588 research outputs found
Comparative Analysis of Techniques Used to Detect Copy-Move Tampering for Real-World Electronic Images
Evolution of high computational powerful computers, easy availability of several innovative editing software package and high-definition quality-based image capturing tools follows to effortless result in producing image forgery. Though, threats for security and misinterpretation of digital images and scenes have been observed to be happened since a long period and also a lot of research has been established in developing diverse techniques to authenticate the digital images. On the contrary, the research in this region is not limited to checking the validity of digital photos but also to exploring the specific signs of distortion or forgery. This analysis would not require additional prior information of intrinsic content of corresponding digital image or prior embedding of watermarks. In this paper, recent growth in the area of digital image tampering identification have been discussed along with benchmarking study has been shown with qualitative and quantitative results. With variety of methodologies and concepts, different applications of forgery detection have been discussed with corresponding outcomes especially using machine and deep learning methods in order to develop efficient automated forgery detection system. The future applications and development of advanced soft-computing based techniques in digital image forgery tampering has been discussed
Comparative Analysis of Techniques Used to Detect Copy-Move Tampering for Real-World Electronic Images
Evolution of high computational powerful computers, easy availability of several innovative editing software package and high-definition quality-based image capturing tools follows to effortless result in producing image forgery. Though, threats for security and misinterpretation of digital images and scenes have been observed to be happened since a long period and also a lot of research has been established in developing diverse techniques to authenticate the digital images. On the contrary, the research in this region is not limited to checking the validity of digital photos but also to exploring the specific signs of distortion or forgery. This analysis would not require additional prior information of intrinsic content of corresponding digital image or prior embedding of watermarks. In this paper, recent growth in the area of digital image tampering identification have been discussed along with benchmarking study has been shown with qualitative and quantitative results. With variety of methodologies and concepts, different applications of forgery detection have been discussed with corresponding outcomes especially using machine and deep learning methods in order to develop efficient automated forgery detection system. The future applications and development of advanced soft-computing based techniques in digital image forgery tampering has been discussed
A survey on passive digital video forgery detection techniques
Digital media devices such as smartphones, cameras, and notebooks are becoming increasingly popular. Through digital platforms such as Facebook, WhatsApp, Twitter, and others, people share digital images, videos, and audio in large quantities. Especially in a crime scene investigation, digital evidence plays a crucial role in a courtroom. Manipulating video content with high-quality software tools is easier, which helps fabricate video content more efficiently. It is therefore necessary to develop an authenticating method for detecting and verifying manipulated videos. The objective of this paper is to provide a comprehensive review of the passive methods for detecting video forgeries. This survey has the primary goal of studying and analyzing the existing passive techniques for detecting video forgeries. First, an overview of the basic information needed to understand video forgery detection is presented. Later, it provides an in-depth understanding of the techniques used in the spatial, temporal, and spatio-temporal domain analysis of videos, datasets used, and their limitations are reviewed. In the following sections, standard benchmark video forgery datasets and the generalized architecture for passive video forgery detection techniques are discussed in more depth. Finally, identifying loopholes in existing surveys so detecting forged videos much more effectively in the future are discussed
Image Copy-Move Forgery Detection via Deep Cross-Scale PatchMatch
The recently developed deep algorithms achieve promising progress in the
field of image copy-move forgery detection (CMFD). However, they have limited
generalizability in some practical scenarios, where the copy-move objects may
not appear in the training images or cloned regions are from the background. To
address the above issues, in this work, we propose a novel end-to-end CMFD
framework by integrating merits from both conventional and deep methods.
Specifically, we design a deep cross-scale patchmatch method tailored for CMFD
to localize copy-move regions. In contrast to existing deep models, our scheme
aims to seek explicit and reliable point-to-point matching between source and
target regions using features extracted from high-resolution scales. Further,
we develop a manipulation region location branch for source/target separation.
The proposed CMFD framework is completely differentiable and can be trained in
an end-to-end manner. Extensive experimental results demonstrate the high
generalizability of our method to different copy-move contents, and the
proposed scheme achieves significantly better performance than existing
approaches.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted by ICME202
Hybrid LSTM and Encoder-Decoder Architecture for Detection of Image Forgeries
With advanced image journaling tools, one can easily alter the semantic
meaning of an image by exploiting certain manipulation techniques such as
copy-clone, object splicing, and removal, which mislead the viewers. In
contrast, the identification of these manipulations becomes a very challenging
task as manipulated regions are not visually apparent. This paper proposes a
high-confidence manipulation localization architecture which utilizes
resampling features, Long-Short Term Memory (LSTM) cells, and encoder-decoder
network to segment out manipulated regions from non-manipulated ones.
Resampling features are used to capture artifacts like JPEG quality loss,
upsampling, downsampling, rotation, and shearing. The proposed network exploits
larger receptive fields (spatial maps) and frequency domain correlation to
analyze the discriminative characteristics between manipulated and
non-manipulated regions by incorporating encoder and LSTM network. Finally,
decoder network learns the mapping from low-resolution feature maps to
pixel-wise predictions for image tamper localization. With predicted mask
provided by final layer (softmax) of the proposed architecture, end-to-end
training is performed to learn the network parameters through back-propagation
using ground-truth masks. Furthermore, a large image splicing dataset is
introduced to guide the training process. The proposed method is capable of
localizing image manipulations at pixel level with high precision, which is
demonstrated through rigorous experimentation on three diverse datasets
Fusion of block and keypoints based approaches for effective copy-move image forgery detection
Keypoint-based and block-based methods are two main categories of techniques for detecting copy-move forged images, one of the most common digital image forgery schemes. In general, block-based methods suffer from high computational cost due to the large number of image blocks used and fail to handle geometric transformations. On the contrary, keypoint-based approaches can overcome these two drawbacks yet are found difficult to deal with smooth regions. As a result, fusion of these two approaches is proposed for effective copy-move forgery detection. First, our scheme adaptively determines an appropriate initial size of regions to segment the image into non-overlapped regions. Feature points are extracted as keypoints using the scale invariant feature transform (SIFT) from the image. The ratio between the number of keypoints and the total number of pixels in that region is used to classify the region into smooth or non-smooth (keypoints) regions. Accordingly, block based approach using Zernike moments and keypoint based approach using SIFT along with filtering and post-processing are respectively applied to these two kinds of regions for effective forgery detection. Experimental results show that the proposed fusion scheme outperforms the keypoint-based method in reliability of detection and the block-based method in efficiency
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