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analyze-generative-diffusion-model

pjt222
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Esta habilidad analiza modelos generativos de difusión preentrenados como Stable Diffusion mediante el cálculo de métricas de calidad (FID, puntuación CLIP), visualización de mapas de atención y exploración de espacios latentes. Úsela para evaluar la calidad de la salida del modelo, comparar programaciones de ruido o analizar patrones de atención cruzada para la generación condicionada por texto. Está diseñada para desarrolladores que realizan evaluación e inspección avanzada de modelos.

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Documentación

Analyze a Generative Diffusion Model

Evaluate pre-trained generative diffusion models. Quantitative quality metrics, noise schedule inspection, cross-attention map analysis, latent space probing. Understand model behavior, diagnose failure modes, guide fine-tuning decisions.

When Use

  • Evaluating pre-trained generative diffusion model's output quality with standard metrics
  • Computing FID, IS, CLIP score, or precision/recall for generated image sets
  • Inspecting and comparing noise schedules (linear, cosine, learned) via SNR curves
  • Extracting cross-attention maps to understand text-to-image token-region correspondences
  • Interpolating between latent codes or discovering semantic directions in latent space
  • Detecting out-of-distribution inputs for diffusion model pipeline

Inputs

  • Required: Pre-trained model identifier or checkpoint path (e.g., stabilityai/stable-diffusion-2-1)
  • Required: Analysis mode — one or more of: metrics, schedule, attention, latent
  • Required: Reference dataset for metric computation (real images or dataset name)
  • Optional: Text prompts for attention analysis (default: model-appropriate test prompts)
  • Optional: Number of generated samples for metric computation (default: 10000)
  • Optional: Device configuration (default: cuda if available, else cpu)

Steps

Step 1: Quantitative Evaluation

Compute standard generative quality metrics against reference dataset.

  1. Set up evaluation pipeline:
import torch
from diffusers import StableDiffusionPipeline
from torchmetrics.image.fid import FrechetInceptionDistance
from torchmetrics.image.inception import InceptionScore

device = "cuda" if torch.cuda.is_available() else "cpu"
pipe = StableDiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(
    "stabilityai/stable-diffusion-2-1", torch_dtype=torch.float16
).to(device)

fid = FrechetInceptionDistance(feature=2048, normalize=True).to(device)
inception = InceptionScore(normalize=True).to(device)
  1. Feed real images into metric accumulators:
from torch.utils.data import DataLoader

for batch in DataLoader(real_dataset, batch_size=64):
    imgs = (batch * 255).byte().to(device)
    fid.update(imgs, real=True)
  1. Generate samples and accumulate fake statistics:
prompts = load_evaluation_prompts("prompts.txt")  # one prompt per line
n_generated = 0
while n_generated < 10000:
    prompt_batch = prompts[n_generated:n_generated + 8]
    images = pipe(prompt_batch, num_inference_steps=50).images
    tensors = torch.stack([to_tensor(img) for img in images]).to(device)
    byte_imgs = (tensors * 255).byte()
    fid.update(byte_imgs, real=False)
    inception.update(byte_imgs)
    n_generated += len(images)
  1. Compute CLIP score for text-image alignment:
from torchmetrics.multimodal.clip_score import CLIPScore

clip_metric = CLIPScore(model_name_or_path="openai/clip-vit-large-patch14").to(device)
for prompt, image_tensor in zip(sampled_prompts, sampled_tensors):
    clip_metric.update(image_tensor.unsqueeze(0), [prompt])

print(f"FID: {fid.compute():.2f}")
print(f"IS:  {inception.compute()[0]:.2f} +/- {inception.compute()[1]:.2f}")
print(f"CLIP: {clip_metric.compute():.2f}")
  1. Compute precision and recall for mode coverage:
from torchmetrics.image import FrechetInceptionDistance

# Precision: fraction of generated images near real manifold
# Recall: fraction of real images near generated manifold
# Use improved precision/recall (Kynkaanniemi et al., 2019) via
# feature embeddings from the Inception network

Got: FID below 30 for well-trained Stable Diffusion model on standard benchmarks. IS above 50 on ImageNet-class prompts. CLIP score above 25 for text-conditioned models. Precision and recall both above 0.6.

If fail: FID above 100? Verify real and generated images share same resolution and normalization. CLIP score low but FID acceptable? Model generates plausible images that do not match text prompt -- check text encoder. Ensure at least 10,000 samples for stable FID estimates.

Step 2: Noise Schedule Inspection

Visualize and compare forward and reverse noise schedules.

