Component forensics
Title | Component forensics |
Publication Type | Journal Articles |
Year of Publication | 2009 |
Authors | Swaminathan A, M. Wu, Liu KJR |
Journal | Signal Processing Magazine, IEEE |
Volume | 26 |
Issue | 2 |
Pagination | 38 - 48 |
Date Published | 2009/03// |
ISBN Number | 1053-5888 |
Keywords | ACQUISITION, component, data;, forensics;digital, image, of, processing;image, sensor, sensors;security, technique;visual, technology;image |
Abstract | Visual sensor technologies have experienced tremendous growth in recent decades, and digital devices are becoming ubiquitous. Digital images taken by various imaging devices have been used in a growing number of applications, from military and reconnaissance to medical diagnosis and consumer photography. Consequently, a series of new forensic issues arise amidst such rapid advancement and widespread adoption of imaging technologies. For example, one can readily ask what kinds of hardware and software components as well as their parameters have been employed inside these devices? Given a digital image, which imaging sensor or which brand of sensor was used to acquire the image? How was the image acquired? Was it captured using a digital camera, cell phone camera, image scanner, or was it created artificially using an imageediting software? Has the image undergone any manipulation after capture? Is it authentic, or has it been tampered in any way? Does it contain any hidden information or steganographic data? Many of these forensic questions are related to tracing the origin of the digital image to its creation process. Evidence obtained from such analysis would provide useful forensic information to law enforcement, security, and intelligence agencies. Knowledge of image acquisition techniques can also help answer further forensic questions regarding the nature of additional processing that the image might have undergone after capture. |
DOI | 10.1109/MSP.2008.931076 |