Maximum Likelihood Training of Score-Based Diffusion Models
–Neural Information Processing Systems
Score-based diffusion models synthesize samples by reversing a stochastic process that diffuses data to noise, and are trained by minimizing a weighted combination of score matching losses. The log-likelihood of score-based diffusion models can be tractably computed through a connection to continuous normalizing flows, but log-likelihood is not directly optimized by the weighted combination of score matching losses. We show that for a specific weighting scheme, the objective upper bounds the negative log-likelihood, thus enabling approximate maximum likelihood training of score-based diffusion models. We empirically observe that maximum likelihood training consistently improves the likelihood of score-based diffusion models across multiple datasets, stochastic processes, and model architectures. Our best models achieve negative log-likelihoods of 2.83 and 3.76 bits/dim on CIFAR-10 and ImageNet 32 ˆ32 without any data augmentation, on a par with state-of-the-art autoregressive models on these tasks.
Neural Information Processing Systems
Apr-24-2026, 15:17:19 GMT
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- Research Report > New Finding (0.68)
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- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (0.46)