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September 19, 2024
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Best way to detect ’deepfake’ videos? Check for the pulse

香港六合彩资料, Intel team up for 'FakeCatcher,' which monitors faces' bloodflow data

Deepfake videos are becoming increasingly sophisticated, thanks to improvements in computer software and hardware. A FakeCatcher tool from 香港六合彩资料 and Intel Corp. can detect over 90 percent of the altered videos. Deepfake videos are becoming increasingly sophisticated, thanks to improvements in computer software and hardware. A FakeCatcher tool from 香港六合彩资料 and Intel Corp. can detect over 90 percent of the altered videos.
Deepfake videos are becoming increasingly sophisticated, thanks to improvements in computer software and hardware. A FakeCatcher tool from 香港六合彩资料 and Intel Corp. can detect over 90 percent of the altered videos. Image Credit: Provided.

With video editing software becoming increasingly sophisticated, it鈥檚 sometimes difficult to believe our own eyes. Did that actor really appear in that movie? Did that politician really say that offensive thing?

Some so-called 鈥渄eepfakes鈥 are harmless fun, but others are made with a more sinister purpose. But how do we know when a video has been manipulated?

Researchers from 香港六合彩资料鈥檚 Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science have teamed up with to develop , which boasts an accuracy rate above 90%.

FakeCatcher works by analyzing the subtle differences in skin color caused by the human heartbeat. Photoplethysmography (abbreviated as PPG) is the same technique used for a pulse oximeter put on the tip of your finger at a doctor鈥檚 office, as well as Apple Watches and wearable fitness tracking devices that measure your heartbeat during exercise.

鈥淲e extract several PPG signals from different parts of the face and look at the spatial and temporal consistency of those signals,鈥 said Ilke Demir, a senior research scientist at Intel. 鈥淚n deepfakes, there is no consistency for heartbeats and there is no pulse information. For real videos, the blood flow in someone鈥檚 left cheek and right cheek 鈥 to oversimplify it 鈥 agree that they have the same pulse.鈥

Working with Demir on the project is Umur A. Ciftci, a PhD student at Watson College鈥檚 Department of Computer Science, under Professor Lijun Yin鈥檚 supervision at the , part of the Seymour Kunis Media Core funded by donor Gary Kunis 鈥73, LHD 鈥02. It builds on Yin鈥檚 15 years of work creating multiple 3D databases of human faces and emotional expressions. Hollywood filmmakers, video game creators and others have utilized the databases for their creative projects.

At Yin鈥檚 lab in the Innovative Technologies Complex, Ciftci has helped to build what may be the most advanced physiological capture setup in the United States, with its 18 cameras as well as in infrared. A device also is strapped around a subject鈥檚 chest that monitors breathing and heart rate. So much data is acquired in a 30-minute session that it requires 12 hours of computer processing to render it.

鈥淯mur has done a lot of physiology data analysis, and signal processing research started with our first multimodal database,鈥 Yin said. 鈥淲e capture data not just with 2D and 3D visible images but also thermal cameras and physiology sensors. The idea of using the physiology as another signature to see if it is consistent with previous data is very helpful for detection.鈥

are many steps below the kind of quality that Yin鈥檚 lab generates, but it means that manipulated videos can be much easier to spot.

鈥淐onsidering that we work with 3D using our own capture setup, we generate some of our own composites, which are basically 鈥榝ake鈥 videos,鈥 Ciftci said. 鈥淭he big difference is that we scan real people and use it, while deepfakes take data from other people and use it. It鈥檚 not that different if you think about it that way.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like the police knowing what all the criminals do and how they do it. You understand how these deepfakes are being done. We learn the tricks and even use some of them in our own data creation.鈥

Since the FakeCatcher findings were published, 27 researchers around the world have been using the algorithm and the dataset in their own analyses. Whenever these kinds of studies are made public, though, there are concerns about telling malicious deepfake makers how their videos have been shown to be false, allowing them to modify their work to be undetectable in the future.

Ciftci is not too worried about that, however: 鈥淚t鈥檚 not going to be easy for someone who doesn鈥檛 know much about the science behind it. They can鈥檛 just use what鈥檚 out there to make this happen without significant software changes.鈥

Intel鈥檚 involvement in the FakeCatcher research is connected to its interests in volumetric capture and augmented/virtual reality experiences. operates what Demir calls 鈥渢he world鈥檚 largest volumetric capture stage鈥: 100 cameras in a 10,000-square-foot geodesic dome that can handle about 30 people simultaneously 鈥 even a few horses once.

Future plans include volumetric-capture technology to be included in mainstream television shows, sports and augmented-reality applications, where the audience can immerse in any scene. Films in 3D and VR also are in the works, with two VR projects recently premiering at the Venice Film Festival.

By compiling the FakeCatcher data and reverse-engineering it, Intel Studios hopes to make more realistic renderings that incorporate the kind of biological markers that humans with real heartbeats have.

鈥淚ntel鈥檚 vision is changing from a chip-first company to putting AI, edge computing and data first,鈥 Demir said. 鈥淲e are making a transformation to AI-specific approaches in any way we can.鈥

(Interesting to note: Intel鈥檚 CEO is Bob Swan, MBA 鈥85, who last year told the School of Management magazine Reaching Higher that 鈥渋ntellectual curiosity is a wonderful and powerful thing to help you grow and develop and evolve over time.鈥)

Future research will seek to improve and refine the FakeCatcher technology, drilling further down into the data to determine how the deepfakes are made. That capability has many implications, including cybersecurity and telemedicine, and Yin also hopes for further collaborations with Intel.

鈥淲e鈥檙e still in the brainstorming stage,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e want to have an impact not only in academia but also to see if our research would have a role in industry.鈥