AISep 29, 2021
Customs Fraud Detection in the Presence of Concept DriftTung-Duong Mai, Kien Hoang, Aitolkyn Baigutanova et al.
Capturing the changing trade pattern is critical in customs fraud detection. As new goods are imported and novel frauds arise, a drift-aware fraud detection system is needed to detect both known frauds and unknown frauds within a limited budget. The current paper proposes ADAPT, an adaptive selection method that controls the balance between exploitation and exploration strategies used for customs fraud detection. ADAPT makes use of the model performance trends and the amount of concept drift to determine the best exploration ratio at every time. Experiments on data from four countries over several years show that each country requires a different amount of exploration for maintaining its fraud detection system. We find the system with ADAPT can gradually adapt to the dataset and find the appropriate amount of exploration ratio with high performance.
LGOct 27, 2020
Active Learning for Human-in-the-Loop Customs InspectionSundong Kim, Tung-Duong Mai, Sungwon Han et al.
We study the human-in-the-loop customs inspection scenario, where an AI-assisted algorithm supports customs officers by recommending a set of imported goods to be inspected. If the inspected items are fraudulent, the officers can levy extra duties. Th formed logs are then used as additional training data for successive iterations. Choosing to inspect suspicious items first leads to an immediate gain in customs revenue, yet such inspections may not bring new insights for learning dynamic traffic patterns. On the other hand, inspecting uncertain items can help acquire new knowledge, which will be used as a supplementary training resource to update the selection systems. Based on multiyear customs datasets obtained from three countries, we demonstrate that some degree of exploration is necessary to cope with domain shifts in trade data. The results show that a hybrid strategy of selecting likely fraudulent and uncertain items will eventually outperform the exploitation-only strategy.