Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Models (DDPM) by Jonathan Ho, Ajay Jain and Pieter Abbeel proposes a diffusion based model of the same name. In the context of the 🤗 Diffusers library, DDPM refers to the discrete denoising scheduler from the paper as well as the pipeline.
The abstract from the paper is:
We present high quality image synthesis results using diffusion probabilistic models, a class of latent variable models inspired by considerations from nonequilibrium thermodynamics. Our best results are obtained by training on a weighted variational bound designed according to a novel connection between diffusion probabilistic models and denoising score matching with Langevin dynamics, and our models naturally admit a progressive lossy decompression scheme that can be interpreted as a generalization of autoregressive decoding. On the unconditional CIFAR10 dataset, we obtain an Inception score of 9.46 and a state-of-the-art FID score of 3.17. On 256x256 LSUN, we obtain sample quality similar to ProgressiveGAN. Our implementation is available at this https URL.
( num_train_timesteps: int = 1000 beta_start: float = 0.0001 beta_end: float = 0.02 beta_schedule: str = 'linear' trained_betas: Union = None variance_type: str = 'fixed_small' clip_sample: bool = True prediction_type: str = 'epsilon' thresholding: bool = False dynamic_thresholding_ratio: float = 0.995 clip_sample_range: float = 1.0 sample_max_value: float = 1.0 timestep_spacing: str = 'leading' steps_offset: int = 0 rescale_betas_zero_snr: bool = False )
Parameters
int
, defaults to 1000) —
The number of diffusion steps to train the model. float
, defaults to 0.0001) —
The starting beta
value of inference. float
, defaults to 0.02) —
The final beta
value. str
, defaults to "linear"
) —
The beta schedule, a mapping from a beta range to a sequence of betas for stepping the model. Choose from
linear
, scaled_linear
, or squaredcos_cap_v2
. np.ndarray
, optional) —
An array of betas to pass directly to the constructor without using beta_start
and beta_end
. str
, defaults to "fixed_small"
) —
Clip the variance when adding noise to the denoised sample. Choose from fixed_small
, fixed_small_log
,
fixed_large
, fixed_large_log
, learned
or learned_range
. bool
, defaults to True
) —
Clip the predicted sample for numerical stability. float
, defaults to 1.0) —
The maximum magnitude for sample clipping. Valid only when clip_sample=True
. str
, defaults to epsilon
, optional) —
Prediction type of the scheduler function; can be epsilon
(predicts the noise of the diffusion process),
sample
(directly predicts the noisy sample) or
v_prediction` (see section 2.4 of Imagen
Video paper). bool
, defaults to False
) —
Whether to use the “dynamic thresholding” method. This is unsuitable for latent-space diffusion models such
as Stable Diffusion. float
, defaults to 0.995) —
The ratio for the dynamic thresholding method. Valid only when thresholding=True
. float
, defaults to 1.0) —
The threshold value for dynamic thresholding. Valid only when thresholding=True
. str
, defaults to "leading"
) —
The way the timesteps should be scaled. Refer to Table 2 of the Common Diffusion Noise Schedules and
Sample Steps are Flawed for more information. int
, defaults to 0) —
An offset added to the inference steps, as required by some model families. bool
, defaults to False
) —
Whether to rescale the betas to have zero terminal SNR. This enables the model to generate very bright and
dark samples instead of limiting it to samples with medium brightness. Loosely related to
--offset_noise
. DDPMScheduler
explores the connections between denoising score matching and Langevin dynamics sampling.
This model inherits from SchedulerMixin and ConfigMixin. Check the superclass documentation for the generic methods the library implements for all schedulers such as loading and saving.
( sample: Tensor timestep: Optional = None ) → torch.Tensor
Ensures interchangeability with schedulers that need to scale the denoising model input depending on the current timestep.
( num_inference_steps: Optional = None device: Union = None timesteps: Optional = None )
Parameters
int
) —
The number of diffusion steps used when generating samples with a pre-trained model. If used,
timesteps
must be None
. str
or torch.device
, optional) —
The device to which the timesteps should be moved to. If None
, the timesteps are not moved. List[int]
, optional) —
Custom timesteps used to support arbitrary spacing between timesteps. If None
, then the default
timestep spacing strategy of equal spacing between timesteps is used. If timesteps
is passed,
num_inference_steps
must be None
. Sets the discrete timesteps used for the diffusion chain (to be run before inference).
( model_output: Tensor timestep: int sample: Tensor generator = None return_dict: bool = True ) → DDPMSchedulerOutput or tuple
Parameters
torch.Tensor
) —
The direct output from learned diffusion model. float
) —
The current discrete timestep in the diffusion chain. torch.Tensor
) —
A current instance of a sample created by the diffusion process. torch.Generator
, optional) —
A random number generator. bool
, optional, defaults to True
) —
Whether or not to return a DDPMSchedulerOutput or tuple
. Returns
DDPMSchedulerOutput or tuple
If return_dict is True
, DDPMSchedulerOutput is returned, otherwise a
tuple is returned where the first element is the sample tensor.
Predict the sample from the previous timestep by reversing the SDE. This function propagates the diffusion process from the learned model outputs (most often the predicted noise).
( prev_sample: Tensor pred_original_sample: Optional = None )
Parameters
torch.Tensor
of shape (batch_size, num_channels, height, width)
for images) —
Computed sample (x_{t-1})
of previous timestep. prev_sample
should be used as next model input in the
denoising loop. torch.Tensor
of shape (batch_size, num_channels, height, width)
for images) —
The predicted denoised sample (x_{0})
based on the model output from the current timestep.
pred_original_sample
can be used to preview progress or for guidance. Output class for the scheduler’s step
function output.