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Auteurs principaux: Chu, Beilin, You, Weike, Li, Mengtao, Zheng, Tingting, Zhao, Kehan, Xu, Xuan, Lu, Zhigao, Song, Jia, Xu, Moxuan, Zhou, Linna
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2025
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.19126
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author Chu, Beilin
You, Weike
Li, Mengtao
Zheng, Tingting
Zhao, Kehan
Xu, Xuan
Lu, Zhigao
Song, Jia
Xu, Moxuan
Zhou, Linna
author_facet Chu, Beilin
You, Weike
Li, Mengtao
Zheng, Tingting
Zhao, Kehan
Xu, Xuan
Lu, Zhigao
Song, Jia
Xu, Moxuan
Zhou, Linna
contents The rapid progress of GANs and Diffusion Models poses new challenges for detecting AI-generated images. Although CLIP-based detectors exhibit promising generalization, they often rely on semantic cues rather than generator artifacts, leading to brittle performance under distribution shifts. In this work, we revisit the nature of semantic bias and uncover that Patch Shuffle provides an unusually strong benefit for CLIP, that disrupts global semantic continuity while preserving local artifact cues, which reduces semantic entropy and homogenizes feature distributions between natural and synthetic images. Through a detailed layer-wise analysis, we further show that CLIP's deep semantic structure functions as a regulator that stabilizes cross-domain representations once semantic bias is suppressed. Guided by these findings, we propose SemAnti, a semantic-antagonistic fine-tuning paradigm that freezes the semantic subspace and adapts only artifact-sensitive layers under shuffled semantics. Despite its simplicity, SemAnti achieves state-of-the-art cross-domain generalization on AIGCDetectBenchmark and GenImage, demonstrating that regulating semantics is key to unlocking CLIP's full potential for robust AI-generated image detection.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_19126
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle When Semantics Regulate: Rethinking Patch Shuffle and Internal Bias for Generated Image Detection with CLIP
Chu, Beilin
You, Weike
Li, Mengtao
Zheng, Tingting
Zhao, Kehan
Xu, Xuan
Lu, Zhigao
Song, Jia
Xu, Moxuan
Zhou, Linna
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
The rapid progress of GANs and Diffusion Models poses new challenges for detecting AI-generated images. Although CLIP-based detectors exhibit promising generalization, they often rely on semantic cues rather than generator artifacts, leading to brittle performance under distribution shifts. In this work, we revisit the nature of semantic bias and uncover that Patch Shuffle provides an unusually strong benefit for CLIP, that disrupts global semantic continuity while preserving local artifact cues, which reduces semantic entropy and homogenizes feature distributions between natural and synthetic images. Through a detailed layer-wise analysis, we further show that CLIP's deep semantic structure functions as a regulator that stabilizes cross-domain representations once semantic bias is suppressed. Guided by these findings, we propose SemAnti, a semantic-antagonistic fine-tuning paradigm that freezes the semantic subspace and adapts only artifact-sensitive layers under shuffled semantics. Despite its simplicity, SemAnti achieves state-of-the-art cross-domain generalization on AIGCDetectBenchmark and GenImage, demonstrating that regulating semantics is key to unlocking CLIP's full potential for robust AI-generated image detection.
title When Semantics Regulate: Rethinking Patch Shuffle and Internal Bias for Generated Image Detection with CLIP
topic Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.19126