Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

FakeFilter: A Cross-Distribution Deepfake Detection System with Domain Adaptation.

Journal of computer security(2021)

Cited 1|Views91
No score
Abstract
Abuse of face swap techniques poses serious threats to the integrity and authenticity of digital visual media. More alarmingly, fake images or videos created by deep learning technologies, also known as Deepfakes, are more realistic, high-quality, and reveal few tampering traces, which attracts great attention in digital multimedia forensics research. To address those threats imposed by Deepfakes, previous work attempted to classify real and fake faces by discriminative visual features, which is subjected to various objective conditions such as the angle or posture of a face. Differently, some research devises deep neural networks to discriminate Deepfakes at the microscopic-level semantics of images, which achieves promising results. Nevertheless, such methods show limited success as encountering unseen Deepfakes created with different methods from the training sets. Therefore, we propose a novel Deepfake detection system, named FakeFilter, in which we formulate the challenge of unseen Deepfake detection into a problem of cross-distribution data classification, and address the issue with a strategy of domain adaptation. By mapping different distributions of Deepfakes into similar features in a certain space, the detection system achieves comparable performance on both seen and unseen Deepfakes. Further evaluation and comparison results indicate that the challenge has been successfully addressed by FakeFilter.
More
Translated text
Key words
Digital multimedia forensics,face swap,Deepfake detection,domain adaptation
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined