<em><ahref="https://docs.unsloth.ai/basics/unsloth-dynamic-v2.0-gguf">Unsloth Dynamic 2.0</a> achieves superior accuracy & outperforms other leading quants.</em>
We introduce InternVL3, an advanced multimodal large language model (MLLM) series that demonstrates superior overall performance.
Compared to InternVL 2.5, InternVL3 exhibits superior multimodal perception and reasoning capabilities, while further extending its multimodal capabilities to encompass tool usage, GUI agents, industrial image analysis, 3D vision perception, and more.
Additionally, we compare InternVL3 with Qwen2.5 Chat models, whose corresponding pre-trained base models are employed as the initialization of the langauge component in InternVL3. Benefitting from Native Multimodal Pre-Training, the InternVL3 series achieves even better overall text performance than the Qwen2.5 series.
As shown in the following figure, [InternVL3](https://internvl.github.io/blog/2025-04-11-InternVL-3/) retains the same model architecture as [InternVL 2.5](https://internvl.github.io/blog/2024-12-05-InternVL-2.5/) and its predecessors, InternVL 1.5 and 2.0, following the "ViT-MLP-LLM" paradigm. In this new version, we integrate a newly incrementally pre-trained InternViT with various pre-trained LLMs, including InternLM 3 and Qwen 2.5, using a randomly initialized MLP projector.
As in the previous version, we applied a pixel unshuffle operation, reducing the number of visual tokens to one-quarter of the original. Besides, we adopted a similar dynamic resolution strategy as InternVL 1.5, dividing images into tiles of 448×448 pixels. The key difference, starting from InternVL 2.0, is that we additionally introduced support for multi-image and video data.
Notably, in InternVL3, we integrate the [Variable Visual Position Encoding (V2PE)](https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.09616), which utilizes smaller, more flexible position increments for visual tokens. Benefiting from V2PE, InternVL3 exhibits better long context understanding capabilities compared to its predecessors.
## Training Strategy
### Native Multimodal Pre-Training
We propose a [Native Multimodal Pre-Training](https://huggingface.co/papers/2504.10479) approach that consolidates language and vision learning into a single pre-training stage.
In contrast to standard paradigms that first train a language-only model and subsequently adapt it to handle additional modalities, our method interleaves multimodal data (e.g., image-text, video-text, or image-text interleaved sequences) with large-scale textual corpora. This unified training scheme allows the model to learn both linguistic and multimodal representations simultaneously, ultimately enhancing its capability to handle vision-language tasks without the need for separate alignment or bridging modules.
Please see [our paper](https://huggingface.co/papers/2504.10479) for more details.
### Supervised Fine-Tuning
In this phase, the techniques of random JPEG compression, square loss re-weighting, and multimodal data packing proposed in [InternVL2.5](https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.05271) are also employed in the InternVL3 series.
The main advancement of the SFT phase in InternVL3 compared to InternVL2.5 lies in the use of higher-quality and more diverse training data.
Specifically, we further extend training samples for tool use, 3D scene understanding, GUI operations, long context tasks, video understanding, scientific diagrams, creative writing, and multimodal reasoning.
### Mixed Preference Optimization
During Pre-training and SFT, the model is trained to predict the next token conditioned on previous ground-truth tokens.
However, during inference, the model predicts each token based on its own prior outputs.
This discrepancy between ground-truth tokens and model-predicted tokens introduces a distribution shift, which can impair the model’s Chain-of-Thought (CoT) reasoning capabilities.
To mitigate this issue, we employ [MPO](https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.10442), which introduces additional supervision from both positive and negative samples to align the model response distribution with the ground-truth distribution, thereby improving reasoning performance.
Specifically, the training objective of MPO is a combination of
where \\(w_{*}\\) represents the weight assigned to each loss component. Please see [our paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.10442) for more details about MPO.
### Test-Time Scaling
Test-Time Scaling has been shown to be an effective method to enhance the reasoning abilities of LLMs and MLLMs.
In this work, we use the Best-of-N evaluation strategy and employ [VisualPRM-8B](https://huggingface.co/OpenGVLab/VisualPRM-8B) as the critic model to select the best response for reasoning and mathematics evaluation.
We compare InternVL3 with Qwen2.5 Chat models, whose corresponding pre-trained base models are employed as the initialization of the langauge component in InternVL3.
Benefitting from Native Multimodal Pre-Training, the InternVL3 series achieves even better overall text performance than the Qwen2.5 series.
Please note that the evaluation scores of Qwen2.5 series may differ from those officially reported, as we have adopted the prompt versions provided in the table across all datasets for OpenCompass evaluation.
We conduct experiments on the InternVL2-8B model while keeping its architecture, initialization parameters, and training data entirely unchanged. Traditionally, InternVL2-8B employs a training pipeline that begins with an MLP warmup phase for feature alignment followed by an Instruction Tuning stage. In our experiments, we substitute the conventional MLP warmup phase with a native multimodal pre-training process. This modification isolates the contribution of native multimodal pre-training to the overall multimodal capability of the model.
The evaluation results in the Figure below shows that the model with native multimodal pre-training exhibits performance on most benchmarks that is comparable to the fully multi-stage-trained InternVL2-8B baseline. Furthermore, when followed by instruction tuning on higher-quality data, the model demonstrates further performance gains across evaluated multimodal tasks. These findings underscore the efficiency of native multimodal pre-training in imparting powerful multimodal capabilities to MLLMs.
