Classification Diffusion Models: Revitalizing Density Ratio Estimation
–Neural Information Processing Systems
A prominent family of methods for learning data distributions relies on density ratio estimation (DRE), where a model is trained to classify between data samples and samples from some reference distribution. DRE-based models can directly output the likelihood for any given input, a highly desired property that is lacking in most generative techniques. Nevertheless, to date, DRE methods have failed in accurately capturing the distributions of complex high-dimensional data, like images, and have thus been drawing reduced research attention in recent years. In this work we present classification diffusion models (CDMs), a DRE-based generative method that adopts the formalism of denoising diffusion models (DDMs) while making use of a classifier that predicts the level of noise added to a clean signal. Our method is based on an analytical connection that we derive between the MSE-optimal denoiser for removing white Gaussian noise and the cross-entropy-optimal classifier for predicting the noise level. Our method is the first DRE-based technique that can successfully generate images beyond the MNIST dataset. Furthermore, it can output the likelihood of any input in a single forward pass, achieving state-ofthe-art negative log likelihood (NLL) among methods with this property. Code is available on the project's webpage.
Neural Information Processing Systems
May-28-2025, 12:32:06 GMT
- Country:
- Europe (0.14)
- North America > Canada
- Genre:
- Research Report
- Experimental Study (1.00)
- New Finding (0.67)
- Research Report
- Technology: