TasksSotADatasetsPapersMethodsSubmitAbout
Papers With Code 2

A community resource for machine learning research: papers, code, benchmarks, and state-of-the-art results.

Explore

Notable BenchmarksAll SotADatasetsPapersMethods

Community

Submit ResultsAbout

Data sourced from the PWC Archive (CC-BY-SA 4.0). Built by the community, for the community.

Papers/Towards Practical Plug-and-Play Diffusion Models

Towards Practical Plug-and-Play Diffusion Models

Hyojun Go, Yunsung Lee, Jin-Young Kim, SeungHyun Lee, Myeongho Jeong, Hyun Seung Lee, Seungtaek Choi

2022-12-12CVPR 2023 1Transfer LearningSemantic Segmentationparameter-efficient fine-tuningDepth EstimationImage GenerationKnowledge Distillation
PaperPDFCode(official)

Abstract

Diffusion-based generative models have achieved remarkable success in image generation. Their guidance formulation allows an external model to plug-and-play control the generation process for various tasks without finetuning the diffusion model. However, the direct use of publicly available off-the-shelf models for guidance fails due to their poor performance on noisy inputs. For that, the existing practice is to fine-tune the guidance models with labeled data corrupted with noises. In this paper, we argue that this practice has limitations in two aspects: (1) performing on inputs with extremely various noises is too hard for a single guidance model; (2) collecting labeled datasets hinders scaling up for various tasks. To tackle the limitations, we propose a novel strategy that leverages multiple experts where each expert is specialized in a particular noise range and guides the reverse process of the diffusion at its corresponding timesteps. However, as it is infeasible to manage multiple networks and utilize labeled data, we present a practical guidance framework termed Practical Plug-And-Play (PPAP), which leverages parameter-efficient fine-tuning and data-free knowledge transfer. We exhaustively conduct ImageNet class conditional generation experiments to show that our method can successfully guide diffusion with small trainable parameters and no labeled data. Finally, we show that image classifiers, depth estimators, and semantic segmentation models can guide publicly available GLIDE through our framework in a plug-and-play manner. Our code is available at https://github.com/riiid/PPAP.

Related Papers

SeC: Advancing Complex Video Object Segmentation via Progressive Concept Construction2025-07-21Visual-Language Model Knowledge Distillation Method for Image Quality Assessment2025-07-21RaMen: Multi-Strategy Multi-Modal Learning for Bundle Construction2025-07-18Disentangling coincident cell events using deep transfer learning and compressive sensing2025-07-17DiffOSeg: Omni Medical Image Segmentation via Multi-Expert Collaboration Diffusion Model2025-07-17SCORE: Scene Context Matters in Open-Vocabulary Remote Sensing Instance Segmentation2025-07-17Unified Medical Image Segmentation with State Space Modeling Snake2025-07-17A Privacy-Preserving Semantic-Segmentation Method Using Domain-Adaptation Technique2025-07-17