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Cong Tran

Cong Tran contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Toward Fine-Grained Speech Inpainting Forensics:A Dataset, Method, and Metric for Multi-Region Tampering Localization

Recent advances in voice cloning and text-to-speech synthesis have made partial speech manipulation - where an adversary replaces a few words within an utterance to alter its meaning while preserving the speaker's identity - an increasingly realistic threat. Existing audio deepfake detection benchmarks focus on utterance-level binary classification or single-region tampering, leaving a critical gap in detecting and localizing multiple inpainted segments whose count is unknown a priori. We address this gap with three contributions. First, we introduce MIST (Multiregion Inpainting Speech Tampering), a large-scale multilingual dataset spanning 6 languages with 1-3 independently inpainted word-level segments per utterance, generated via LLM-guided semantic replacement and neural voice cloning, with fake content constituting only 2-7% of each utterance. Second, we propose ISA (Iterative Segment Analysis), a backbone-agnostic framework that performs coarse-to-fine sliding-window classification with gap-tolerant region proposal and boundary refinement to recover all tampered regions without prior knowledge of their count. Third, we define SF1@tau, a segment-level F1 metric based on temporal IoU matching that jointly evaluates region count accuracy and localization precision. Zero-shot evaluation reveals that partial inpainting at word granularity remains unsolved by existing deepfake detectors: utterance-level classifiers trained on fully synthesized speech assign near zero fake probability to MIST utterances where only 2-7% of content is manipulated. ISA consistently outperforms non-iterative baselines in this challenging setting, and the dataset, code, and evaluation toolkit are publicly released.

preprint2022arXiv

Grad-Align+: Empowering Gradual Network Alignment Using Attribute Augmentation

Network alignment (NA) is the task of discovering node correspondences across different networks. Although NA methods have achieved remarkable success in a myriad of scenarios, their satisfactory performance is not without prior anchor link information and/or node attributes, which may not always be available. In this paper, we propose Grad-Align+, a novel NA method using node attribute augmentation that is quite robust to the absence of such additional information. Grad-Align+ is built upon a recent state-of-the-art NA method, the so-called Grad-Align, that gradually discovers only a part of node pairs until all node pairs are found. Specifically, Grad-Align+ is composed of the following key components: 1) augmenting node attributes based on nodes' centrality measures, 2) calculating an embedding similarity matrix extracted from a graph neural network into which the augmented node attributes are fed, and 3) gradually discovering node pairs by calculating similarities between cross-network nodes with respect to the aligned cross-network neighbor-pair. Experimental results demonstrate that Grad-Align+ exhibits (a) superiority over benchmark NA methods, (b) empirical validation of our theoretical findings, and (c) the effectiveness of our attribute augmentation module.

preprint2022arXiv

META-CODE: Community Detection via Exploratory Learning in Topologically Unknown Networks

The discovery of community structures in social networks has gained considerable attention as a fundamental problem for various network analysis tasks. However, due to privacy concerns or access restrictions, the network structure is often unknown, thereby rendering established community detection approaches ineffective without costly data acquisition. To tackle this challenge, we present META-CODE, a novel end-to-end solution for detecting overlapping communities in networks with unknown topology via exploratory learning aided by easy-to-collect node metadata. Specifically, META-CODE consists of three steps: 1) initial network inference, 2) node-level community-affiliation embedding based on graph neural networks (GNNs) trained by our new reconstruction loss, and 3) network exploration via community-affiliation-based node queries, where Steps 2 and 3 are performed iteratively. Experimental results demonstrate that META-CODE exhibits (a) superiority over benchmark methods for overlapping community detection, (b) the effectiveness of our training model, and (c) fast network exploration.