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JEDI: Joint Embedding Diffusion World Model for Online Model-Based Reinforcement Learning

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Computer Science > Machine Learning

arXiv:2605.13013 (cs)
[Submitted on 13 May 2026]

Title:JEDI: Joint Embedding Diffusion World Model for Online Model-Based Reinforcement Learning

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Abstract:Diffusion world models have recently become competitive for online model-based reinforcement learning, but current approaches expose a tension: pixel diffusion is effective but computationally expensive while the latest latent diffusion approach improves efficiency yet performs subpar. The latter also relies on separately trained latents rather than the end-to-end world-model objectives that have driven much of modern MBRL progress. In particular, JEPA-style predictive representation learning has emerged as an especially promising direction for world modeling and MBRL. Concurrently, diffusion-style objectives have gained traction across multiple domains, with iterative refinement as a promising approach for multimodal and stochastic targets. Taken together, these trends motivate Joint Embedding DIffusion (JEDI), the first online end-to-end latent diffusion world model. JEDI learns its latent space directly from the diffusion denoising loss with a JEPA framework, using denoising to learn and predict future latents rather than relying on reconstruction and pretrained models. We provide a theoretical motivation showing that conventional JEPA objectives induce a predictive information bottleneck, and that conditional diffusion denoising admits a closely related predictive-compression decomposition. Empirically, JEDI is competitive on Atari100k and outperforms the baseline with seperately trained latents where directly comparable. Relative to the pixel diffusion baseline, JEDI uses 43% less VRAM, over 3$\times$ faster world-model sampling, and 2.5$\times$ faster training. JEDI also exhibits a markedly different task-level performance profile from the pixel baseline, suggesting that end-to-end predictive latents change more than compute alone.
Subjects: Machine Learning (cs.LG)
Cite as: arXiv:2605.13013 [cs.LG]
  (or arXiv:2605.13013v1 [cs.LG] for this version)
  https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2605.13013
arXiv-issued DOI via DataCite (pending registration)

Submission history

From: Jing Yu Lim [view email]
[v1] Wed, 13 May 2026 05:07:32 UTC (2,413 KB)
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