Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4955634 | Digital Investigation | 2017 | 26 Pages |
Abstract
Digital videos are prone to several kinds of tamper attacks, but on a broad scale these can be categorized as either inter-frame forgeries, where the arrangement of frames in a video is manipulated, or intra-frame forgeries, where the contents of the individual frames are altered. Intra-frame forgeries are simply digital image forgeries performed on individual frames of the video. Upscale-crop and splicing are two intra-frame forgeries, both of which are performed via an image processing operation known as resampling. While the challenge of resampling detection in digital images has remained at the receiving end of much innovation over the past two decades, detection of resampling in digital videos has been regarded with little attention. With the intent of ameliorating this situation, in this paper, we propose a forensic system capable of validating the authenticity of digital videos by establishing if any of its frames or regions of frames have undergone post-production resampling. The system integrates the outcomes of pixel-correlation inspection and noise-inconsistency analysis; the operation of the system as a whole overcomes the limitations usually faced by these individual analyses. The proposed system has been extensively tested on a large dataset consisting of digital videos and images compressed using different codecs at different bit-rates and scaling factors, by varying noise and tampered region sizes. Empirical evidence gathered over this dataset suggests good efficacy of the system in different forensic scenarios.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computer Networks and Communications
Authors
Raahat Devender Singh, Naveen Aggarwal,