM USA