  1. Extract schedule parameters from model:
scheduler = pipe.scheduler
betas = torch.tensor(scheduler.betas) if hasattr(scheduler, 'betas') else None
alphas_cumprod = torch.tensor(scheduler.alphas_cumprod)
timesteps = torch.arange(len(alphas_cumprod))
  1. Compute signal-to-noise ratio curve:
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

snr = alphas_cumprod / (1 - alphas_cumprod)
log_snr = torch.log(snr)

fig, axes = plt.subplots(1, 3, figsize=(18, 5))
axes[0].plot(timesteps.numpy(), alphas_cumprod.numpy())
axes[0].set_xlabel("Timestep"); axes[0].set_ylabel("alpha_cumprod")
axes[0].set_title("Cumulative Signal Retention")

axes[1].plot(timesteps.numpy(), log_snr.numpy())
axes[1].set_xlabel("Timestep"); axes[1].set_ylabel("log(SNR)")
axes[1].set_title("Log Signal-to-Noise Ratio")

if betas is not None:
    axes[2].plot(timesteps.numpy(), betas.numpy())
    axes[2].set_xlabel("Timestep"); axes[2].set_ylabel("beta")
    axes[2].set_title("Beta Schedule")
fig.tight_layout()
fig.savefig("noise_schedule.png", dpi=150)
  1. Compare multiple schedule types:
from diffusers import DDPMScheduler

schedules = {
    "linear": DDPMScheduler(beta_schedule="linear", num_train_timesteps=1000),
    "cosine": DDPMScheduler(beta_schedule="squaredcos_cap_v2", num_train_timesteps=1000),
}

fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(10, 6))
for name, sched in schedules.items():
    ac = torch.tensor(sched.alphas_cumprod)
    snr = torch.log(ac / (1 - ac))
    ax.plot(snr.numpy(), label=name)
ax.set_xlabel("Timestep"); ax.set_ylabel("log(SNR)")
ax.set_title("Schedule Comparison"); ax.legend()
fig.savefig("schedule_comparison.png", dpi=150)

Got: Cosine schedule shows more gradual SNR decrease in mid-timesteps compared to linear. Log-SNR curve should span from approximately +10 (clean) to -10 (pure noise). Learned schedules should be monotonically decreasing.

If fail: alphas_cumprod not monotonically decreasing? Schedule misconfigured. Values constant? Check scheduler properly initialized with model's config. For custom schedulers, verify set_timesteps() called.

Step 3: Attention Map Analysis

Extract and visualize cross-attention maps from text-conditioned models.

  1. Register attention hooks on U-Net cross-attention layers:
attention_maps = {}

def hook_fn(name):
    def fn(module, input, output):
        # Cross-attention: Q from image, K/V from text
        if hasattr(module, 'processor'):
            attention_maps[name] = output.detach().cpu()
    return fn

for name, module in pipe.unet.named_modules():
    if 'attn2' in name and hasattr(module, 'processor'):
        module.register_forward_hook(hook_fn(name))
  1. Run inference and collect attention at specific timesteps:
prompt = "a red car parked next to a blue house"
timestep_attention = {}

# Custom callback to capture attention at specific timesteps
def callback_fn(pipe, step_index, timestep, callback_kwargs):
    if step_index in [5, 15, 30, 45]:
        timestep_attention[int(timestep)] = {
            k: v.clone() for k, v in attention_maps.items()
        }
    return callback_kwargs

output = pipe(prompt, num_inference_steps=50, callback_on_step_end=callback_fn)
  1. Visualize token-region correspondences:
tokenizer = pipe.tokenizer
tokens = tokenizer.encode(prompt)
token_strings = [tokenizer.decode([t]) for t in tokens]

# Select a mid-resolution attention layer
layer_key = [k for k in attention_maps if 'mid' in k or 'up.1' in k][0]
attn = attention_maps[layer_key]  # shape: (batch, heads, hw, seq_len)
attn_avg = attn.mean(dim=1)  # average across heads
res = int(attn_avg.shape[1] ** 0.5)
attn_map = attn_avg[0].reshape(res, res, -1)

fig, axes = plt.subplots(2, min(len(token_strings), 6), figsize=(18, 6))
for idx, token in enumerate(token_strings[:6]):
    for row, (ts, ts_attn) in enumerate(list(timestep_attention.items())[:2]):
        a = ts_attn[layer_key].mean(dim=1)[0]
        a_res = int(a.shape[0] ** 0.5)
        axes[row, idx].imshow(a[:, idx].reshape(a_res, a_res), cmap="hot")
        axes[row, idx].set_title(f"t={ts}: '{token}'")
        axes[row, idx].axis("off")
fig.suptitle("Cross-Attention Maps by Token and Timestep")
fig.tight_layout()
fig.savefig("attention_maps.png", dpi=150)

Got: Content tokens ("car", "house") activate localized spatial regions. Style/color tokens ("red", "blue") activate regions overlapping with their associated object. Early timesteps (high noise) show diffuse attention; later timesteps show sharp, localized attention.

If fail: All attention maps look uniform? Hook may be capturing self-attention instead of cross-attention -- verify layer name contains attn2 (cross) not attn1 (self). Attention captured but has wrong dimensions? Check output tensor indexing matches layer's head count and spatial resolution.

Step 4: Latent Space Probing

Explore structure of latent space through interpolation and direction discovery.

