Beyer, Lucas
Gemma 3 Technical Report
Gemma Team, null, Kamath, Aishwarya, Ferret, Johan, Pathak, Shreya, Vieillard, Nino, Merhej, Ramona, Perrin, Sarah, Matejovicova, Tatiana, Ramé, Alexandre, Rivière, Morgane, Rouillard, Louis, Mesnard, Thomas, Cideron, Geoffrey, Grill, Jean-bastien, Ramos, Sabela, Yvinec, Edouard, Casbon, Michelle, Pot, Etienne, Penchev, Ivo, Liu, Gaël, Visin, Francesco, Kenealy, Kathleen, Beyer, Lucas, Zhai, Xiaohai, Tsitsulin, Anton, Busa-Fekete, Robert, Feng, Alex, Sachdeva, Noveen, Coleman, Benjamin, Gao, Yi, Mustafa, Basil, Barr, Iain, Parisotto, Emilio, Tian, David, Eyal, Matan, Cherry, Colin, Peter, Jan-Thorsten, Sinopalnikov, Danila, Bhupatiraju, Surya, Agarwal, Rishabh, Kazemi, Mehran, Malkin, Dan, Kumar, Ravin, Vilar, David, Brusilovsky, Idan, Luo, Jiaming, Steiner, Andreas, Friesen, Abe, Sharma, Abhanshu, Sharma, Abheesht, Gilady, Adi Mayrav, Goedeckemeyer, Adrian, Saade, Alaa, Feng, Alex, Kolesnikov, Alexander, Bendebury, Alexei, Abdagic, Alvin, Vadi, Amit, György, András, Pinto, André Susano, Das, Anil, Bapna, Ankur, Miech, Antoine, Yang, Antoine, Paterson, Antonia, Shenoy, Ashish, Chakrabarti, Ayan, Piot, Bilal, Wu, Bo, Shahriari, Bobak, Petrini, Bryce, Chen, Charlie, Lan, Charline Le, Choquette-Choo, Christopher A., Carey, CJ, Brick, Cormac, Deutsch, Daniel, Eisenbud, Danielle, Cattle, Dee, Cheng, Derek, Paparas, Dimitris, Sreepathihalli, Divyashree Shivakumar, Reid, Doug, Tran, Dustin, Zelle, Dustin, Noland, Eric, Huizenga, Erwin, Kharitonov, Eugene, Liu, Frederick, Amirkhanyan, Gagik, Cameron, Glenn, Hashemi, Hadi, Klimczak-Plucińska, Hanna, Singh, Harman, Mehta, Harsh, Lehri, Harshal Tushar, Hazimeh, Hussein, Ballantyne, Ian, Szpektor, Idan, Nardini, Ivan, Pouget-Abadie, Jean, Chan, Jetha, Stanton, Joe, Wieting, John, Lai, Jonathan, Orbay, Jordi, Fernandez, Joseph, Newlan, Josh, Ji, Ju-yeong, Singh, Jyotinder, Black, Kat, Yu, Kathy, Hui, Kevin, Vodrahalli, Kiran, Greff, Klaus, Qiu, Linhai, Valentine, Marcella, Coelho, Marina, Ritter, Marvin, Hoffman, Matt, Watson, Matthew, Chaturvedi, Mayank, Moynihan, Michael, Ma, Min, Babar, Nabila, Noy, Natasha, Byrd, Nathan, Roy, Nick, Momchev, Nikola, Chauhan, Nilay, Sachdeva, Noveen, Bunyan, Oskar, Botarda, Pankil, Caron, Paul, Rubenstein, Paul Kishan, Culliton, Phil, Schmid, Philipp, Sessa, Pier Giuseppe, Xu, Pingmei, Stanczyk, Piotr, Tafti, Pouya, Shivanna, Rakesh, Wu, Renjie, Pan, Renke, Rokni, Reza, Willoughby, Rob, Vallu, Rohith, Mullins, Ryan, Jerome, Sammy, Smoot, Sara, Girgin, Sertan, Iqbal, Shariq, Reddy, Shashir, Sheth, Shruti, Põder, Siim, Bhatnagar, Sijal, Panyam, Sindhu Raghuram, Eiger, Sivan, Zhang, Susan, Liu, Tianqi, Yacovone, Trevor, Liechty, Tyler, Kalra, Uday, Evci, Utku, Misra, Vedant, Roseberry, Vincent, Feinberg, Vlad, Kolesnikov, Vlad, Han, Woohyun, Kwon, Woosuk, Chen, Xi, Chow, Yinlam, Zhu, Yuvein, Wei, Zichuan, Egyed, Zoltan, Cotruta, Victor, Giang, Minh, Kirk, Phoebe, Rao, Anand, Black, Kat, Babar, Nabila, Lo, Jessica, Moreira, Erica, Martins, Luiz Gustavo, Sanseviero, Omar, Gonzalez, Lucas, Gleicher, Zach, Warkentin, Tris, Mirrokni, Vahab, Senter, Evan, Collins, Eli, Barral, Joelle, Ghahramani, Zoubin, Hadsell, Raia, Matias, Yossi, Sculley, D., Petrov, Slav, Fiedel, Noah, Shazeer, Noam, Vinyals, Oriol, Dean, Jeff, Hassabis, Demis, Kavukcuoglu, Koray, Farabet, Clement, Buchatskaya, Elena, Alayrac, Jean-Baptiste, Anil, Rohan, Dmitry, null, Lepikhin, null, Borgeaud, Sebastian, Bachem, Olivier, Joulin, Armand, Andreev, Alek, Hardin, Cassidy, Dadashi, Robert, Hussenot, Léonard
