Abstract

Digital image forgery has become hugely widespread, as numerous easy-to-use, low-cost image manipulation tools have become widely available to the common masses. Such forged images can be used with various malicious intentions, such as to harm the social reputation of renowned personalities, to perform identity fraud resulting in financial disasters, and many more illegitimate activities. Image splicing is a form of image forgery where an adversary intelligently combines portions from multiple source images to generate a natural-looking artificial image. Detection of image splicing attacks poses an open challenge in the forensic domain, and in recent literature, several significant research findings on image splicing detection have been described. However, the number of features documented in such works is significantly huge. Our aim in this work is to address the issue of feature set optimization while modeling image splicing detection as a classification problem and preserving the forgery detection efficiency reported in the state-of-the-art. This paper proposes an image-splicing detection scheme based on textural features and Haralick features computed from the input image’s Gray Level Co-occurrence Matrix (GLCM) and also localizes the spliced regions in a detected spliced image. We have explored the well-known Columbia Image Splicing Detection Evaluation Dataset and the DSO-1 dataset, which is more challenging because of its constituent post-processed color images. Experimental results prove that our proposed model obtains 95% accuracy in image splicing detection with an AUC score of 0.99, with an optimized feature set of dimensionality of 15 only.

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