Although several methods have been proposed for the detection of resampling operations in multimedia signals and the estimation of the resampling factor, the fundamental limits for this forensic task leave open research questions. In this work, we explore the effects that a downsampling operation introduces in the statistics of a 1D signal as a function of the parameters used. We quantify the statistical distance between an original signal and its downsampled version by means of the Kullback-Leibler Divergence (KLD) in case of a wide-sense stationary lst-order autoregressive signal model. Values of the KLD are derived for different signal parameters, resampling factors and interpolation kernels, thus predicting the achievable hypothesis distinguishability in each case. Our analysis reveals unexpected detectability in case ofstrong downsampling due to the local correlation structure of the original signal. Moreover, since existing detection methods generally leverage the cyclostationarity of resampled signals, we also address the case where the autocovariance values are estimated directly by means of the sample autocovariance from the signal under investigation. Under the considered assumptions, the Wishart distribution models the sample covariance matrix of a signal segment and the KLD under different hypotheses is derived.

Information-theoretic bounds of resampling forensics: New evidence for traces beyond cyclostationarity / Pasquini, Cecilia; Bohme, Rainer. - (2017), pp. 3-14. (Intervento presentato al convegno 5th ACM Workshop on Information Hiding and Multimedia Security Workshop, IH and MMSec 2017 tenutosi a Philadelphia, PA nel 20th-22nd June 2017) [10.1145/3082031.3083233].

Information-theoretic bounds of resampling forensics: New evidence for traces beyond cyclostationarity

Pasquini, Cecilia;
2017-01-01

Abstract

Although several methods have been proposed for the detection of resampling operations in multimedia signals and the estimation of the resampling factor, the fundamental limits for this forensic task leave open research questions. In this work, we explore the effects that a downsampling operation introduces in the statistics of a 1D signal as a function of the parameters used. We quantify the statistical distance between an original signal and its downsampled version by means of the Kullback-Leibler Divergence (KLD) in case of a wide-sense stationary lst-order autoregressive signal model. Values of the KLD are derived for different signal parameters, resampling factors and interpolation kernels, thus predicting the achievable hypothesis distinguishability in each case. Our analysis reveals unexpected detectability in case ofstrong downsampling due to the local correlation structure of the original signal. Moreover, since existing detection methods generally leverage the cyclostationarity of resampled signals, we also address the case where the autocovariance values are estimated directly by means of the sample autocovariance from the signal under investigation. Under the considered assumptions, the Wishart distribution models the sample covariance matrix of a signal segment and the KLD under different hypotheses is derived.
2017
IH and MMSec 2017: Proceedings of the 2017 ACM Workshop on Information Hiding and Multimedia Security
New York
Association for Computing Machinery, Inc
9781450350617
Pasquini, Cecilia; Bohme, Rainer
Information-theoretic bounds of resampling forensics: New evidence for traces beyond cyclostationarity / Pasquini, Cecilia; Bohme, Rainer. - (2017), pp. 3-14. (Intervento presentato al convegno 5th ACM Workshop on Information Hiding and Multimedia Security Workshop, IH and MMSec 2017 tenutosi a Philadelphia, PA nel 20th-22nd June 2017) [10.1145/3082031.3083233].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11572/277576
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