Introspective Diffusion Language Models

(introspective-diffusion.github.io)

82 points | by zagwdt 4 hours ago

6 comments

  • thepasch 2 hours ago
    If I’m reading this right, this is pretty wild. They turned a Qwen autoregressor into a diffuser by using a bunch of really clever techniques, and they vastly outperform any “native diffuser,” actually being competitive with the base model they were trained from. The obvious upside here is the massive speedup in generation.

    And then through a LoRA adapter, you can ground the diffuser on the base model’s distribution (essentially have it “compare” its proposals against what the base model would’ve generated), which effectively means: exact same byte-for-byte output for the same seed, just roughly twice as fast (which should improve even more for batched tasks).

    I’m not an expert, more of a “practicing enthusiast,” so I might be missing something, but at first glance, this reads super exciting to me.

    • awestroke 1 hour ago
      I don't understand how you can compare against the base model output without generating with the base model, in which case what's the point?
      • qeternity 25 minutes ago
        I haven't read TFA yet but a common technique is speculative decoding where a fast draft model will generate X tokens, which are then verified by the larger target model. The target model may accept some Y < X tokens but the speedup comes from the fact that this can be done in parallel as a prefill operation due to the nature of transformers.

        So let's say a draft model generates 5 tokens, all 5 of these can be verified in parallel with a single forward pass of the target model. The target model may only accept the first 4 tokens (or whatever) but as long as the 5 forward passes of the draft model + 1 prefill of the target model is faster than 4 forward passes of the target, you will have a speedup while maintaining the exact output distribution as the target.

      • anentropic 21 minutes ago
        presumably that happens at training time?

        then once successfully trained you get faster inference from just the diffusion model

      • a1j9o94 36 minutes ago
        You would only use the base model during training. This is a distillation technique
    • oliver236 29 minutes ago
      [dead]
  • andsoitis 3 hours ago
    Is anyone here experimenting seriously with Diffusion for text generation? I’d love to learn about your experiences!
    • Topfi 27 minutes ago
      I've found the latency and pricing make Mercury 2 extremely compelling for some UX experiments focused around automated note tagging/interlinking. Far more than the Gemini Flash Lite I used before, it made some interactions nearly frictionless, very close to how old school autocomplete/T9/autocorrect works in a manner that users don't even think about the processes behind it.

      Sadly, it does not perform at the level of e.g. Haiku 3.5 for tool calling, despite their own benchmarks claiming parity with Haiku 4.5, but it does compete with Flash Lite there too.

      Anything with very targeted output, sufficient existing input and that benefits from a seamless feeling lends itself to dLLMs. Could see a place in tab-complete too, though Cursors model seems to be sufficiently low latency already.

      • nl 5 minutes ago
        If you like Mercury 2 you should try Xiaomi Mimo-v2-flash.

        I have an agentic benchmark and it shows Mercury 2 at 19/25 in 58 seconds and Mimo v2 Flash at 22/25 in 109 seconds

        https://sql-benchmark.nicklothian.com/?highlight=xiaomi_mimo... (flip to the Cost vs Performance tab to see speed more graphically too)

    • recsv-heredoc 3 hours ago
      https://www.inceptionlabs.ai/

      This startup seems to have been at it a while.

      From our look into it - amazing speed, but challenges remain around time-to-first-token user experience and overall answer quality.

      Can absolutely see this working if we can get the speed and accuracy up to that “good enough” position for cheaper models - or non-user facing async work.

      One other question I’ve had is wondering if it’s possible to actually set a huge amount of text to diffuse as the output - using a larger body to mechanically force greater levels of reasoning. I’m sure there’s some incredibly interesting research taking place in the big labs on this.

      • IanCal 3 hours ago
        The overall speed rather than TTFT might start to be more relevant as the caller moves from being a human to another model.

        However quality is really important. I tried that site and clicked one of their examples, "create a javascript animation". Fast response, but while it starts like this

        ``` Below is a self‑contained HTML + CSS + JavaScript example that creates a simple, smooth animation: a colorful ball bounces around the browser window while leaving a fading trail behind it.

        <!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <title>JavaScript Bounce Animation</title> <style> body, html { margin: 0; padding: 0;

        ```

        the answer then degrades to

        ``` radius: BALL_RADIUS, color: BALL_COLOR, traivD O] // array of previous {x,y} positions }; ```

        Then more things start creeping in

        ``` // 3⃣ Bounce off walls if (ball.G 0 ball.radius < 0 || ball.x + ball.radius > _7{nas.width) { ball.vx *= -1; ibSl.x = Math.max(ball.radius, Math.min(ball.x, canvbbF4idth - ball.radius)); } if

        ```

        and the more it goes on the worse it gets

        ``` Ho7 J3 Works 0 Atep | Description | ```

        and

        ``` • prwrZ8}E6on 5 jdF wVuJg Ar touc> 2ysteners ,2 Ppawn \?) balls w>SFu the 8b$] cliM#]9 ```

        This is for the demo on the front page, so I expect this is a pretty good outcome compared to what else you might ask.

        • nl 3 minutes ago
          Mercury 2 is better than that in my testing, but it does have trouble with tool calling.
        • cataflutter 2 hours ago
          Weird; I clicked through out of curiosity and didn't get any corruption of the sort in the end result.

          I also asked it some technical details about how diffusion LLMs could work and it provided grammatically-correct plausible answers in a very short time (I don't know the tech to say if it's correct or not).

    • girvo 2 hours ago
      It's being explored right now for speculative decoding in the local-LLM space, which I think is quite interesting as a use-case

      https://www.emergentmind.com/topics/dflash-block-diffusion-f...

      • roger_ 39 minutes ago
        DFlash immediately came to my mind.

        There are several Mac implementations of it that show > 2x faster Qwen3.5 already.

    • moostee 3 hours ago
      I have. It requires a distinct intuition compared to a normal language model. Very well suited to certain problems.
    • LoganDark 2 hours ago
      I've been playing with a Swift implementation of a diffusion language model (WeDLM), but performance is not yet acceptable and it still generates roughly from left-to-right like a language model (just within a sliding window rather than strictly token-by-token... but that doesn't matter when the sliding window is only like 16 tokens.)
  • scotty79 21 minutes ago
    So can you just use this and have a faster Qwen32b?

    https://huggingface.co/yifanyu/I-DLM-32B/tree/main

  • simianwords 1 hour ago
    Can diffusion models have reasoning steps where they generate a block, introspect and then generate another until the output is satisfactory?
  • akcd 2 hours ago
    [dead]
  • ramon156 2 hours ago
    > 2025-04-12: Initial code release with training and inference support.

    > 2025-04-12: Released I-DLM-8B, I-DLM-32B, and I-DLM-8B-LoRA on HuggingFace.

    Is this old already? Not saying that's a bad thing, since it seems very sophisticated. Just curious if there's an update

    • oersted 1 hour ago
      It's clearly a typo on the year, April 12 was two days ago, a quick check in HuggingFace shows that they were uploaded 5 days ago.