Scaling Laws for Native Multimodal Models

26citations
arXiv:2504.07951
26
citations
#117
in ICCV 2025
of 2701 papers
6
Top Authors
6
Data Points

Abstract

Building general-purpose models that can effectively perceive the world through multimodal signals has been a long-standing goal. Current approaches involve integrating separately pre-trained components, such as connecting vision encoders to LLMs and continuing multimodal training. While such approaches exhibit remarkable sample efficiency, it remains an open question whether such late-fusion architectures are inherently superior. In this work, we revisit the architectural design of native multimodal models (NMMs)-those trained from the ground up on all modalities-and conduct an extensive scaling laws study, spanning 457 trained models with different architectures and training mixtures. Our investigation reveals no inherent advantage to late-fusion architectures over early-fusion ones, which do not rely on image encoders or tokenizers. On the contrary, early-fusion exhibits stronger performance at lower parameter counts, is more efficient to train, and is easier to deploy. Motivated by the strong performance of the early-fusion architectures, we show that incorporating Mixture of Experts (MoEs) allows models to learn modality-specific weights, significantly benefiting performance.

Citation History

Jan 25, 2026
0
Jan 26, 2026
0
Jan 26, 2026
0
Jan 28, 2026
0
Feb 13, 2026
26+26
Feb 13, 2026
26