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Jul 15

Evaluating Text-to-Visual Generation with Image-to-Text Generation

Despite significant progress in generative AI, comprehensive evaluation remains challenging because of the lack of effective metrics and standardized benchmarks. For instance, the widely-used CLIPScore measures the alignment between a (generated) image and text prompt, but it fails to produce reliable scores for complex prompts involving compositions of objects, attributes, and relations. One reason is that text encoders of CLIP can notoriously act as a "bag of words", conflating prompts such as "the horse is eating the grass" with "the grass is eating the horse". To address this, we introduce the VQAScore, which uses a visual-question-answering (VQA) model to produce an alignment score by computing the probability of a "Yes" answer to a simple "Does this figure show '{text}'?" question. Though simpler than prior art, VQAScore computed with off-the-shelf models produces state-of-the-art results across many (8) image-text alignment benchmarks. We also compute VQAScore with an in-house model that follows best practices in the literature. For example, we use a bidirectional image-question encoder that allows image embeddings to depend on the question being asked (and vice versa). Our in-house model, CLIP-FlanT5, outperforms even the strongest baselines that make use of the proprietary GPT-4V. Interestingly, although we train with only images, VQAScore can also align text with video and 3D models. VQAScore allows researchers to benchmark text-to-visual generation using complex texts that capture the compositional structure of real-world prompts. We introduce GenAI-Bench, a more challenging benchmark with 1,600 compositional text prompts that require parsing scenes, objects, attributes, relationships, and high-order reasoning like comparison and logic. GenAI-Bench also offers over 15,000 human ratings for leading image and video generation models such as Stable Diffusion, DALL-E 3, and Gen2.

  • 8 authors
·
Apr 1, 2024

E-PMQ: Expert-Guided Post-Merge Quantization with Merged-Weight Anchoring

Low-resource deployment constraints have made model quantization essential for deploying neural networks while preserving performance. Meanwhile, model merging has become an increasingly practical low-resource strategy for integrating multiple task- or domain-specialized experts into a single model without joint training or multi-model serving. Together, quantization and model merging enable an efficient low-resource deployment pipeline by integrating multiple experts into one low-bit model. We formulate this setting as Post-Merge Quantization (PMQ). We show that directly applying post-training quantization (PTQ) to a merged model is unreliable because two distinct deviations are coupled: the quantization deviation introduced by low-bit reconstruction and the expert-relative merging deviation inherited from model merging. To mitigate these deviations, we propose E-PMQ, an expert-guided PMQ framework that uses source expert weights to provide expert- guided output targets during layer-wise calibration, together with merged-weight anchoring to stabilize the calibration and preserve the integrated behavior of the merged model. On CLIP-ViT-B/32 eight-task merging, E-PMQ improves 4-bit GPTQ from 65.0% to 73.6% under Task Arithmetic and from 69.1% to 74.8% under TIES-Merging. On harder settings, E-PMQ improves GPTQ from 34.8% to 76.7% on 20-task CLIP-ViT-L/14 and from 78.26% to 83.34% on FLAN-T5- base GLUE. These results demonstrate that E-PMQ enables effective post-merge quantization and low-bit deployment.