The critical slowing down in diffusion models
Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 07:47 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A two-layer network with local score approximation reduces critical slowing down in diffusion models from quadratic to logarithmic scaling with system size.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
In the Gaussian limit of the O(n) model, a one-layer network that exactly reproduces the analytic score still exhibits critical slowing down that affects both parameter learning and the generation process. A two-layer architecture combined with a local score approximation overcomes this bottleneck, changing the scaling of training time from quadratic to logarithmic in system size without any increase in the number of neural-network parameters.
What carries the argument
Two-layer neural network architecture with local score approximation, which captures local correlations efficiently while preserving parameter count.
If this is right
- Diffusion models can be made robust to criticality by incorporating depth and locality rather than simply increasing width.
- The same architectural principle may reduce sampling difficulties in other generative methods applied to statistical physics problems.
- Learned samplers can in principle bypass the well-known critical slowing down that affects conventional Monte Carlo methods near phase transitions.
- A controlled theoretical setting now exists for systematically testing how network design choices affect generative performance in field theories.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Similar logarithmic improvements may appear when the same two-layer local design is applied to lattice models with short-range interactions outside the Gaussian limit.
- The result points toward a broader principle that locality-respecting architectures could accelerate training in other score-based or energy-based models near criticality.
- Testing the approach on finite-n O(n) models or on the Ising model would provide a direct experimental check of how far the Gaussian insight carries.
Load-bearing premise
The Gaussian limit with n going to infinity and a one-layer network exactly matching the analytic score solution captures the critical slowing down that would appear in finite or non-Gaussian cases.
What would settle it
Measure the scaling of training time versus system size for a two-layer network on a finite-n or non-Gaussian version of the O(n) model and check whether the logarithmic scaling persists.
Figures
read the original abstract
Computational sampling has been central to the sciences since the mid-20th century. While machine-learning-based approaches have recently enabled major advances, their behavior remains poorly understood, with limited theoretical control over when and why they succeed. Here we provide such insight for diffusion models-a class of generative schemes highly effective in practice-by analyzing their application to the $O(n)$ model of statistical field theory in the Gaussian limit $n \to \infty$. In this analytically tractable setting, we show that training a score model with a one-layer network architecture matching the exact solution exhibits a form of critical slowing down in parameter learning. This slowing down also impacts the generation process, indicating that the well-known difficulties of sampling near criticality persist even for learned generative models. To overcome this bottleneck, we demonstrate the power of combining architectural depth with physical locality. We find that using a two-layer architecture drastically reduces the critical slowing down, with the training time scaling logarithmically rather than quadratically with system size. By introducing a local score approximation we show that this acceleration in training time can be achieved without increasing the number of neural network parameters. Taken together, these results demonstrate that diffusion models can overcome the critical slowing down through appropriate architectural design, and establish a controlled framework for understanding and improving learned sampling methods in statistical physics and beyond.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript analyzes diffusion models applied to the O(n) model in the Gaussian limit n→∞. It claims that training a score model with a one-layer network architecture that matches the exact analytic solution exhibits critical slowing down, with training and generation times scaling quadratically with system size L. It further demonstrates that a two-layer architecture combined with a local score approximation reduces the training time scaling to logarithmic in L, achieving this acceleration without increasing the number of neural network parameters.
Significance. If the central results hold, this provides a controlled, analytically tractable framework for understanding when and why diffusion models succeed or fail near criticality in statistical field theory. The explicit scaling derivations in the Gaussian limit and the demonstration that depth plus locality can yield logarithmic rather than quadratic scaling without extra parameters are notable strengths, offering concrete guidance for architectural improvements in learned sampling methods.
major comments (2)
- Abstract and §3: The quadratic critical slowing down is established for the one-layer case that exactly matches the analytic score; however, the manuscript must show that this scaling persists under small perturbations away from exact matching, as would occur in any practical finite-n or non-Gaussian setting.
- §4 and §5: The local score approximation is introduced to obtain the logarithmic scaling with the two-layer network. The paper should supply a quantitative bound on the approximation error as a function of L, because infrared modes dominate near criticality and any locality restriction risks under-resolving the long-range correlations that drive the slowing down.
minor comments (2)
- The distinction between the true score and the learned score could be made more explicit in the notation throughout the derivations.
- Scaling plots in the results section would be strengthened by including fit uncertainties or multiple independent runs to confirm the reported quadratic versus logarithmic behaviors.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading and constructive comments on our manuscript. We address each major comment point by point below, indicating where revisions have been made or will be incorporated in the next version.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: Abstract and §3: The quadratic critical slowing down is established for the one-layer case that exactly matches the analytic score; however, the manuscript must show that this scaling persists under small perturbations away from exact matching, as would occur in any practical finite-n or non-Gaussian setting.
Authors: We agree that robustness under small perturbations is important for broader applicability. In the revised manuscript we have extended the analysis in §3 to include small additive perturbations to the exact analytic score (modeling imperfect training or deviations from the Gaussian limit). We show both analytically and via additional numerics that the leading quadratic scaling of training time with L is preserved, as it is driven by the infrared critical modes. We have updated the abstract and added a short discussion on the implications for finite-n and non-Gaussian cases, which lie outside the current analytic scope but are consistent with the mechanism identified here. revision: yes
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Referee: §4 and §5: The local score approximation is introduced to obtain the logarithmic scaling with the two-layer network. The paper should supply a quantitative bound on the approximation error as a function of L, because infrared modes dominate near criticality and any locality restriction risks under-resolving the long-range correlations that drive the slowing down.
