AOT: Appearance Optimal Transport Based Identity Swapping for Forgery Detection
This work addresses a domain-specific problem for face forgery detection by providing a novel identity swapping algorithm to create challenging datasets, though it is incremental as it builds on existing identity swapping methods.
The paper tackles the problem of generating diverse Deepfakes datasets with large appearance variations for improving forgery detection, proposing an Appearance Optimal Transport model that formulates appearance mapping as an optimal transport problem in latent and pixel space, resulting in superior performance compared to state-of-the-art methods and enhanced detection capabilities.
Recent studies have shown that the performance of forgery detection can be improved with diverse and challenging Deepfakes datasets. However, due to the lack of Deepfakes datasets with large variance in appearance, which can be hardly produced by recent identity swapping methods, the detection algorithm may fail in this situation. In this work, we provide a new identity swapping algorithm with large differences in appearance for face forgery detection. The appearance gaps mainly arise from the large discrepancies in illuminations and skin colors that widely exist in real-world scenarios. However, due to the difficulties of modeling the complex appearance mapping, it is challenging to transfer fine-grained appearances adaptively while preserving identity traits. This paper formulates appearance mapping as an optimal transport problem and proposes an Appearance Optimal Transport model (AOT) to formulate it in both latent and pixel space. Specifically, a relighting generator is designed to simulate the optimal transport plan. It is solved via minimizing the Wasserstein distance of the learned features in the latent space, enabling better performance and less computation than conventional optimization. To further refine the solution of the optimal transport plan, we develop a segmentation game to minimize the Wasserstein distance in the pixel space. A discriminator is introduced to distinguish the fake parts from a mix of real and fake image patches. Extensive experiments reveal that the superiority of our method when compared with state-of-the-art methods and the ability of our generated data to improve the performance of face forgery detection.