SDCVLGASMar 21, 2024

Exploring Green AI for Audio Deepfake Detection

arXiv:2403.14290v111 citationsh-index: 4Has CodeEUSIPCO
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses environmental concerns in AI for audio security, but it is incremental as it builds on existing self-supervised learning models.

The study tackled the high carbon footprint of audio deepfake detection by proposing a framework that uses pre-trained self-supervised learning models with classical machine learning algorithms, achieving a 0.90% equal error rate on the ASVspoof 2019 LA dataset with under 1k trainable parameters.

The state-of-the-art audio deepfake detectors leveraging deep neural networks exhibit impressive recognition performance. Nonetheless, this advantage is accompanied by a significant carbon footprint. This is mainly due to the use of high-performance computing with accelerators and high training time. Studies show that average deep NLP model produces around 626k lbs of CO\textsubscript{2} which is equivalent to five times of average US car emission at its lifetime. This is certainly a massive threat to the environment. To tackle this challenge, this study presents a novel framework for audio deepfake detection that can be seamlessly trained using standard CPU resources. Our proposed framework utilizes off-the-shelve self-supervised learning (SSL) based models which are pre-trained and available in public repositories. In contrast to existing methods that fine-tune SSL models and employ additional deep neural networks for downstream tasks, we exploit classical machine learning algorithms such as logistic regression and shallow neural networks using the SSL embeddings extracted using the pre-trained model. Our approach shows competitive results compared to the commonly used high-carbon footprint approaches. In experiments with the ASVspoof 2019 LA dataset, we achieve a 0.90\% equal error rate (EER) with less than 1k trainable model parameters. To encourage further research in this direction and support reproducible results, the Python code will be made publicly accessible following acceptance. Github: https://github.com/sahasubhajit/Speech-Spoofing-

Code Implementations1 repo
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