English

Finding AI-Generated Faces in the Wild

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2024-04-08 v3 Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

AI-based image generation has continued to rapidly improve, producing increasingly more realistic images with fewer obvious visual flaws. AI-generated images are being used to create fake online profiles which in turn are being used for spam, fraud, and disinformation campaigns. As the general problem of detecting any type of manipulated or synthesized content is receiving increasing attention, here we focus on a more narrow task of distinguishing a real face from an AI-generated face. This is particularly applicable when tackling inauthentic online accounts with a fake user profile photo. We show that by focusing on only faces, a more resilient and general-purpose artifact can be detected that allows for the detection of AI-generated faces from a variety of GAN- and diffusion-based synthesis engines, and across image resolutions (as low as 128 x 128 pixels) and qualities.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2311.08577,
  title  = {Finding AI-Generated Faces in the Wild},
  author = {Gonzalo J. Aniano Porcile and Jack Gindi and Shivansh Mundra and James R. Verbus and Hany Farid},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2311.08577},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

to be published as: G.J.A. Porcile, J. Gindi, S. Mundra, J.R. Verbus, and H. Farid, Finding AI-Generated Faces in the Wild, Workshop on Media Forensics at CVPR, 2024

R2 v1 2026-06-28T13:21:27.929Z