A robust forgery detection method for copy-move and splicing attacks in images
- Islam, Mohammad, Karmakar, Gour, Kamruzzaman, Joarder, Murshed, Manzur
- Authors: Islam, Mohammad , Karmakar, Gour , Kamruzzaman, Joarder , Murshed, Manzur
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Electronics Vol. 9, no. 9 (2020), p. 1-22
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- Description: Internet of Things (IoT) image sensors, social media, and smartphones generate huge volumes of digital images every day. Easy availability and usability of photo editing tools have made forgery attacks, primarily splicing and copy-move attacks, effortless, causing cybercrimes to be on the rise. While several models have been proposed in the literature for detecting these attacks, the robustness of those models has not been investigated when (i) a low number of tampered images are available for model building or (ii) images from IoT sensors are distorted due to image rotation or scaling caused by unwanted or unexpected changes in sensors' physical set-up. Moreover, further improvement in detection accuracy is needed for real-word security management systems. To address these limitations, in this paper, an innovative image forgery detection method has been proposed based on Discrete Cosine Transformation (DCT) and Local Binary Pattern (LBP) and a new feature extraction method using the mean operator. First, images are divided into non-overlapping fixed size blocks and 2D block DCT is applied to capture changes due to image forgery. Then LBP is applied to the magnitude of the DCT array to enhance forgery artifacts. Finally, the mean value of a particular cell across all LBP blocks is computed, which yields a fixed number of features and presents a more computationally efficient method. Using Support Vector Machine (SVM), the proposed method has been extensively tested on four well known publicly available gray scale and color image forgery datasets, and additionally on an IoT based image forgery dataset that we built. Experimental results reveal the superiority of our proposed method over recent state-of-the-art methods in terms of widely used performance metrics and computational time and demonstrate robustness against low availability of forged training samples.
- Description: This research was funded by Research Priority Area (RPA) scholarship of Federation University Australia.
- Authors: Islam, Mohammad , Karmakar, Gour , Kamruzzaman, Joarder , Murshed, Manzur
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Electronics Vol. 9, no. 9 (2020), p. 1-22
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Internet of Things (IoT) image sensors, social media, and smartphones generate huge volumes of digital images every day. Easy availability and usability of photo editing tools have made forgery attacks, primarily splicing and copy-move attacks, effortless, causing cybercrimes to be on the rise. While several models have been proposed in the literature for detecting these attacks, the robustness of those models has not been investigated when (i) a low number of tampered images are available for model building or (ii) images from IoT sensors are distorted due to image rotation or scaling caused by unwanted or unexpected changes in sensors' physical set-up. Moreover, further improvement in detection accuracy is needed for real-word security management systems. To address these limitations, in this paper, an innovative image forgery detection method has been proposed based on Discrete Cosine Transformation (DCT) and Local Binary Pattern (LBP) and a new feature extraction method using the mean operator. First, images are divided into non-overlapping fixed size blocks and 2D block DCT is applied to capture changes due to image forgery. Then LBP is applied to the magnitude of the DCT array to enhance forgery artifacts. Finally, the mean value of a particular cell across all LBP blocks is computed, which yields a fixed number of features and presents a more computationally efficient method. Using Support Vector Machine (SVM), the proposed method has been extensively tested on four well known publicly available gray scale and color image forgery datasets, and additionally on an IoT based image forgery dataset that we built. Experimental results reveal the superiority of our proposed method over recent state-of-the-art methods in terms of widely used performance metrics and computational time and demonstrate robustness against low availability of forged training samples.
- Description: This research was funded by Research Priority Area (RPA) scholarship of Federation University Australia.
Video coding using arbitrarily shaped block partitions in globally optimal perspective
- Paul, Manoranjan, Murshed, Manzur
- Authors: Paul, Manoranjan , Murshed, Manzur
- Date: 2011
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing Vol. 16, no. (2011), p.
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- Description: Algorithms using content-based patterns to segment moving regions at the macroblock (MB) level have exhibited good potential for improved coding efficiency when embedded into the H.264 standard as an extra mode. The content-based pattern generation (CPG) algorithm provides local optimal result as only one pattern can be optimally generated from a given set of moving regions. But, it failed to provide optimal results for multiple patterns from entire sets. Obviously, a global optimal solution for clustering the set and then generation of multiple patterns enhances the performance farther. But a global optimal solution is not achievable due to the non-polynomial nature of the clustering problem. In this paper, we propose a near-optimal content-based pattern generation (OCPG) algorithm which outperforms the existing approach. Coupling OCPG, generating a set of patterns after clustering the MBs into several disjoint sets, with a direct pattern selection algorithm by allowing all the MBs in multiple pattern modes outperforms the existing pattern-based coding when embedded into the H.264.
