LLaVA-1.5 vs PaliGemma
Compare LLaVA-1.5 and PaliGemma side-by-side.
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LLaVA-1.5 vs PaliGemma: Overview
LLaVA-1.5 is an open-source large multimodal model released in October 2023 by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Microsoft Research. It builds on the original LLaVA architecture by introducing targeted refinements: switching the vision encoder to CLIP-ViT-L at 336-pixel resolution, replacing the projection layer with a two-layer MLP, and adding academic-task-oriented visual question answering data with response formatting prompts during training. These modifications achieve state-of-the-art performance across 11 benchmarks at release, with training completing in approximately one day on a single 8-A100 node.
The model accepts an image paired with a text prompt and generates natural language responses, supporting visual question answering, image captioning, and open-ended visual conversation. LLaVA-1.5 is available in 7B and 13B parameter variants built on the Vicuna language model, and is distributed under the Llama 2 Community License due to its Llama-2-based foundation. The original LLaVA paper was presented as an oral at NeurIPS 2023. Subsequent releases in the series (LLaVA-NeXT (LLaVA-1.6), LLaVA-NeXT-Video, and LLaVA-OneVision) are separate models with their own release pages and build on this foundation with expanded OCR, video, and multi-image capabilities.
PaliGemma is a vision-language model released in May 2024 by Google, built by pairing the SigLIP-So400m vision encoder with the Gemma 2B language model. It is designed primarily as a compact, transfer-friendly base model for fine-tuning to downstream vision-language tasks, rather than as a chat-optimized assistant. PaliGemma draws architectural inspiration from the PaLI-3 model at Google Research, applying a similar encoder-decoder approach at a smaller and more accessible parameter scale.
PaliGemma accepts an image together with a text prompt and generates text output, supporting image captioning, visual question answering, optical character recognition, object detection, referring expression segmentation, and a range of related vision-language tasks when fine-tuned on task-specific data. The model is released at three input resolutions (224, 448, and 896 pixels), with higher resolutions providing stronger performance on tasks requiring fine visual detail such as OCR and document understanding. Google released pretrained (PT) checkpoints intended as fine-tuning bases, along with Mix variants that have been fine-tuned on a mixture of downstream tasks for direct use without additional training. PaliGemma is distributed under the Gemma license, a custom license from Google that permits commercial use subject to the terms of the Gemma Prohibited Use Policy. It was succeeded by PaliGemma 2 in December 2024, which extends the architecture to larger Gemma 2 language backbones at 3B, 10B, and 28B parameter sizes.
LLaVA-1.5 vs PaliGemma Comparison Table
| Property | LLaVA-1.5 | PaliGemma |
|---|---|---|
| Organization | Microsoft | |
| Category | open | open |
| Modality | multimodal | multimodal |
| Release Date | Oct 2023 | May 2024 |
| Context Window | — | — |
| Parameters | 7B, 13B | 3B |
| License | Custom | Custom |
| Vision Tasks | ||
| Vision Language | ||
| Visual Question Answering | ||
| Captioning | ||
| Model Features | ||
| LLMs with Vision Capabilities | ||
| Multimodal Vision | ||