We introduce Gemma 3, a multimodal addition to the Gemma family of lightweight open models, ranging in scale from 1 to 27 billion parameters. This version introduces vision understanding abilities, a wider coverage of languages and longer context - at least 128K tokens. We also change the architecture of the model to reduce the KV-cache memory that tends to explode with long context. This is achieved by increasing the ratio of local to global attention layers, and keeping the span on local attention short. The Gemma 3 models are trained with distillation and achieve superior performance to Gemma 2 for both pre-trained and instruction finetuned versions. In particular, our novel post-training recipe significantly improves the math, chat, instruction-following and multilingual abilities, making Gemma3-4B-IT competitive with Gemma2-27B-IT and Gemma3-27B-IT comparable to Gemini-1.5-Pro across benchmarks. We release all our models to the community.
SigLIP 2: Multilingual Vision-Language Encoders with Improved Semantic Understanding, Localization, and Dense Features
Tschannen, Michael, Gritsenko, Alexey, Wang, Xiao, Naeem, Muhammad Ferjad, Alabdulmohsin, Ibrahim, Parthasarathy, Nikhil, Evans, Talfan, Beyer, Lucas, Xia, Ye, Mustafa, Basil, Hénaff, Olivier, Harmsen, Jeremiah, Steiner, Andreas, Zhai, Xiaohua
We introduce SigLIP 2, a family of new multilingual vision-language encoders that build on the success of the original SigLIP. In this second iteration, we extend the original image-text training objective with several prior, independently developed techniques into a unified recipe -- this includes captioning-based pretraining, self-supervised losses (self-distillation, masked prediction) and online data curation. With these changes, SigLIP 2 models outperform their SigLIP counterparts at all model scales in core capabilities, including zero-shot classification, image-text retrieval, and transfer performance when extracting visual representations for Vision-Language Models (VLMs). Furthermore, the new training recipe leads to significant improvements on localization and dense prediction tasks. We also train variants which support multiple resolutions and preserve the input's native aspect ratio. Finally, we train on a more diverse data-mixture that includes de-biasing techniques, leading to much better multilingual understanding and improved fairness. To allow users to trade off inference cost with performance, we release model checkpoints at four sizes: ViT-B (86M), L (303M), So400m (400M), and g (1B).
PaliGemma: A versatile 3B VLM for transfer
Beyer, Lucas, Steiner, Andreas, Pinto, André Susano, Kolesnikov, Alexander, Wang, Xiao, Salz, Daniel, Neumann, Maxim, Alabdulmohsin, Ibrahim, Tschannen, Michael, Bugliarello, Emanuele, Unterthiner, Thomas, Keysers, Daniel, Koppula, Skanda, Liu, Fangyu, Grycner, Adam, Gritsenko, Alexey, Houlsby, Neil, Kumar, Manoj, Rong, Keran, Eisenschlos, Julian, Kabra, Rishabh, Bauer, Matthias, Bošnjak, Matko, Chen, Xi, Minderer, Matthias, Voigtlaender, Paul, Bica, Ioana, Balazevic, Ivana, Puigcerver, Joan, Papalampidi, Pinelopi, Henaff, Olivier, Xiong, Xi, Soricut, Radu, Harmsen, Jeremiah, Zhai, Xiaohua
PaliGemma is an open Vision-Language Model (VLM) that is based on the SigLIP-So400m vision encoder and the Gemma-2B language model. It is trained to be a versatile and broadly knowledgeable base model that is effective to transfer. It achieves strong performance on a wide variety of open-world tasks. We evaluate PaliGemma on almost 40 diverse tasks including standard VLM benchmarks, but also more specialized tasks such as remote-sensing and segmentation.
