Welcome to MIT HAN Lab! We specialize in efficient generative AI, including large language models (LLMs), multi-modal models (VLMs/VLAs), and diffusion models. Today’s foundation models are remarkably powerful but prohibitively costly in terms of computation, energy, and scalability. At MIT HAN Lab, we integrate algorithm–system co-design to push the frontier of AI efficiency and performance. Our research spans the entire AI stack—from pre-training and post-training to model compression and deployment—bridging fundamental breakthroughs with real-world applications. By rethinking how AI is designed with GPU efficiency in mind, we aim to make generative AI faster, greener, and more accessible.
Alumni: Ji Lin (OpenAI), Hanrui Wang (Co-Founder @Eigen AI), Zhijian Liu (assistant professor @UCSD), Han Cai (NVIDIA Research), Haotian Tang (Google Deepmind->Meta), Yujun Lin (NVIDIA Research), Wei-Chen Wang (Co-Founder @Eigen AI), Wei-Ming Chen (NVIDIA).
Accelerating LLM and Generative AI [slides]:



HART has been highlighted by MIT news: AI tool generates high-quality images faster than state-of-the-art approaches!
🔥⚡ We release TinyChat 2.0, the latest version with significant advancements in prefilling speed of Edge LLMs and VLMs, 1.5-1.7x faster than the previous version of TinyChat. Please refer to our blog for more details.
DistriFusion is integrated in NVIDIA's TensorRT-LLM for distributed inference on high-resolution image generation.
🔥 NVIDIA TensorRT-LLM, AMD, Google Vertex AI, Amazon Sagemaker, Intel Neural Compressor, FastChat, vLLM, HuggingFace TGI, and LMDeploy adopt AWQ to improve LLM serving efficiency. Our AWQ models on HuggingFace has received over 6 million downloads.
Congrats on graduation! Cheers on the next move: Zhijian Liu: assistant professor at UCSD, Hanrui Wang: assistant professor at UCLA, Ji Lin: OpenAI, Han Cai: NVIDIA Research, Wei-Chen Wang (postdoc): Amazon, Wei-Ming Chen (postdoc): NVIDIA.
We show SmoothQuant can enable W8A8 quantization for Llama-1/2, Falcon, Mistral, and Mixtral models with negligible loss.
We supported VILA Vision Languague Models in AWQ & TinyChat! Check our latest demos with multi-image inputs!
StreamingLLM is integrated by HPC-AI Tech SwiftInfer to support infinite input length for LLM inference.
StreamingLLM is integrated by CMU, UW, and OctoAI, enabling endless and efficient LLM generation on iPhone!
Congrats Ji Lin completed and defended his PhD thesis: "Efficient Deep Learning Computing: From TinyML to Large Language Model". Ji joined OpenAI after graduation.
AWQ is integrate by NVIDIA TensorRT-LLM, can fit Falcon-180B on a single H200GPU with INT4 AWQ, and 6.7x faster Llama-70B over A100.
🔥 AWQ is now integrated natively in Hugging Face transformers through from_pretrained. You can either load quantized models from the Hub or your own HF quantized models.
Attention Sinks, an library from community enables StreamingLLM on more Huggingface LLMs. blog.

We introduce DC-VideoGen, a post-training acceleration framework for efficient video generation. DC-VideoGen can be applied to any pre-trained video diffusion model, improving efficiency by adapting it to a deep compression latent space with lightweight fine-tuning. The framework builds on two key innovations: (i) a Deep Compression Video Autoencoder with a novel chunk-causal temporal design that achieves 32x/64x spatial and 4x temporal compression while preserving reconstruction quality and generalization to longer videos; and (ii) AE-Adapt-V, a robust adaptation strategy that enables rapid and stable transfer of pre-trained models into the new latent space. Adapting the pre-trained Wan-2.1-14B model with DC-VideoGen requires only 10 GPU days on the NVIDIA H100 GPU. The accelerated models achieve up to 14.8x lower inference latency than their base counterparts without compromising quality, and further enable 2160x3840 video generation on a single GPU.

We introduce DC-VideoGen, a post-training acceleration framework for efficient video generation with a Deep Compression Video Autoencoder and a robust adapation strategy AE-Adapt-V.