- Authors: Paul, Manoranjan , Murshed, Manzur
- Date: 2011
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing Vol. 16, no. (2011), p.
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Algorithms using content-based patterns to segment moving regions at the macroblock (MB) level have exhibited good potential for improved coding efficiency when embedded into the H.264 standard as an extra mode. The content-based pattern generation (CPG) algorithm provides local optimal result as only one pattern can be optimally generated from a given set of moving regions. But, it failed to provide optimal results for multiple patterns from entire sets. Obviously, a global optimal solution for clustering the set and then generation of multiple patterns enhances the performance farther. But a global optimal solution is not achievable due to the non-polynomial nature of the clustering problem. In this paper, we propose a near-optimal content-based pattern generation (OCPG) algorithm which outperforms the existing approach. Coupling OCPG, generating a set of patterns after clustering the MBs into several disjoint sets, with a direct pattern selection algorithm by allowing all the MBs in multiple pattern modes outperforms the existing pattern-based coding when embedded into the H.264.
Improved depth coding for HEVC focusing on depth edge approximation
- Podder, Pallab, Paul, Manoranjan, Rahaman, Motiur, Murshed, Manzur
- Authors: Podder, Pallab , Paul, Manoranjan , Rahaman, Motiur , Murshed, Manzur
- Date: 2017
- Type: Text , Journal article , acceptedVersion
- Relation: Signal Processing: Image Communication Vol. 55, no. (2017), p. 80-92
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- Description: The latest High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) standard has greatly improved the coding efficiency compared to its predecessor H.264. An important share of which is the adoption of hierarchical block partitioning structures and an extended number of modes. The structure of existing inter-modes is appropriate mainly to handle the rectangular and square aligned motion patterns. However, they could not be suitable for the block partitioning of depth objects having partial foreground motion with irregular edges and background. In such cases, the HEVC reference test model (HM) normally explores finer level block partitioning that requires more bits and encoding time to compensate large residuals. Since motion detection is the underlying criteria for mode selection, in this work, we use the energy concentration ratio feature of phase correlation to capture different types of motion in depth object. For better motion modeling focusing at depth edges, the proposed technique also uses an extra pattern mode comprising a group of templates with various rectangular and non-rectangular object shapes and edges. As the pattern mode could save bits by encoding only the foreground areas and beat all other inter-modes in a block once selected, the proposed technique could improve the rate-distortion performance. It could also reduce encoding time by skipping further branching using the pattern mode and selecting a subset of modes using innovative pre-processing criteria. Experimentally it could save 29% average encoding time and improve 0.10 dB Bjontegaard Delta peak signal-to-noise ratio compared to the HM.
- Authors: Podder, Pallab , Paul, Manoranjan , Rahaman, Motiur , Murshed, Manzur
- Date: 2017
- Type: Text , Journal article , acceptedVersion
- Relation: Signal Processing: Image Communication Vol. 55, no. (2017), p. 80-92
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: The latest High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) standard has greatly improved the coding efficiency compared to its predecessor H.264. An important share of which is the adoption of hierarchical block partitioning structures and an extended number of modes. The structure of existing inter-modes is appropriate mainly to handle the rectangular and square aligned motion patterns. However, they could not be suitable for the block partitioning of depth objects having partial foreground motion with irregular edges and background. In such cases, the HEVC reference test model (HM) normally explores finer level block partitioning that requires more bits and encoding time to compensate large residuals. Since motion detection is the underlying criteria for mode selection, in this work, we use the energy concentration ratio feature of phase correlation to capture different types of motion in depth object. For better motion modeling focusing at depth edges, the proposed technique also uses an extra pattern mode comprising a group of templates with various rectangular and non-rectangular object shapes and edges. As the pattern mode could save bits by encoding only the foreground areas and beat all other inter-modes in a block once selected, the proposed technique could improve the rate-distortion performance. It could also reduce encoding time by skipping further branching using the pattern mode and selecting a subset of modes using innovative pre-processing criteria. Experimentally it could save 29% average encoding time and improve 0.10 dB Bjontegaard Delta peak signal-to-noise ratio compared to the HM.
