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Focus Matters: Phase-Aware Suppression for Hallucination in Vision-Language Models

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Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs) have achieved impressive progress in multimodal reasoning, yet they remain prone to object hallucinations, generating descriptions of objects that are not present in the input image. Recent approaches attempt to mitigate hallucinations by suppressing unreliable visual signals in the vision encoder, but many rely on iterative optimization for each input, resulting in substantial inference latency. In this work, we investigate the internal attention dynamics of vision encoders in LVLMs and identify a consistent three-phase structure of visual information processing: diffusion, focus, and rediffusion. Our analysis reveals that hallucination behavior is particularly sensitive to tokens receiving low attention during the focus phase. Motivated by this observation, we propose a lightweight inference-time intervention that selectively suppresses such tokens during the focus phase. The method operates in a training-free manner using statistics from a single forward pass and employs a Determinantal Point Process (DPP) to preserve diverse visual cues while filtering redundant tokens. Extensive experiments across multiple LVLM backbones and decoding strategies demonstrate that the proposed approach consistently reduces hallucination metrics while maintaining competitive caption quality. Moreover, compared to adversarial uncertainty estimation methods, our approach achieves comparable hallucination mitigation with negligible additional inference latency.

Sohyeon Kim, Sang Yeon Yoon, Kyeongbo Kong• 2026

Related benchmarks

TaskDatasetResultRank
Object Hallucination EvaluationPOPE--
1455
Object Hallucination EvaluationCHAIR--
108
Object Hallucination EvaluationPOPE Random, Popular, Adversarial v1.0
Random Score94.13
51
Object Hallucination EvaluationCHAIR MSCOCO v1.0 (val)
CHAIRs48.2
51
Generative Hallucination EvaluationAMBER--
14
Discriminative Hallucination EvaluationAMBER
Accuracy73.5
12
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