As shown in the table below, models fine-tuned with MPO demonstrate superior reasoning performance across seven multimodal reasoning benchmarks compared to their counterparts without MPO. Specifically, InternVL3-78B and InternVL3-38B outperform their counterparts by 4.1 and 4.5 points, respectively. Notably, the training data used for MPO is a subset of that used for SFT, indicating that the performance improvements primarily stem from the training algorithm rather than the training data.
As reported in the table below, the introduction of V2PE leads to significant performance gains across most evaluation metrics. In addition, our ablation studies—by varying the positional increment \\( \delta \\)—reveal that even for tasks primarily involving conventional contexts, relatively small \\( \delta \\) values can achieve optimal performance. These findings provide important insights for future efforts aimed at refining position encoding strategies for visual tokens in MLLMs.
The reason for writing the code this way is to avoid errors that occur during multi-GPU inference due to tensors not being on the same device. By ensuring that the first and last layers of the large language model (LLM) are on the same device, we prevent such errors.
# Initialize an empty string to store the generated text
generated_text = ''
# Loop through the streamer to get the new text as it is generated
for new_text in streamer:
if new_text == model.conv_template.sep:
break
generated_text += new_text
print(new_text, end='', flush=True) # Print each new chunk of generated text on the same line
```
## Finetune
Many repositories now support fine-tuning of the InternVL series models, including [InternVL](https://github.com/OpenGVLab/InternVL), [SWIFT](https://github.com/modelscope/ms-swift), [XTurner](https://github.com/InternLM/xtuner), and others. Please refer to their documentation for more details on fine-tuning.
## Deployment
### LMDeploy
LMDeploy is a toolkit for compressing, deploying, and serving LLMs & VLMs.
```sh
# if lmdeploy<0.7.3, you need to explicitly set chat_template_config=ChatTemplateConfig(model_name='internvl2_5')
pip install lmdeploy>=0.7.3
```
LMDeploy abstracts the complex inference process of multi-modal Vision-Language Models (VLM) into an easy-to-use pipeline, similar to the Large Language Model (LLM) inference pipeline.
#### A 'Hello, world' Example
```python
from lmdeploy import pipeline, TurbomindEngineConfig, ChatTemplateConfig
If `ImportError` occurs while executing this case, please install the required dependency packages as prompted.
#### Multi-images Inference
When dealing with multiple images, you can put them all in one list. Keep in mind that multiple images will lead to a higher number of input tokens, and as a result, the size of the context window typically needs to be increased.
```python
from lmdeploy import pipeline, TurbomindEngineConfig, ChatTemplateConfig
prompts = [('describe this image', load_image(img_url)) for img_url in image_urls]
response = pipe(prompts)
print(response)
```
#### Multi-turn Conversation
There are two ways to do the multi-turn conversations with the pipeline. One is to construct messages according to the format of OpenAI and use above introduced method, the other is to use the `pipeline.chat` interface.
```python
from lmdeploy import pipeline, TurbomindEngineConfig, GenerationConfig, ChatTemplateConfig
LMDeploy's `api_server` enables models to be easily packed into services with a single command. The provided RESTful APIs are compatible with OpenAI's interfaces. Below are an example of service startup:
This project is released under the MIT License. This project uses the pre-trained Qwen2.5 as a component, which is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License.
## Citation
If you find this project useful in your research, please consider citing:
```BibTeX
@article{chen2024expanding,
title={Expanding Performance Boundaries of Open-Source Multimodal Models with Model, Data, and Test-Time Scaling},
author={Chen, Zhe and Wang, Weiyun and Cao, Yue and Liu, Yangzhou and Gao, Zhangwei and Cui, Erfei and Zhu, Jinguo and Ye, Shenglong and Tian, Hao and Liu, Zhaoyang and others},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2412.05271},
year={2024}
}
@article{wang2024mpo,
title={Enhancing the Reasoning Ability of Multimodal Large Language Models via Mixed Preference Optimization},
author={Wang, Weiyun and Chen, Zhe and Wang, Wenhai and Cao, Yue and Liu, Yangzhou and Gao, Zhangwei and Zhu, Jinguo and Zhu, Xizhou and Lu, Lewei and Qiao, Yu and Dai, Jifeng},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2411.10442},
year={2024}
}
@article{chen2024far,
title={How Far Are We to GPT-4V? Closing the Gap to Commercial Multimodal Models with Open-Source Suites},
author={Chen, Zhe and Wang, Weiyun and Tian, Hao and Ye, Shenglong and Gao, Zhangwei and Cui, Erfei and Tong, Wenwen and Hu, Kongzhi and Luo, Jiapeng and Ma, Zheng and others},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2404.16821},
year={2024}
}
@inproceedings{chen2024internvl,
title={Internvl: Scaling up vision foundation models and aligning for generic visual-linguistic tasks},
author={Chen, Zhe and Wu, Jiannan and Wang, Wenhai and Su, Weijie and Chen, Guo and Xing, Sen and Zhong, Muyan and Zhang, Qinglong and Zhu, Xizhou and Lu, Lewei and others},
booktitle={Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition},