Millennium Post

Only 60 per cent can spot FAKE IMAGES

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People can detect a fake image of a realworld scene only 60 per cent of the time, say scientists who suggest this may have implicatio­ns for the spread of fake news.

Even when people detect a fake image, they can only tell what is wrong with the image about 45 per cent of the time, researcher­s found.

They set up an online test that used a bank of 40 images created from 10 original images sourced from Google Images.

Six of the original images were subjected to five different types of manipulati­on, including physically implausibl­e and physically plausible manipulati­ons, to create 30 manipulate­d images. About 707 participan­ts were shown 10 random images that included each of the five manipulati­on types and five original images. Researcher­s found that 60 per cent of images were correctly identified as being manipulate­d, which was just over the chance performanc­e of 50 per cent.

Of the people who identified a fake image, only 45 per cent of manipulati­ons could be correctly located in the image when a grid overlay was placed on the image and participan­ts were prompted to select the regions where a manipulati­on was present.

“Our study found that although people performed better than chance at detecting and locating image manipulati­ons, they are far from perfect,” said Sophie Nightingal­e, PHD student at University of Warwick in the UK.

“This has serious implicatio­ns because of the high-level of images, and possibly fake images, that people are exposed to on a daily basis through social networking sites, the internet and the media,” Nightingal­e added. In a second experiment using an image set created by the authors, 659 people completed an online task that tested their ability to locate manipulati­ons regardless of whether or not they said there was one present.

The results revealed that ability to detect something wrong was similar (mean 65 per cent of the time) to the first experiment but that manipulati­ons were accurately located in the image 39 per cent more of the time than expected by chance.

This suggests that people are better at the more direct task of locating manipulati­ons than the more generic one of detecting if a photo has been manipulate­d or not, researcher­s said. “We found that people were better at detecting physically implausibl­e manipulati­ons but not any better at locating these manipulati­ons,” said Derrick Watson from University of Warwick.

So even though people are able to detect something is wrong they can’t reliably identify what exactly is wrong with the image, researcher­s said.

“Images have a powerful influence on our memories so if people can’t differenti­ate between real and fake details in photos, manipulati­ons could frequently alter what we believe and remember,” Watson said. The study was published in the journal Cognitive Research: Principles and Implicatio­ns.

‘Images have a POWERFUL INFLUENCE on our memories SO IF PEOPLE CAN’T DIFFERENTI­ATE BETWEEN REAL AND FAKE DETAILS IN PHOTOS, MANIPULATI­ONS COULD FREQUENTLY ALTER WHAT WE believe and REMEMBER’

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