English

Error Propagation and Model Collapse in Diffusion Models: A Theoretical Study

Machine Learning 2026-02-19 v1 Machine Learning

Abstract

Machine learning models are increasingly trained or fine-tuned on synthetic data. Recursively training on such data has been observed to significantly degrade performance in a wide range of tasks, often characterized by a progressive drift away from the target distribution. In this work, we theoretically analyze this phenomenon in the setting of score-based diffusion models. For a realistic pipeline where each training round uses a combination of synthetic data and fresh samples from the target distribution, we obtain upper and lower bounds on the accumulated divergence between the generated and target distributions. This allows us to characterize different regimes of drift, depending on the score estimation error and the proportion of fresh data used in each generation. We also provide empirical results on synthetic data and images to illustrate the theory.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2602.16601,
  title  = {Error Propagation and Model Collapse in Diffusion Models: A Theoretical Study},
  author = {Nail B. Khelifa and Richard E. Turner and Ramji Venkataramanan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2602.16601},
  year   = {2026}
}