CVApr 9

SciFigDetect: A Benchmark for AI-Generated Scientific Figure Detection

arXiv:2604.0821119.41 citationsHas Code
Predicted impact top 46% in CV · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
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This addresses a challenge for research integrity and visual forensics in academia, as AI-generated scientific figures become more prevalent, and it is incremental by providing the first benchmark for this specific domain.

The paper tackles the problem of detecting AI-generated scientific figures, which are distinct from natural images due to their structured and text-dense nature, and finds that current detection methods fail dramatically in zero-shot transfer, exhibit strong generator-specific overfitting, and are fragile under common corruptions.

Modern multimodal generators can now produce scientific figures at near-publishable quality, creating a new challenge for visual forensics and research integrity. Unlike conventional AI-generated natural images, scientific figures are structured, text-dense, and tightly aligned with scholarly semantics, making them a distinct and difficult detection target. However, existing AI-generated image detection benchmarks and methods are almost entirely developed for open-domain imagery, leaving this setting largely unexplored. We present the first benchmark for AI-generated scientific figure detection. To construct it, we develop an agent-based data pipeline that retrieves licensed source papers, performs multimodal understanding of paper text and figures, builds structured prompts, synthesizes candidate figures, and filters them through a review-driven refinement loop. The resulting benchmark covers multiple figure categories, multiple generation sources and aligned real--synthetic pairs. We benchmark representative detectors under zero-shot, cross-generator, and degraded-image settings. Results show that current methods fail dramatically in zero-shot transfer, exhibit strong generator-specific overfitting, and remain fragile under common post-processing corruptions. These findings reveal a substantial gap between existing AIGI detection capabilities and the emerging distribution of high-quality scientific figures. We hope this benchmark can serve as a foundation for future research on robust and generalizable scientific-figure forensics. The dataset is available at https://github.com/Joyce-yoyo/SciFigDetect.

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