Improving Out-of-Domain Audio Deepfake Detection via Layer Selection and Fusion of SSL-Based Countermeasures
Abstract
Audio deepfake detection systems based on frozen pre-trained self-supervised learning (SSL) encoders show a high level of performance when combined with layer-weighted pooling methods, such as multi-head factorized attentive pooling (MHFA). However, they still struggle to generalize to out-of-domain (OOD) conditions. We tackle this problem by studying the behavior of six different pre-trained SSLs, on four different test corpora. We perform a layer-by-layer analysis to determine which layers contribute most. Next, we study the pooling head, comparing a strategy based on a single layer with automatic selection via MHFA. We observed that selecting the best layer gave very good results, while reducing system parameters by up to 80%. A wide variation in performance as a function of test corpus and SSL model is also observed, showing that the pre-training strategy of the encoder plays a role. Finally, score-level fusion of several encoders improved generalization to OOD attacks.