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On addressing the impact of ISO speed upon PRNU and forgery detection

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-01-01, 00:00 authored by Yijun Quan, Chang-Tsun LiChang-Tsun Li
Photo Response Non-Uniformity (PRNU) has been used as a powerful device fingerprint for image forgery detection because image forgeries can be revealed by finding the absence of the PRNU in the manipulated areas. The correlation between an image’s noise residual with the device’s reference PRNU is often compared with a decision threshold to check the existence of the PRNU. A PRNU correlation predictor is usually used to determine this decision threshold assuming the correlation is content-dependent. However, we found that not only the correlation is content-dependent, but it also depends on the camera sensitivity setting. Camera sensitivity , commonly known by the name of ISO speed , is an important attribute in digital photography. In this work, we will show the PRNU correlation’s dependency on ISO speed. Due to such dependency, we postulate that a correlation predictor is ISO speed-specific, i.e. reliable correlation predictions can only be made when a correlation predictor is trained with images of similar ISO speeds to the image in question . We report the experiments we conducted to validate the postulate. It is realized that in the real-world, information about the ISO speed may not be available in the metadata to facilitate the implementation of our postulate in the correlation prediction process. We hence propose a method called Content-based Inference of ISO Speeds (CINFISOS) to infer the ISO speed from the image content.

History

Journal

IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security

Volume

16

Pagination

190 - 202

Publisher

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)

Location

Piscataway, N.J.

ISSN

1556-6013

eISSN

1556-6021

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2020, The Authors