No Filter: Cultural and Socioeconomic Diversity in Contrastive Vision-Language Models
Pouget, Angéline, Beyer, Lucas, Bugliarello, Emanuele, Wang, Xiao, Steiner, Andreas Peter, Zhai, Xiaohua, Alabdulmohsin, Ibrahim
We study cultural and socioeconomic diversity in contrastive vision-language models (VLMs). Using a broad range of benchmark datasets and evaluation metrics, we bring to attention several important findings. First, the common filtering of training data to English image-text pairs disadvantages communities of lower socioeconomic status and negatively impacts cultural understanding. Notably, this performance gap is not captured by - and even at odds with - the currently popular evaluation metrics derived from the Western-centric ImageNet and COCO datasets. Second, pretraining with global, unfiltered data before fine-tuning on English content can improve cultural understanding without sacrificing performance on said popular benchmarks. Third, we introduce the task of geo-localization as a novel evaluation metric to assess cultural diversity in VLMs. Our work underscores the value of using diverse data to create more inclusive multimodal systems and lays the groundwork for developing VLMs that better represent global perspectives.
Getting ViT in Shape: Scaling Laws for Compute-Optimal Model Design
Alabdulmohsin, Ibrahim, Zhai, Xiaohua, Kolesnikov, Alexander, Beyer, Lucas
Scaling laws have been recently employed to derive compute-optimal model size (number of parameters) for a given compute duration. We advance and refine such methods to infer compute-optimal model shapes, such as width and depth, and successfully implement this in vision transformers. Our shape-optimized vision transformer, SoViT, achieves results competitive with models that exceed twice its size, despite being pre-trained with an equivalent amount of compute. For example, SoViT-400m/14 achieves 90.3% fine-tuning accuracy on ILSRCV2012, surpassing the much larger ViT-g/14 and approaching ViT-G/14 under identical settings, with also less than half the inference cost. We conduct a thorough evaluation across multiple tasks, such as image classification, captioning, VQA and zero-shot transfer, demonstrating the effectiveness of our model across a broad range of domains and identifying limitations. Overall, our findings challenge the prevailing approach of blindly scaling up vision models and pave a path for a more informed scaling.
Three Towers: Flexible Contrastive Learning with Pretrained Image Models
Kossen, Jannik, Collier, Mark, Mustafa, Basil, Wang, Xiao, Zhai, Xiaohua, Beyer, Lucas, Steiner, Andreas, Berent, Jesse, Jenatton, Rodolphe, Kokiopoulou, Efi
We introduce Three Towers (3T), a flexible method to improve the contrastive learning of vision-language models by incorporating pretrained image classifiers. While contrastive models are usually trained from scratch, LiT (Zhai et al., 2022) has recently shown performance gains from using pretrained classifier embeddings. However, LiT directly replaces the image tower with the frozen embeddings, excluding any potential benefits from training the image tower contrastively. With 3T, we propose a more flexible strategy that allows the image tower to benefit from both pretrained embeddings and contrastive training. To achieve this, we introduce a third tower that contains the frozen pretrained embeddings, and we encourage alignment between this third tower and the main image-text towers. Empirically, 3T consistently improves over LiT and the CLIP-style from-scratch baseline for retrieval tasks. For classification, 3T reliably improves over the from-scratch baseline, and while it underperforms relative to LiT for JFT-pretrained models, it outperforms LiT for ImageNet-21k and Places365 pretraining.
Sigmoid Loss for Language Image Pre-Training
Zhai, Xiaohua, Mustafa, Basil, Kolesnikov, Alexander, Beyer, Lucas
We propose a simple pairwise Sigmoid loss for Language-Image Pre-training (SigLIP). Unlike standard contrastive learning with softmax normalization, the sigmoid loss operates solely on image-text pairs and does not require a global view of the pairwise similarities for normalization. The sigmoid loss simultaneously allows further scaling up the batch size, while also performing better at smaller batch sizes. Combined with Locked-image Tuning, with only four TPUv4 chips, we train a SigLiT model that achieves 84.5% ImageNet zero-shot accuracy in two days. The disentanglement of the batch size from the loss further allows us to study the impact of examples vs pairs and negative to positive ratio. Finally, we push the batch size to the extreme, up to one million, and find that the benefits of growing batch size quickly diminish, with a more reasonable batch size of 32k being sufficient. We release our models at https://github.com/google-research/big_vision and hope our research motivates further explorations in improving the quality and efficiency of language-image pre-training.
