Papers
arxiv:2603.19227

Bridging Semantic and Kinematic Conditions with Diffusion-based Discrete Motion Tokenizer

Published on Mar 19
· Submitted by
Haozhe Xie
on Mar 20
Authors:
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Abstract

A three-stage motion generation framework combines discrete token-based planning with diffusion-based synthesis to improve controllability and fidelity while reducing token usage and computational requirements.

AI-generated summary

Prior motion generation largely follows two paradigms: continuous diffusion models that excel at kinematic control, and discrete token-based generators that are effective for semantic conditioning. To combine their strengths, we propose a three-stage framework comprising condition feature extraction (Perception), discrete token generation (Planning), and diffusion-based motion synthesis (Control). Central to this framework is MoTok, a diffusion-based discrete motion tokenizer that decouples semantic abstraction from fine-grained reconstruction by delegating motion recovery to a diffusion decoder, enabling compact single-layer tokens while preserving motion fidelity. For kinematic conditions, coarse constraints guide token generation during planning, while fine-grained constraints are enforced during control through diffusion-based optimization. This design prevents kinematic details from disrupting semantic token planning. On HumanML3D, our method significantly improves controllability and fidelity over MaskControl while using only one-sixth of the tokens, reducing trajectory error from 0.72 cm to 0.08 cm and FID from 0.083 to 0.029. Unlike prior methods that degrade under stronger kinematic constraints, ours improves fidelity, reducing FID from 0.033 to 0.014.

Community

the most interesting bit for me is moTok's idea to decouple semantic abstraction from fine-grained motion by letting a diffusion decoder recover the details from compact tokens. that design lets you push kinematic constraints into planning while relegating reconstruction to diffusion, which explains why you can use far fewer tokens yet still hit high fidelity. one ablation i’d love to see is what happens if you push token granularity coarser or finer and see where the fidelity/controllability trade-off shifts, especially under sudden/high-frequency motion or occlusions. btw the arxivlens breakdown helped me parse the method details, there’s a solid walkthrough on arxivlens that covers section 3 well: https://arxivlens.com/PaperView/Details/bridging-semantic-and-kinematic-conditions-with-diffusion-based-discrete-motion-tokenizer-7804-5f444359

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