Learning Adaptive Dynamical Features via Multi-τ Liquid-Mamba for All-in-one Image Restoration
Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 08:59 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Multi-τ Liquid-Mamba adapts discretization steps across multiple branches to handle varied image degradations in all-in-one restoration.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Multi-τ Liquid-Mamba modulates the effective discretization steps of multiple dynamical branches inside selective state space modeling and adaptively fuses their responses according to degradation-aware gating weights. This design captures both fast-varying local details and slowly evolving global structures while preserving the original selective parameterization and hardware-efficient selective scan mechanism, so the module integrates directly into prior Mamba-based restoration models.
What carries the argument
Multi-τ Liquid-Mamba: input-conditioned multi-timescale liquid discretization fused by degradation-aware gating weights inside selective state space modeling.
If this is right
- The model captures both fast local details and slow global structures in one forward pass.
- Linear scaling with sequence length is retained.
- The module can be inserted into existing Mamba restoration networks without redesigning the scan pipeline.
- Consistent state-of-the-art results appear across combined restoration tasks such as denoising, deblurring, and deraining.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same multi-branch timescale modulation could be tested on video or 3D data where temporal or volumetric degradations also vary spatially.
- If the gating mechanism proves robust, it might reduce reliance on separate task-specific heads for different restoration problems.
- An ablation that fixes the τ values instead of making them input-conditioned would isolate how much of the reported gain comes from adaptivity versus the mere presence of multiple branches.
Load-bearing premise
That changing discretization steps across multiple input-dependent branches and fusing them with gating weights improves restoration quality without breaking the selective parameterization or hardware-efficient scan of the base Mamba model.
What would settle it
A controlled replacement test on standard all-in-one benchmarks in which a single-τ version of the same backbone produces equal or better PSNR/SSIM scores than the multi-τ version at identical or lower compute cost.
Figures
read the original abstract
Image restoration aims to recover high-quality images from degraded observations. Recent Mamba-based image restoration models have demonstrated strong potential in modeling long-range dependencies with linear complexity. However, most existing designs still rely on a single state-evolution timescale, which limits their adaptability to spatially heterogeneous and task-dependent degradation patterns in all-in-one image restoration. In this paper, we propose Multi-$\tau$ Liquid-Mamba, an adaptive state space module that introduces input-conditioned multi-timescale liquid discretization into selective state space modeling. Instead of changing the overall selective scan pipeline, the proposed module modulates the effective discretization steps of multiple dynamical branches and adaptively fuses their responses according to degradation-aware gating weights. This design allows the model to capture both fast-varying local details and slowly evolving global structures while preserving the linear scaling property of Mamba with respect to sequence length. Importantly, Multi-$\tau$ Liquid-Mamba modulates the effective transition dynamics while preserving the original selective parameterization and hardware-efficient selective scan mechanism, making it a plug-and-play module that can be seamlessly integrated into existing Mamba-based architectures. Built upon this framework, we develop a Multi-$\tau$ Liquid-Mamba Image Restoration Network (MLMIR) for all-in-one image restoration. Extensive experiments on a wide range of restoration benchmarks demonstrate that MLMIR consistently achieves state-of-the-art performance in all-in-one image restoration while remaining highly competitive in task-aligned restoration settings.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims to introduce Multi-τ Liquid-Mamba, an adaptive state space module that incorporates input-conditioned multi-timescale liquid discretization into selective state space modeling for all-in-one image restoration. By modulating the effective discretization steps of multiple dynamical branches and fusing their responses with degradation-aware gating weights, the module captures both fast-varying local details and slowly evolving global structures. The design is presented as preserving the linear scaling and the hardware-efficient selective scan of the base Mamba model, allowing it to be a plug-and-play addition to existing architectures. The resulting MLMIR network is reported to achieve state-of-the-art performance on a range of image restoration benchmarks.
Significance. Should the central technical claims regarding the preservation of linear complexity and the selective scan mechanism be verified through detailed equations and ablations, this work could provide a valuable extension to Mamba-based models in computer vision, particularly for tasks requiring adaptation to varying degradation patterns. The plug-and-play aspect and focus on all-in-one restoration are notable if the efficiency claims hold.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract (module design paragraph)] Abstract (module design paragraph): The assertion that Multi-τ Liquid-Mamba 'modulates the effective transition dynamics while preserving the original selective parameterization and hardware-efficient selective scan mechanism' is load-bearing for the linear-complexity claim. No explicit integration equation, pseudocode, or diagram is visible showing how input-conditioned multi-τ branches are folded into a single selective scan (e.g., via effective τ modulation of shared A/B/C parameters rather than separate state transitions). This leaves open the possibility that multiple scans are required, directly contradicting the 'instead of changing the overall selective scan pipeline' statement.
minor comments (1)
- The abstract would benefit from a brief quantitative statement on the number of τ branches, the form of the gating weights, or the specific restoration benchmarks used, to allow readers to assess the scope of the claimed gains.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive feedback. We address the single major comment below and agree that additional clarification on the integration mechanism will strengthen the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: The assertion that Multi-τ Liquid-Mamba 'modulates the effective transition dynamics while preserving the original selective parameterization and hardware-efficient selective scan mechanism' is load-bearing for the linear-complexity claim. No explicit integration equation, pseudocode, or diagram is visible showing how input-conditioned multi-τ branches are folded into a single selective scan (e.g., via effective τ modulation of shared A/B/C parameters rather than separate state transitions). This leaves open the possibility that multiple scans are required, directly contradicting the 'instead of changing the overall selective scan pipeline' statement.
Authors: We thank the referee for identifying this point of potential ambiguity. The abstract provides a concise summary; the full mathematical details appear in Section 3, where the input-conditioned multi-τ discretization is realized by modulating the effective Δ (discretization step) parameter inside the standard selective SSM recurrence while reusing the same selective A/B/C matrices. This permits all branches to be processed inside one selective scan, after which a degradation-aware gating fusion combines the outputs. No separate scans are introduced. We will add an explicit integration diagram and pseudocode to the revised manuscript (and, space permitting, a brief clarifying sentence in the abstract) to make the single-scan property unambiguous. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: architectural proposal with no self-referential derivations or fitted predictions
full rationale
The paper presents Multi-τ Liquid-Mamba as a plug-and-play architectural module that modulates discretization steps across branches and fuses via gating weights while preserving the base Mamba selective scan. No equations, parameter-fitting procedures, or derivation chains appear in the provided text. Claims rest on design description and external benchmark results rather than any quantity shown to equal its own inputs by construction. No self-citations are invoked as load-bearing uniqueness theorems, and no renaming of known results or ansatz smuggling is evident. The central claim is therefore self-contained as an engineering addition whose validity is testable independently.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
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