Depth sequence coding with hierarchical partitioning and spatial-domain quantization
- Shahriyar, Shampa, Murshed, Manzur, Ali, Mortuza, Paul, Manoranjan
- Authors: Shahriyar, Shampa , Murshed, Manzur , Ali, Mortuza , Paul, Manoranjan
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology Vol. 30, no. 3 (2020), p. 835-849
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- Description: Depth coding in 3D-HEVC deforms object shapes due to block-level edge-approximation and lacks efficient techniques to exploit the statistical redundancy, due to the frame-level clustering tendency in depth data, for higher coding gain at near-lossless quality. This paper presents a standalone mono-view depth sequence coder, which preserves edges implicitly by limiting quantization to the spatial-domain and exploits the frame-level clustering tendency efficiently with a novel binary tree-based decomposition (BTBD) technique. The BTBD can exploit the statistical redundancy in frame-level syntax, motion components, and residuals efficiently with fewer block-level prediction/coding modes and simpler context modeling for context-adaptive arithmetic coding. Compared with the depth coder in 3D-HEVC, the proposed one has achieved significantly lower bitrate at lossless to near-lossless quality range for mono-view coding and rendered superior quality synthetic views from the depth maps, compressed at the same bitrate, and the corresponding texture frames. © 1991-2012 IEEE.
- Authors: Shahriyar, Shampa , Murshed, Manzur , Ali, Mortuza , Paul, Manoranjan
- Date: 2020
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology Vol. 30, no. 3 (2020), p. 835-849
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Depth coding in 3D-HEVC deforms object shapes due to block-level edge-approximation and lacks efficient techniques to exploit the statistical redundancy, due to the frame-level clustering tendency in depth data, for higher coding gain at near-lossless quality. This paper presents a standalone mono-view depth sequence coder, which preserves edges implicitly by limiting quantization to the spatial-domain and exploits the frame-level clustering tendency efficiently with a novel binary tree-based decomposition (BTBD) technique. The BTBD can exploit the statistical redundancy in frame-level syntax, motion components, and residuals efficiently with fewer block-level prediction/coding modes and simpler context modeling for context-adaptive arithmetic coding. Compared with the depth coder in 3D-HEVC, the proposed one has achieved significantly lower bitrate at lossless to near-lossless quality range for mono-view coding and rendered superior quality synthetic views from the depth maps, compressed at the same bitrate, and the corresponding texture frames. © 1991-2012 IEEE.
Integrated generalized zero-shot learning for fine-grained classification
- Shermin, Tasfia, Teng, Shyh, Sohel, Ferdous, Murshed, Manzur, Lu, Guojun
- Authors: Shermin, Tasfia , Teng, Shyh , Sohel, Ferdous , Murshed, Manzur , Lu, Guojun
- Date: 2022
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Pattern Recognition Vol. 122, no. (2022), p.
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- Description: Embedding learning (EL) and feature synthesizing (FS) are two of the popular categories of fine-grained GZSL methods. EL or FS using global features cannot discriminate fine details in the absence of local features. On the other hand, EL or FS methods exploiting local features either neglect direct attribute guidance or global information. Consequently, neither method performs well. In this paper, we propose to explore global and direct attribute-supervised local visual features for both EL and FS categories in an integrated manner for fine-grained GZSL. The proposed integrated network has an EL sub-network and a FS sub-network. Consequently, the proposed integrated network can be tested in two ways. We propose a novel two-step dense attention mechanism to discover attribute-guided local visual features. We introduce new mutual learning between the sub-networks to exploit mutually beneficial information for optimization. Moreover, we propose to compute source-target class similarity based on mutual information and transfer-learn the target classes to reduce bias towards the source domain during testing. We demonstrate that our proposed method outperforms contemporary methods on benchmark datasets. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd
- Authors: Shermin, Tasfia , Teng, Shyh , Sohel, Ferdous , Murshed, Manzur , Lu, Guojun
- Date: 2022
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Pattern Recognition Vol. 122, no. (2022), p.
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Embedding learning (EL) and feature synthesizing (FS) are two of the popular categories of fine-grained GZSL methods. EL or FS using global features cannot discriminate fine details in the absence of local features. On the other hand, EL or FS methods exploiting local features either neglect direct attribute guidance or global information. Consequently, neither method performs well. In this paper, we propose to explore global and direct attribute-supervised local visual features for both EL and FS categories in an integrated manner for fine-grained GZSL. The proposed integrated network has an EL sub-network and a FS sub-network. Consequently, the proposed integrated network can be tested in two ways. We propose a novel two-step dense attention mechanism to discover attribute-guided local visual features. We introduce new mutual learning between the sub-networks to exploit mutually beneficial information for optimization. Moreover, we propose to compute source-target class similarity based on mutual information and transfer-learn the target classes to reduce bias towards the source domain during testing. We demonstrate that our proposed method outperforms contemporary methods on benchmark datasets. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd
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