arXiv:2603.10210v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: While Diffusion Models excel in text-to-image synthesis, they often suffer from concept omission when synthesizing complex multi-instance scenes. Existing training-free methods attempt to resolve this by rescaling attention maps, which merely exacerbates unstructured noise without establishing coherent semantic representations. To address this, we propose Delta-K, a backbone-agnostic and plug-and-play inference framework that tackles omission by operating directly in the shared cross-attention Key space. Specifically, with Vision-language model, we extract a differential key $Delta K$ that encodes the semantic signature of missing concepts. This signal is then injected during the early semantic planning stage of the diffusion process. Governed by a dynamically optimized scheduling mechanism, Delta-K grounds diffuse noise into stable structural anchors while preserving existing concepts. Extensive experiments demonstrate the generality of our approach: Delta-K consistently improves compositional alignment across both modern DiT models and classical U-Net architectures, without requiring spatial masks, additional training, or architectural modifications.
Toward terminological clarity in digital biomarker research
Digital biomarker research has generated thousands of publications demonstrating associations between sensor-derived measures and clinical conditions, yet clinical adoption remains negligible. We identify a foundational




