Phuket, Thailand / June 10, 2024 - June 13, 2024
3rd ACM International Workshop on Multimedia AI against Disinformation (MAD’24)
On June 10, 2024, the 3rd edition of the ACM International Workshop on Multimedia AI against Disinformation (MAD’24) organized with the ACM International Conference on Multimedia Retrieval (ICMR’24) will take place in Phuket, Thailand.
Fraunhofer IDMT will support the organization of the workshop and present its latest work on visual and audio scene classification and speech detection there.
Anitha Bhat Talagini Ashoka, Luca Cuccovillo, Patrick Aichroth
This paper introduces a novel approach that enhances synthetic speech detection by applying Benford's law analysis to the encoder embeddings. By leveraging Benford's Law as supplementary information alongside the existing embeddings, the model gains a detailed understanding of both content-related features and numerical distribution patterns. Our approach demonstrates superior performance on the ASVspoof 2019 LA dataset, achieving an AUC score of 0.921, while providing enhanced interpretability.
Jakob Abeßer, Luca Cuccovillo
This paper presents a baseline approach and an experimental protocol for a specific content verification problem: detecting discrepancies between the audio and video modalities in multimedia content. We first design and optimize an audio-visual scene classifier, to compare with existing classification baselines that use both modalities. Then, by applying this classifier separately to the audio and the visual modality, we can detect scene-class inconsistencies between them. To facilitate further research and provide a common evaluation platform, we introduce an experimental protocol and a benchmark dataset simulating such inconsistencies. Our approach achieves state-of-the-art results in scene classification and promising outcomes in audio-visual discrepancies detection, highlighting its potential in content verification applications.
Modern communication does not rely anymore solely on classic media like newspapers or television, but rather takes place over social networks, in real-time, and with live interactions among users. The speedup in the amount of information available, however, also led to an increased amount and quality of misleading content, disinformation and propaganda. Conversely, the fight against disinformation, in which news agencies and NGOs (among others) take part on a daily basis to avoid the risk of citizens' opinions being distorted, became even more crucial and demanding, especially for what concerns sensitive topics such as politics, health and religion.
Disinformation campaigns are leveraging, among others, AI-based tools for content generation and modification: hyper-realistic visual, speech, textual and video content have emerged under the collective name of "deepfakes", and more recently with the use of Large Language Models (LLMs) and Large Multimodal Models (LMMs), undermining the perceived credibility of media content. It is, therefore, even more crucial to counter these advances by devising new analysis tools able to detect the presence of synthetic and manipulated content, accessible to journalists and fact-checkers, robust and trustworthy, and possibly based on AI to reach greater performance.
Future multimedia disinformation detection research relies on the combination of different modalities and on the adoption of the latest advances of deep learning approaches and architectures. These raise new challenges and questions that need to be addressed in order to reduce the effects of disinformation campaigns. The workshop, in its third edition, welcomes contributions related to different aspects of AI-powered disinformation detection, analysis and mitigation.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
Paper submission due | March 3, 2024 |
Acceptance notification | March 31, 2024 |
Camera-ready papers due | April 25, 2024 |
Workshop @ACM ICMR 2024 | June 10, 2024 |
The 3rd ACM International Workshop on Multimedia AI against Disinformation (MAD’24) is organized with the ACM International Conference on Multimedia Retrieval (ICMR’24) and is supported under the H2020 project AI4Media “A European Excellence Centre for Media, Society and Democracy”, the Horizon Europe project vera.ai “VERification Assisted by Artificial Intelligence”, and the Horizon Europe project AI4Debunk “Participative Assistive AI-powered Tools for Supporting Trustworthy Online Activity of Citizens and Debunking Disinformation“.
For more information about the workshop and submission instructions please visit the workshop website MAD2024.