  1. Encode reference images into latent space:
from diffusers import AutoencoderKL
from PIL import Image
import torchvision.transforms as T

vae = pipe.vae
transform = T.Compose([T.Resize(512), T.CenterCrop(512), T.ToTensor(),
                       T.Normalize([0.5], [0.5])])

def encode_image(image_path):
    img = transform(Image.open(image_path).convert("RGB")).unsqueeze(0).to(device)
    with torch.no_grad():
        latent = vae.encode(img.half()).latent_dist.sample() * vae.config.scaling_factor
    return latent

z1 = encode_image("image_a.png")
z2 = encode_image("image_b.png")
  1. Perform spherical linear interpolation (slerp):
def slerp(z1, z2, alpha):
    """Spherical linear interpolation between two latent codes."""
    z1_flat = z1.flatten()
    z2_flat = z2.flatten()
    omega = torch.acos(torch.clamp(
        torch.dot(z1_flat, z2_flat) / (z1_flat.norm() * z2_flat.norm()), -1, 1
    ))
    if omega.abs() < 1e-6:
        return (1 - alpha) * z1 + alpha * z2
    return (torch.sin((1 - alpha) * omega) * z1 + torch.sin(alpha * omega) * z2) / torch.sin(omega)

alphas = torch.linspace(0, 1, 8)
interpolated = [slerp(z1, z2, a.item()) for a in alphas]
decoded = []
for z in interpolated:
    with torch.no_grad():
        img = vae.decode(z / vae.config.scaling_factor).sample
    decoded.append(img.cpu())
  1. Discover semantic directions via prompt-pair differences:
def get_text_embedding(prompt):
    tokens = pipe.tokenizer(prompt, return_tensors="pt", padding="max_length",
                            max_length=77, truncation=True).input_ids.to(device)
    with torch.no_grad():
        emb = pipe.text_encoder(tokens).last_hidden_state
    return emb

pos_emb = get_text_embedding("a happy person smiling")
neg_emb = get_text_embedding("a sad person frowning")
direction = pos_emb - neg_emb  # semantic direction in text embedding space
  1. Detect out-of-distribution latents:
# Compute latent space statistics from a reference set
ref_latents = torch.stack([encode_image(p) for p in reference_paths])
ref_mean = ref_latents.mean(dim=0)
ref_std = ref_latents.std(dim=0)

def ood_score(z):
    """Mahalanobis-like OOD score (higher = more unusual)."""
    deviation = ((z - ref_mean) / (ref_std + 1e-6)).flatten()
    return deviation.norm().item()

test_z = encode_image("test_image.png")
score = ood_score(test_z)
print(f"OOD score: {score:.2f} (reference mean: {np.mean([ood_score(r) for r in ref_latents]):.2f})")

Got: Interpolated images show smooth, semantically meaningful transitions without artifacts. Semantic directions produce consistent attribute changes when added to diverse latent codes. OOD scores for in-distribution images cluster tightly; outliers score significantly higher.

If fail: Interpolation produces blurry or incoherent midpoints? Use slerp instead of linear interpolation -- linear interpolation traverses low-density regions in high-dimensional latent spaces. Semantic directions have no visible effect? Increase direction magnitude or verify text encoder is same one used during model training.

Checks

  • FID computed on at least 10,000 generated samples and matching real sample count
  • CLIP score computed with same CLIP model used during training (if applicable)
  • Noise schedule visualization shows monotonically decreasing alphas_cumprod
  • Log-SNR spans approximately +10 to -10 across full timestep range
  • Attention maps resolve per-token spatial activations at mid-resolution layers
  • Attention sharpens from early (diffuse) to late (localized) timesteps
  • Latent interpolations smooth with no sudden jumps or artifacts
  • OOD detection baseline established from at least 100 reference samples

Pitfalls

  • FID on mismatched resolutions: Real and generated images must be same resolution before feeding to Inception. Resize both sets identically or FID will be inflated.
  • Forgetting to normalize for torchmetrics: FrechetInceptionDistance(normalize=True) expects [0, 1] float tensors. With normalize=False it expects [0, 255] uint8. Mixing conventions gives meaningless FID.
  • Hooking self-attention instead of cross-attention: U-Net layers named attn1 are self-attention (image-to-image). Use attn2 for cross-attention (text-to-image). Confusing them produces uninformative uniform maps.
  • Linear interpolation in high dimensions: Linear interpolation between two high-dimensional Gaussians passes through low-density shell. Always use slerp for latent space interpolation in diffusion models.
  • Ignoring VAE scaling factor: Stable Diffusion latents scaled by vae.config.scaling_factor after encoding. Forgetting to apply or remove this factor produces garbled decoded images.
  • Too few samples for precision/recall: Precision and recall estimates from fewer than 5,000 samples per set unreliable. Use at least 10,000 for stable estimates.

See Also

  • implement-diffusion-network - building diffusion models that this skill evaluates
  • analyze-diffusion-dynamics - mathematical foundations of noise processes inspected here
  • fit-drift-diffusion-model - different diffusion model family sharing SDE foundations

Repositorio GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Ruta: i18n/caveman/skills/analyze-generative-diffusion-model
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