As smartphones are being widely used in daily lives, the images captured by smartphones become ubiquitous and may be used for legal purposes. Accordingly, the authentication of smartphone images and the identification of post-capture manipulation are of significant interest in digital forensics. In this paper, we propose a method to determine the smartphone camera source of a particular image and operations that may have been performed on that image. We first take images using different smartphones and purposely manipulate the images, including different combinations of double JPEG compression, cropping, and rescaling. Then, we extract the marginal density in low frequency coordinates and neighboring joint density features on intra-block and inter-block as features. Finally, we employ a support vector machine to identify the smartphone source as well as to reveal the operations. Experimental results show that our method is very promising for identifying both smartphone source and manipulations. Our study also indicates that applying unsupervised clustering and supervised classification together (clustering first, followed by classification) leads to improvement in identifying smartphone sources and manipulations and thus provides a means to address the complexity issue of intentional manipulation. (Publisher abstract provided.)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- The Cross-Reactivity of the Cannabinoid Analogs (delta-8-THC, delta-10-THC and CBD) and their metabolites in Urine of Six Commercially Available Homogeneous Immunoassays, Grant Report
- Improving Sexual Assault Kit Outcomes
- Development of a THC Breath Analyzer using Chitosan Film with Colorimetric Dye