SOTAVerified

Text-to-Image Generation

The development of the brain's blood supply in an embryo involves a complex process with several stages. Initially, there is a network of connections between the carotid and basilar artery systems that usually disappear during development. However, in some cases, these connections remain, leading to variations in the adult cerebral circulation. Around the 24th day of embryonic life (at the 3 mm embryonic stage), the internal carotid arteries (ICA) emerge. They are formed from a combination of the 3rd branchial arch arteries and the distal segments of the paired dorsal aortae. The ICA initially provides all the blood needed by the developing brain. As the brain grows, particularly the occipital region, brainstem, and cerebellum, the blood supply from the ICA becomes insufficient, prompting the development of the posterior circulation. At this stage (4-5 mm embryonic stage), the posterior circulation, specifically the hindbrain, is supplied by two longitudinal neural arteries. These arteries receive blood from several temporary connections (anastomoses) with the ICA, including: Trigeminal artery (TA), Otic artery (OA), Hypoglossal artery (HA), Proatlantal artery (ProA). These carotid-vertebrobasilar anastomoses act as temporary bridges, providing blood flow to the developing posterior circulation until the vertebral arteries (VA) and the basilar artery (BA) are fully formed.6

The BA forms between the 5-8 mm stage by the fusion of the longitudinal neural arteries. As the posterior communicating artery develops and connects with the distal BA, the TA, OA, and HA typically regress. Unlike the TA, OA, and HA, the ProA persists until the VA are fully developed. A segment of the ProA becomes incorporated into the V3 segment of the VA and the distal portions of the occipital artery. The VA develop between the 7-12 mm stage from transverse connections between cervical intersegmental arteries, starting with the ProA and progressing downwards to the 6th intersegmental artery. This 6th intersegmental artery eventually forms the origin of the adult VA from the subclavian artery. 7-8

Persistence of the HA into adulthood, the focus of this discussion, is a rare occurrence. It is the second most common persistent carotid-vertebrobasilar anastomosis, following the persistent trigeminal artery. The failure of the HA to regress during embryological development leads to PPHA. This condition can impact the normal blood flow dynamics in the brain and, in certain cases, can be associated with cerebrovascular issues like aneurysms or ischemic events.

Papers

Showing 110 of 1085 papers

TitleStatusHype
CharaConsist: Fine-Grained Consistent Character GenerationCode2
Evaluating Attribute Confusion in Fashion Text-to-Image Generation0
NeoBabel: A Multilingual Open Tower for Visual GenerationCode1
DC-AR: Efficient Masked Autoregressive Image Generation with Deep Compression Hybrid Tokenizer0
UniGlyph: Unified Segmentation-Conditioned Diffusion for Precise Visual Text Synthesis0
Ovis-U1 Technical ReportCode3
Rethink Sparse Signals for Pose-guided Text-to-image GenerationCode0
XVerse: Consistent Multi-Subject Control of Identity and Semantic Attributes via DiT ModulationCode4
Diffusion Tree Sampling: Scalable inference-time alignment of diffusion models0
Med-Art: Diffusion Transformer for 2D Medical Text-to-Image Generation0
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Benchmark Results

#ModelMetricClaimedVerifiedStatus
1StackGAN-v1FID74.05Unverified
2StackGAN + OPFID55.3Unverified
3L-VerseFID45.8Unverified
4L-Verse-CCFID37.2Unverified
5AttnGAN (256 x 256)FID35.2Unverified
6AttnGAN + OPFID33.35Unverified
7DM-GANFID32.64Unverified
8DM-GAN + VICTRFID32.37Unverified
9Vanilla CM3FID29.5Unverified
10AttnGAN + VICTRFID29.26Unverified