Abstract
AbstractMultimodal emotion recognition has attracted a great deal of attention in recent years, with new interesting applications now being considered. One promising application is in the digital image forensics fields where, for example, it gives the possibility to automatically highlight subjects that are in pain, in digital images under examination, by analyzing their facial expressions. However, finding an image that represents a possible crime leaves the problem of identifying the device used to take the image open. Such a problem has been addressed by Source Camera Identification algorithms (SCI, for short). These algorithms analyze some features hidden in a target image to find traces left by the sensor that captured the image. A particularly challenging case is when the candidate source cameras for an image under investigation are of the same manufacturer and model. A fair and universal assessment of these algorithms is only possible if standard datasets are used for their benchmarking. However, our comprehensive analysis has shown that the majority of the datasets proposed so far contain a collection of images taken with different types of cameras, mostly smartphones. We fill this gap by presenting UNISA2020, a novel image dataset that contains a large collection of real-world images taken with multiple conventional digital cameras of the same type. The images in our dataset have been assembled so as to avoid artifacts that could negatively affect the identification process. To validate our dataset, we also performed a comparative experimental analysis to investigate the performance of an SCI reference algorithm when running on our dataset as well as on other SCI standard datasets.
Funder
Università degli Studi di Salerno
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Computer Networks and Communications,Hardware and Architecture,Media Technology,Software
Cited by
5 articles.
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