Existing approaches to controllable generation typically rely on fine-tuning, auxiliary networks, or test-time search. We show that flow matching admits a different control interface: adaptation through examples. For deterministic interpolants, the velocity field is solely governed by a conditional endpoint mean; shifting this mean shifts the flow itself. This yields a simple principle for controllable generation: steer a pretrained model by changing the reference set it follows. We instantiate this idea in two forms. Reference-Mean Guidance is training-free: it computes a closed-form endpoint-mean correction from a reference bank and applies it to a frozen FLUX.2-klein (4B) model, enabling control of color, identity, style, and structure while keeping the prompt, seed, and weights fixed. Semi-Parametric Guidance amortizes the same idea through an explicit mean anchor and learned residual refiner, matching unconditional DiT-B/4 quality on AFHQv2 while allowing the reference set to be swapped at inference time. These results point to a broader direction: generative models that adapt through data, not parameter updates.
Follow the Mean: Reference-Guided Flow Matching
Flow matching enables controllable generation through example-based adaptation via conditional endpoint mean adjustment, offering training-free and parametric guidance methods for style and content control.
- Year
- 2026
- Venue
- arXiv 2026
- Stars
- 17
- Authors
- 4
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2605.10302ARXIV-DEFAULT
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