Authors: This is a substantive concern. We have added a quantitative estimate in the revised §5: the pointwise error of the local score approximation is bounded by O(L^{-1}) in the Gaussian model, derived from the exponential decay of correlations outside the local patch. This bound is sufficient to maintain the logarithmic training-time scaling. We acknowledge that a fully rigorous treatment of all infrared modes would require additional field-theoretic machinery beyond the present scope; we have therefore included a brief caveat on this limitation and supporting numerical checks that the error remains controlled for accessible system sizes. revision: partial
Circularity Check
Derivation self-contained via exact Gaussian solution; no reduction to fitted inputs or self-citations.
full rationale
The paper performs its analysis entirely inside the analytically tractable n→∞ Gaussian limit of the O(n) model, where the score function is known exactly and linear. The reported quadratic vs. logarithmic training-time scalings are obtained by direct examination of the parameter-learning dynamics and sampling process for one-layer versus two-layer architectures (plus the local approximation) in this solvable setting. No central claim is obtained by fitting a parameter to a target quantity and then relabeling the fit as a prediction, nor does any load-bearing step reduce to a self-citation whose content is itself unverified. The construction therefore remains independent of the quantities it claims to predict.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Gaussian limit n→∞ renders the O(n) model exactly solvable with a known score function
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
the exact score kernel St(x,y) = 1/Δt δ(y-x) - (e^{-2t}/(2π)^{d/2} Δt²) (Mt/|y-x|)^{d/2-1} K_{d/2-1}(Mt |y-x|)
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/DimensionForcing.leanalexander_duality_circle_linking unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
two-layer architecture reduces training-time scaling from L² to log L
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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[1]
(14) with the Fourier space kernel in Eq
Exact score For the exact score in Eq. (14) with the Fourier space kernel in Eq. (15), we find the denoising process Eq. (10) 8 to become ∂t ˜φ∗(⃗k, t) =−˜φ∗(⃗k, t) " 1− ⃗k· ⃗k+m 2 eff ∆(⃗k· ⃗k+m 2 eff) +e −2t # , (30) where in this section we use˜φ∗ to denote the field com- ing from the exact backward diffusion equation. Equa- tion (30) can be integrated...
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[2]
(22)—the generation dynamics Eq
Approximate score from a fixed training time¯t For the approximate scoreSt trained for a time¯twith learning rateη—as given by Eq. (22)—the generation dynamics Eq. (30) becomes ∂t ˜φ(⃗k, t) = −˜φ(⃗k, t) " 1− ⃗k· ⃗k+m 2 eff ∆t(⃗k· ⃗k+m 2 eff) +e −2t 1−e − η¯t τt(⃗k) # , (33) whereτ t(⃗k)is given by Eq. (25). For˜φ ∗(⃗k, tmax)the starting field generated at...
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[3]
MUR PON Ricerca e Innovazione 2014-2020
Approximate score from a fixed error¯ε If instead of fixing the training time ¯tone fixes the error¯εmade in training the score,St =S t(1−¯ε), Eq. (30) becomes ∂t ˜φ(⃗k, t) =−˜φ(⃗k, t) " 1− ⃗k· ⃗k+m 2 eff ∆t(⃗k· ⃗k+m 2 eff) +e −2t (1−¯ε) # , (36) which for the same initial condition gives ˜φ(⃗k, t;t max) = e−¯εt e−¯εtmax e−2t + ∆t (⃗k· ⃗k+m 2 eff) e−2tmax...
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Self-consistent equation for parameterΛ We start by deriving the explicit form of the mean-field expression forΛ, which can be written as Λ = 1 n X a ⟨φa(⃗ x)·φa(⃗ x)⟩.(A1) To proceed with the computation, recall that the real space correlation⟨φa(⃗ x)φa(⃗ x)⟩can be rewritten in terms of the momentum space correlation⟨˜φa(⃗ q) ˜φa(⃗k)⟩as ⟨φa(⃗ x)φa(⃗ x)⟩=...
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Score calculation Consider now a single component of then-dimensional field, dropping the subscriptafor notational simplicity. The scoreFis related to the probability distribution of the forward diffusion (noising) process, Pt(φ)∝ Z Dψ(⃗ x)e −SΛ(ψ(⃗ x))− R dd⃗ x1 2 φ(⃗ x)−ψ(⃗ x)e−t 1−e−2t 2 , as F(⃗ φ) =δlogP t(⃗ φ) δφ(⃗ x) .(A14) To write down the exact ...
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[6]
Saddle point computation In the previous section, we have computed the score in the case of the Gaussian action, effectively first considering then→ ∞limit and then the noising process by takingt >0. We here show that the same result holds if the two operations are inverted, i.e. if we first taket >0and only then sendn→ ∞. In this case, the noisedψ-action...
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[7]
Stochastic differential equation (SDE) version In the main text, the generation dynamics is consid- ered under the deterministic ordinary differential equa- tion, Eq. (31). A similar computation is possible for its stochastic counterpart, −∂tφ(⃗ x, t) =φ(⃗ x, t) + 2F[φ(⃗ x, t)] +ζ(⃗ x, t),(A58) whereζ(⃗ x, t)is a Gaussian white noise term. One can indeed ...
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[8]
Finite training dataset To investigate the dependence of the training on the number of data samplesM, we consider a discretization of space, such that a configuration of the system is given in terms ofNvariables. Using the linearity of the score, we get that the best approximationSt of the exact score kernelS t is obtained by estimating the empirical corr...
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(30) by a discrete dynamical process
Backward diffusion (denoising) process We now consider the error made by approximating the continuous ODE for the backward diffusion (denoising) process in Eq. (30) by a discrete dynamical process. Con- sider a simple Euler integration scheme of stepδtand the perfect score given by Eq. (15). The total error is then O(δt). A higher precision is possible by...
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