arXiv:2604.09450v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: Chest X-ray report generation (CXR-RG) has the potential to substantially alleviate radiologists’ workload. However, conventional autoregressive vision–language models (VLMs) suffer from high inference latency due to sequential token decoding. Diffusion-based models offer a promising alternative through parallel generation, but they still require multiple denoising iterations. Compressing multi-step denoising to a single step could further reduce latency, but often degrades textual coherence due to the mean-field bias introduced by token-factorized denoisers. To address this challenge, we propose textbfECHO, an efficient diffusion-based VLM (dVLM) for chest X-ray report generation. ECHO enables stable one-step-per-block inference via a novel Direct Conditional Distillation (DCD) framework, which mitigates the mean-field limitation by constructing unfactorized supervision from on-policy diffusion trajectories to encode joint token dependencies. In addition, we introduce a Response-Asymmetric Diffusion (RAD) training strategy that further improves training efficiency while maintaining model effectiveness. Extensive experiments demonstrate that ECHO surpasses state-of-the-art autoregressive methods, improving RaTE and SemScore by textbf64.33% and textbf60.58% respectively, while achieving an textbf$8times$ inference speedup without compromising clinical accuracy.
Measuring and reducing surgical staff stress in a realistic operating room setting using EDA monitoring and smart hearing protection
BackgroundStress is a critical factor in the operating room (OR) and affects both the performance and well-being of surgical staff. Measuring and mitigating this stress

