Yijun Bei

CV
h-index6
6papers
15citations
Novelty42%
AI Score39

6 Papers

CVJun 13, 2024Code
A Large-scale Universal Evaluation Benchmark For Face Forgery Detection

Yijun Bei, Hengrui Lou, Jinsong Geng et al.

With the rapid development of AI-generated content (AIGC) technology, the production of realistic fake facial images and videos that deceive human visual perception has become possible. Consequently, various face forgery detection techniques have been proposed to identify such fake facial content. However, evaluating the effectiveness and generalizability of these detection techniques remains a significant challenge. To address this, we have constructed a large-scale evaluation benchmark called DeepFaceGen, aimed at quantitatively assessing the effectiveness of face forgery detection and facilitating the iterative development of forgery detection technology. DeepFaceGen consists of 776,990 real face image/video samples and 773,812 face forgery image/video samples, generated using 34 mainstream face generation techniques. During the construction process, we carefully consider important factors such as content diversity, fairness across ethnicities, and availability of comprehensive labels, in order to ensure the versatility and convenience of DeepFaceGen. Subsequently, DeepFaceGen is employed in this study to evaluate and analyze the performance of 13 mainstream face forgery detection techniques from various perspectives. Through extensive experimental analysis, we derive significant findings and propose potential directions for future research. The code and dataset for DeepFaceGen are available at https://github.com/HengruiLou/DeepFaceGen.

CVOct 22, 2024
Benchmarking Multi-Scene Fire and Smoke Detection

Xiaoyi Han, Nan Pu, Zunlei Feng et al.

The current irregularities in existing public Fire and Smoke Detection (FSD) datasets have become a bottleneck in the advancement of FSD technology. Upon in-depth analysis, we identify the core issue as the lack of standardized dataset construction, uniform evaluation systems, and clear performance benchmarks. To address this issue and drive innovation in FSD technology, we systematically gather diverse resources from public sources to create a more comprehensive and refined FSD benchmark. Additionally, recognizing the inadequate coverage of existing dataset scenes, we strategically expand scenes, relabel, and standardize existing public FSD datasets to ensure accuracy and consistency. We aim to establish a standardized, realistic, unified, and efficient FSD research platform that mirrors real-life scenes closely. Through our efforts, we aim to provide robust support for the breakthrough and development of FSD technology. The project is available at \href{https://xiaoyihan6.github.io/FSD/}{https://xiaoyihan6.github.io/FSD/}.

CVOct 22, 2024
Fire and Smoke Detection with Burning Intensity Representation

Xiaoyi Han, Yanfei Wu, Nan Pu et al.

An effective Fire and Smoke Detection (FSD) and analysis system is of paramount importance due to the destructive potential of fire disasters. However, many existing FSD methods directly employ generic object detection techniques without considering the transparency of fire and smoke, which leads to imprecise localization and reduces detection performance. To address this issue, a new Attentive Fire and Smoke Detection Model (a-FSDM) is proposed. This model not only retains the robust feature extraction and fusion capabilities of conventional detection algorithms but also redesigns the detection head specifically for transparent targets in FSD, termed the Attentive Transparency Detection Head (ATDH). In addition, Burning Intensity (BI) is introduced as a pivotal feature for fire-related downstream risk assessments in traditional FSD methodologies. Extensive experiments on multiple FSD datasets showcase the effectiveness and versatility of the proposed FSD model. The project is available at \href{https://xiaoyihan6.github.io/FSD/}{https://xiaoyihan6.github.io/FSD/}.

CVMar 8
EvolveReason: Self-Evolving Reasoning Paradigm for Explainable Deepfake Facial Image Identification

Binjia Zhou, Dawei Luo, Shuai Chen et al.

