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Paperium
Paperium

Posted on • Originally published at paperium.net

TAG:Tangential Amplifying Guidance for Hallucination-Resistant DiffusionSampling

How a Simple “Boost” Makes AI‑Generated Images Look Realer

Ever wondered why some AI‑created pictures look a bit off, like a person with three eyes or a sky that’s strangely fuzzy? Scientists have discovered a clever new trick called Tangential Amplifying Guidance, or TAG, that helps the AI stay on track while it draws.
Imagine a hiker using a rope tied to a sturdy tree to stay on the right path; TAG does the same for the AI, gently pulling the image‑making process toward more believable scenes without changing the AI’s brain.
By focusing on the “sideways” moves in the generation journey, TAG nudges the picture into regions that are more likely to be correct, cutting down those odd hallucinations.
The best part? It works as a plug‑in, adding almost no extra computing power.
This breakthrough means faster, sharper, and more trustworthy AI art that can be used in everything from game design to medical illustrations.
Next time you see a stunning AI picture, remember the hidden guide that kept it grounded—and imagine what else this subtle boost could help us create.

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TAG:Tangential Amplifying Guidance for Hallucination-Resistant DiffusionSampling

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