Autoregressive video generation paradigms offer theoretical promise for long video synthesis, yet their practical deployment is hindered by the computational burden of sequential iterative denoising. While cache reuse strategies can accelerate generation by skipping redundant denoising steps, existing methods rely on coarse-grained chunk-level skipping that fails to capture fine-grained pixel dynamics. This oversight is critical: pixels with high motion require more denoising steps to prevent error accumulation, while static pixels tolerate aggressive skipping. We formalize this insight theoretically by linking cache errors to residual instability, and propose MotionCache, a motion-aware cache framework that exploits inter-frame differences as a lightweight proxy for pixel-level motion characteristics. MotionCache employs a coarse-to-fine strategy: an initial warm-up phase establishes semantic coherence, followed by motion-weighted cache reuse that dynamically adjusts update frequencies per token. Extensive experiments on state-of-the-art models like SkyReels-V2 and MAGI-1 demonstrate that MotionCache achieves significant speedups of 6.28times and 1.64times respectively, while effectively preserving generation quality (VBench: 1%downarrow and 0.01%downarrow respectively). The code is available at https://github.com/ywlq/MotionCache.
Motion-Aware Caching for Efficient Autoregressive Video Generation
MotionCache is a motion-aware caching framework that accelerates autoregressive video generation by dynamically adjusting denoising step frequencies based on pixel-level motion characteristics, achieving significant speedups while maintaining generation quality.
- Year
- 2026
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- arXiv 2026
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- 10
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2605.01725ARXIV-DEFAULT
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