Abstract

Contrast enhancement forensics techniques have always been of great interest for the image forensics community, as they can be an effective tool for recovering image history and identifying tampered images. Although several contrast enhancement forensic algorithms have been proposed, their accuracy and robustness against some kinds of processing are still unsatisfactory. In order to attenuate such deficiency, in this paper, we propose a new framework based on dual-domain fusion convolutional neural network to fuse the features of pixel and histogram domains for contrast enhancement forensics. Specifically, we first present a pixel-domain convolutional neural network to automatically capture the patterns of contrast-enhanced images in the pixel domain. Then, we present a histogram-domain convolutional neural network to extract the features in the histogram domain. The feature representations of pixel and histogram domains are fused and fed into two fully connected layers for the classification of contrast-enhanced images. Experimental results show that the proposed method achieves better performance and is robust against pre-JPEG compression and antiforensics attacks, obtaining over 99% detection accuracy for JPEG-compressed images with different QFs and antiforensics attack. In addition, a strategy for performance improvements of CNN-based forensics is explored, which could provide guidance for the design of CNN-based forensics tools.

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