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Main Authors: Bhatti, Zoha Hayat, Ahtisham, Bakhtawar, Tausif, Seemal, George, Niklas, Bajwa, Nida ul Habib, Javed, Mobin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.20061
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author Bhatti, Zoha Hayat
Ahtisham, Bakhtawar
Tausif, Seemal
George, Niklas
Bajwa, Nida ul Habib
Javed, Mobin
author_facet Bhatti, Zoha Hayat
Ahtisham, Bakhtawar
Tausif, Seemal
George, Niklas
Bajwa, Nida ul Habib
Javed, Mobin
contents Large Language Models and commercial speech synthesis systems now enable highly realistic AI-generated voice scams (vishing), raising urgent concerns about deception at scale. Yet it remains unclear whether individuals can reliably distinguish AI-generated speech from human-recorded voices in realistic scam contexts and what perceptual strategies underlie their judgments. We conducted a controlled online study in which 22 participants evaluated 16 vishing-style audio clips (8 AI-generated, 8 human-recorded) and classified each as human or AI while reporting confidence. Participants performed poorly: mean accuracy was 37.5%, below chance in a binary classification task. At the stimulus level, misclassification was bidirectional: 75% of AI-generated clips were majority-labeled as human, while 62.5% of human-recorded clips were majority-labeled as AI. Signal Detection Theory analysis revealed near-zero discriminability (d' approx 0), indicating inability to reliably distinguish synthetic from human voices rather than simple response bias. Qualitative analysis of 315 coded excerpts revealed reliance on paralinguistic and emotional heuristics, including pauses, filler words, vocal variability, cadence, and emotional expressiveness. However, these surface-level cues traditionally associated with human authenticity were frequently replicated by AI-generated samples. Misclassifications were often accompanied by moderate to high confidence, suggesting perceptual miscalibration rather than uncertainty. Together, our findings demonstrate that authenticity judgments based on vocal heuristics are unreliable in contemporary vishing scenarios. We discuss implications for security interventions, user education, and AI-mediated deception mitigation.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2602_20061
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Can You Tell It's AI? Human Perception of Synthetic Voices in Vishing Scenarios
Bhatti, Zoha Hayat
Ahtisham, Bakhtawar
Tausif, Seemal
George, Niklas
Bajwa, Nida ul Habib
Javed, Mobin
Cryptography and Security
Large Language Models and commercial speech synthesis systems now enable highly realistic AI-generated voice scams (vishing), raising urgent concerns about deception at scale. Yet it remains unclear whether individuals can reliably distinguish AI-generated speech from human-recorded voices in realistic scam contexts and what perceptual strategies underlie their judgments. We conducted a controlled online study in which 22 participants evaluated 16 vishing-style audio clips (8 AI-generated, 8 human-recorded) and classified each as human or AI while reporting confidence. Participants performed poorly: mean accuracy was 37.5%, below chance in a binary classification task. At the stimulus level, misclassification was bidirectional: 75% of AI-generated clips were majority-labeled as human, while 62.5% of human-recorded clips were majority-labeled as AI. Signal Detection Theory analysis revealed near-zero discriminability (d' approx 0), indicating inability to reliably distinguish synthetic from human voices rather than simple response bias. Qualitative analysis of 315 coded excerpts revealed reliance on paralinguistic and emotional heuristics, including pauses, filler words, vocal variability, cadence, and emotional expressiveness. However, these surface-level cues traditionally associated with human authenticity were frequently replicated by AI-generated samples. Misclassifications were often accompanied by moderate to high confidence, suggesting perceptual miscalibration rather than uncertainty. Together, our findings demonstrate that authenticity judgments based on vocal heuristics are unreliable in contemporary vishing scenarios. We discuss implications for security interventions, user education, and AI-mediated deception mitigation.
title Can You Tell It's AI? Human Perception of Synthetic Voices in Vishing Scenarios
topic Cryptography and Security
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.20061