See if you can spot an AI deepfake with our test
•A test has been developed to help people identify AI-generated deepfakes among realistic images.
•Researchers have found that traditional methods of spotting deepfakes are becoming less effective as AI improves.
•Training to identify AI fakes requires a more nuanced approach, as people can learn to recognize them with practice.
See if you can spot an AI deepfake with our testImage caption, One of these photos, being held by Dr Clare Sutherland, is an AI-generated deepfakeByCalum Watson, BBC Scotland and Aimee Stanton, BBC Scotland data visualisation unitPublished3 minutes agoPsychologist Dr Clare Sutherland is holding up two large photos. One shows the face of an Australian academic leading an international research study; the other is an AI-generated deepfake. Artificial intelligence has become so adept at creating realistic images, it is increasingly hard to figure out what is real or not. But can people be trained to spot an image of a human that has actually been created by a machine? That's a question Sutherland, from the University of Aberdeen, and her Australian colleague have been examining. But before we reveal the answer, have a go at this test - and note down your score. If you found that tough, you are not alone. It used to be far easier to spot computer-generated visual creations - often used by fraudsters - because AI would make blunders, like adding an extra finger or something else that was obviously weird.But AI learns from its mistakes."Training on visual artifacts, like looking for a sixth finger or odd earrings, has had limited success, partly because the AI is getting too good, and fraudsters may avoid using pictures with obvious flaws anyway," explained Prof Amy Dawel.She is the woman with shoulder-length hair in the picture being held by Sutherland. The man's image is the fake.Dawel is the director of the Australian National University Emotions and Faces Lab.She has been leading a team of researchers in Australia, Canada and the UK to find out if people can be trained to rumble the AI imposters.The answer, for now at least, is yes - but learning to spot an AI fake requires a more subtle approach.Getting a feel for fakesSutherland is leading the UK-based research at the University of Aberdeen., externalShe said they had noticed they were getting a...المصدر: BBC News | Source: BBC News
→A test has been developed to help people identify AI-generated deepfakes among realistic images.
→Researchers have found that traditional methods of spotting deepfakes are becoming less effective as AI improves.
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This article was originally published by BBC News. Khabr is a licensed Jordanian AI-powered news platform (Registration #82086). We add editorial value through: AI-powered news analysis, automated summaries, AI audio narration, multi-language translation (Arabic, English, French, Turkish), and AI fact-checking. Our mission is to make news more accessible and understandable for Arabic-speaking audiences worldwide.