With the rapid advancement of AIGC technology, developing identification methods to address the security challenges posed by deepfakes has become urgent. Face forgery identification techniques can be categorized into two types: traditional classification methods and explainable VLM approaches. The former provides classification results but lacks explanatory ability, while the latter, although capable of providing coarse-grained explanations, often suffers from hallucinations and insufficient detail. To overcome these limitations, we propose EvolveReason, which mimics the reasoning and observational processes of human auditors when identifying face forgeries. By constructing a chain-of-thought dataset, CoT-Face, tailored for advanced VLMs, our approach guides the model to think in a human-like way, prompting it to output reasoning processes and judgment results. This provides practitioners with reliable analysis and helps alleviate hallucination. Additionally, our framework incorporates a forgery latent-space distribution capture module, enabling EvolveReason to identify high-frequency forgery cues difficult to extract from the original images. To further enhance the reliability of textual explanations, we introduce a self-evolution exploration strategy, leveraging reinforcement learning to allow the model to iteratively explore and optimize its textual descriptions in a two-stage process. Experimental results show that EvolveReason not only outperforms the current state-of-the-art methods in identification performance but also accurately identifies forgery details and demonstrates generalization capabilities.

CVJul 7, 2025
CorrDetail: Visual Detail Enhanced Self-Correction for Face Forgery Detection

Binjia Zhou, Hengrui Lou, Lizhe Chen et al.

With the swift progression of image generation technology, the widespread emergence of facial deepfakes poses significant challenges to the field of security, thus amplifying the urgent need for effective deepfake detection.Existing techniques for face forgery detection can broadly be categorized into two primary groups: visual-based methods and multimodal approaches. The former often lacks clear explanations for forgery details, while the latter, which merges visual and linguistic modalities, is more prone to the issue of hallucinations.To address these shortcomings, we introduce a visual detail enhanced self-correction framework, designated CorrDetail, for interpretable face forgery detection. CorrDetail is meticulously designed to rectify authentic forgery details when provided with error-guided questioning, with the aim of fostering the ability to uncover forgery details rather than yielding hallucinated responses. Additionally, to bolster the reliability of its findings, a visual fine-grained detail enhancement module is incorporated, supplying CorrDetail with more precise visual forgery details. Ultimately, a fusion decision strategy is devised to further augment the model's discriminative capacity in handling extreme samples, through the integration of visual information compensation and model bias reduction.Experimental results demonstrate that CorrDetail not only achieves state-of-the-art performance compared to the latest methodologies but also excels in accurately identifying forged details, all while exhibiting robust generalization capabilities.

CVDec 28, 2024
Mining Platoon Patterns from Traffic Videos

Yijun Bei, Teng Ma, Dongxiang Zhang et al.

Discovering co-movement patterns from urban-scale video data sources has emerged as an attractive topic. This task aims to identify groups of objects that travel together along a common route, which offers effective support for government agencies in enhancing smart city management. However, the previous work has made a strong assumption on the accuracy of recovered trajectories from videos and their co-movement pattern definition requires the group of objects to appear across consecutive cameras along the common route. In practice, this often leads to missing patterns if a vehicle is not correctly identified from a certain camera due to object occlusion or vehicle mis-matching. To address this challenge, we propose a relaxed definition of co-movement patterns from video data, which removes the consecutiveness requirement in the common route and accommodates a certain number of missing captured cameras for objects within the group. Moreover, a novel enumeration framework called MaxGrowth is developed to efficiently retrieve the relaxed patterns. Unlike previous filter-and-refine frameworks comprising both candidate enumeration and subsequent candidate verification procedures, MaxGrowth incurs no verification cost for the candidate patterns. It treats the co-movement pattern as an equivalent sequence of clusters, enumerating candidates with increasing sequence length while avoiding the generation of any false positives. Additionally, we also propose two effective pruning rules to efficiently filter the non-maximal patterns. Extensive experiments are conducted to validate the efficiency of MaxGrowth and the quality of its generated co-movement patterns. Our MaxGrowth runs up to two orders of magnitude faster than the baseline algorithm. It also demonstrates high accuracy in real video dataset when the trajectory recovery algorithm is not perfect.