PaLI: A Jointly-Scaled Multilingual Language-Image Model
Chen, Xi, Wang, Xiao, Changpinyo, Soravit, Piergiovanni, AJ, Padlewski, Piotr, Salz, Daniel, Goodman, Sebastian, Grycner, Adam, Mustafa, Basil, Beyer, Lucas, Kolesnikov, Alexander, Puigcerver, Joan, Ding, Nan, Rong, Keran, Akbari, Hassan, Mishra, Gaurav, Xue, Linting, Thapliyal, Ashish, Bradbury, James, Kuo, Weicheng, Seyedhosseini, Mojtaba, Jia, Chao, Ayan, Burcu Karagol, Riquelme, Carlos, Steiner, Andreas, Angelova, Anelia, Zhai, Xiaohua, Houlsby, Neil, Soricut, Radu
Effective scaling and a flexible task interface enable large language models to excel at many tasks. We present PaLI (Pathways Language and Image model), a model that extends this approach to the joint modeling of language and vision. PaLI generates text based on visual and textual inputs, and with this interface performs many vision, language, and multimodal tasks, in many languages. To train PaLI, we make use of large pre-trained encoder-decoder language models and Vision Transformers (ViTs). This allows us to capitalize on their existing capabilities and leverage the substantial cost of training them. We find that joint scaling of the vision and language components is important. Since existing Transformers for language are much larger than their vision counterparts, we train a large, 4-billion parameter ViT (ViT-e) to quantify the benefits from even larger-capacity vision models. To train PaLI, we create a large multilingual mix of pretraining tasks, based on a new image-text training set containing 10B images and texts in over 100 languages. PaLI achieves state-of-the-art in multiple vision and language tasks (such as captioning, visual question-answering, scene-text understanding), while retaining a simple, modular, and scalable design.
PaLI-X: On Scaling up a Multilingual Vision and Language Model
Chen, Xi, Djolonga, Josip, Padlewski, Piotr, Mustafa, Basil, Changpinyo, Soravit, Wu, Jialin, Ruiz, Carlos Riquelme, Goodman, Sebastian, Wang, Xiao, Tay, Yi, Shakeri, Siamak, Dehghani, Mostafa, Salz, Daniel, Lucic, Mario, Tschannen, Michael, Nagrani, Arsha, Hu, Hexiang, Joshi, Mandar, Pang, Bo, Montgomery, Ceslee, Pietrzyk, Paulina, Ritter, Marvin, Piergiovanni, AJ, Minderer, Matthias, Pavetic, Filip, Waters, Austin, Li, Gang, Alabdulmohsin, Ibrahim, Beyer, Lucas, Amelot, Julien, Lee, Kenton, Steiner, Andreas Peter, Li, Yang, Keysers, Daniel, Arnab, Anurag, Xu, Yuanzhong, Rong, Keran, Kolesnikov, Alexander, Seyedhosseini, Mojtaba, Angelova, Anelia, Zhai, Xiaohua, Houlsby, Neil, Soricut, Radu
We present the training recipe and results of scaling up PaLI-X, a multilingual vision and language model, both in terms of size of the components and the breadth of its training task mixture. Our model achieves new levels of performance on a wide-range of varied and complex tasks, including multiple image-based captioning and question-answering tasks, image-based document understanding and few-shot (in-context) learning, as well as object detection, video question answering, and video captioning. PaLI-X advances the state-of-the-art on most vision-and-language benchmarks considered (25+ of them). Finally, we observe emerging capabilities, such as complex counting and multilingual object detection, tasks that are not explicitly in the training mix.
A Study of Autoregressive Decoders for Multi-Tasking in Computer Vision
Beyer, Lucas, Wan, Bo, Madan, Gagan, Pavetic, Filip, Steiner, Andreas, Kolesnikov, Alexander, Pinto, André Susano, Bugliarello, Emanuele, Wang, Xiao, Yu, Qihang, Chen, Liang-Chieh, Zhai, Xiaohua
There has been a recent explosion of computer vision models which perform many tasks and are composed of an image encoder (usually a ViT) and an autoregressive decoder (usually a Transformer). However, most of this work simply presents one system and its results, leaving many questions regarding design decisions and trade-offs of such systems unanswered. In this work, we aim to provide such answers. We take a close look at autoregressive decoders for multi-task learning in multimodal computer vision, including classification, captioning, visual question answering, and optical character recognition. Through extensive systematic experiments, we study the effects of task and data mixture, training and regularization hyperparameters, conditioning type and specificity, modality combination, and more. Importantly, we compare these to well-tuned single-task baselines to highlight the cost incurred by multi-tasking. A key finding is that a small decoder learned on top of a frozen pretrained encoder works surprisingly well. We call this setup locked-image tuning with decoder (LiT-decoder). It can be seen as teaching a decoder to interact with a pretrained vision model via natural language.