The emergence of Large Language Models (LLMs) with strong reasoning capabilities marks a significant milestone, unlocking new frontiers in complex problem-solving. However, training these reasoning models, typically using Reinforcement Learning (RL), encounters critical efficiency bottlenecks: response generation during RL training exhibits a persistent long-tail distribution, where a few very long responses dominate execution time, wasting resources and inflating costs. To address this, we propose TLT, a system that accelerates reasoning RL training losslessly by integrating adaptive speculative decoding. Applying speculative decoding in RL is challenging due to the dynamic workloads, evolving target model, and draft model training overhead. TLT overcomes these obstacles with two synergistic components: (1) Adaptive Drafter, a lightweight draft model trained continuously on idle GPUs during long-tail generation to maintain alignment with the target model at no extra cost; and (2) Adaptive Rollout Engine, which maintains a memory efficient pool of pre-captured CUDAGraphs and adaptively select suitable SD strategies for each input batch. Evaluations demonstrate that TLT achieves over 1.7× end-to-end RL training speedup over state-of-the-art systems, preserves the model accuracy, and yields a high-quality draft model as a free byproduct suitable for efficient deployment.

TLT is a lossless acceleration framework for reasoning-oriented LLM RL training, introducing adaptive speculative decoding to eliminate long-tail generation bottlenecks. It achieves over 1.7× end-to-end speedup while fully preserving model quality and producing a high-quality draft model for efficient deployment.
Recent advances in diffusion models have enabled high-quality video generation, but the additional temporal dimension significantly increases computational costs, making training and inference on long videos prohibitively expensive. In this paper, we identify a phenomenon we term Spatiotemporal Energy Decay in video diffusion models: post-softmax attention scores diminish as spatial and temporal distance between tokens increase, akin to the physical decay of signal or waves over space and time in nature. Motivated by this, we propose Radial Attention, a scalable sparse attention mechanism with O(nlogn) complexity that translates energy decay into exponentially decaying compute density, which is significantly more efficient than standard O(n2) dense attention and more expressive than linear attention. Specifically, Radial Attention employs a simple, static attention mask where each token attends to spatially nearby tokens, with the attention window size shrinking with temporal distance. Moreover, it allows pre-trained video diffusion models to extend their generation length with efficient LoRA-based fine-tuning. Extensive experiments show that Radial Attention maintains video quality across Wan2.1-14B, HunyuanVideo, and Mochi 1, achieving up to a 1.9× speedup over the original dense attention. With minimal tuning, it enables video generation up to 4× longer while reducing training costs by up to 4.4× compared to direct fine-tuning and accelerating inference by up to 3.7× compared to dense attention inference.
A O(nlogn) Sparse Attention Mask for Long Video Generation

This paper presents SANA-Sprint, an efficient diffusion model for ultra-fast text-to-image (T2I) generation. SANA-Sprint is built on a pre-trained foundation model and augmented with hybrid distillation, dramatically reducing inference steps from 20 to 1-4. We introduce three key innovations: (1) We propose a training-free approach that transforms a pre-trained flow-matching model for continuous-time consistency distillation (sCM), eliminating costly training from scratch and achieving high training efficiency. Our hybrid distillation strategy combines sCM with latent adversarial distillation (LADD): sCM ensures alignment with the teacher model, while LADD enhances single-step generation fidelity. (2) SANA-Sprint is a unified step-adaptive model that achieves high-quality generation in 1-4 steps, eliminating step-specific training and improving efficiency. (3) We integrate ControlNet with SANA-Sprint for real-time interactive image generation, enabling instant visual feedback for user interaction. SANA-Sprint establishes a new Pareto frontier in speed-quality tradeoffs, achieving state-of-the-art performance with 7.59 FID and 0.74 GenEval in only 1 step — outperforming FLUX-schnell (7.94 FID / 0.71 GenEval) while being 10× faster (0.1s vs 1.1s on H100). It also achieves 0.1s (T2I) and 0.25s (ControlNet) latency for 1024×1024 images on H100, and 0.31s (T2I) on an RTX 4090, showcasing its exceptional efficiency and potential for AI-powered consumer applications (AIPC). Code and pre-trained models will be open-sourced.

SANA-Sprint is a one-step distilled diffusion model enabling real-time generation; Deployable on laptop GPU; Top-notch GenEval & DPGBench results.
We actively collaborate with industry partners on efficient AI, model compression and acceleration. Our research has influenced and landed in many industrial products: Intel OpenVino, Intel Neural Network Distiller, Intel Neural Compressor, Apple Neural Engine, NVIDIA Sparse Tensor Core, NVIDIA TensorRT LLM, AMD-Xilinx Vitis AI, Qualcomm AI Model Efficiency Toolkit (AIMET), Amazon AutoGluon, Facebook PyTorch, Microsoft NNI, SONY Neural Architecture Search Library, SONY Model Compression Toolkit, ADI MAX78000/MAX78002 Model Training and Synthesis Tool.







