New Deepfakes Can Mimic Heartbeats, Evading Detection Tools

Deep Fakes Have Heartbeats Now

June 1, 2025 Deepfakes just got more convincing — and harder to catch. A new study shows AI-generated videos can now simulate human heartbeats, defeating some of the most advanced deepfake detection systems.

Published in Frontiers in Imaging, the research reveals that modern deepfakes can replicate subtle physiological signals like pulse variations across a person’s face. These signals are typically used by detectors based on remote photoplethysmography (rPPP) — a medical imaging technique similar to hospital-grade pulse oximeters.

That method, once considered reliable, may no longer be effective. “A detector that worked nicely two years ago begins to completely fail today,” said Prof. Peter Eisert, one of the study’s co-authors. His team found that even deepfakes not explicitly programmed to show heartbeats often displayed them when built from real driving videos.

This raises new concerns about misinformation, identity fraud, and public trust in digital media. As deepfakes improve, experts like Eisert warn that traditional detection may be insufficient. Instead, they suggest focusing on cryptographic digital fingerprints to verify video authenticity before manipulation occurs.

The findings underscore how fast detection technology is falling behind — and how the deepfake arms race may be nearing a tipping point.

 

Top Stories

Related Articles

October 21, 2025 Bell Canada has completed Canada’s first successful space-based voice and data call using a standard smartphone, marking more...

October 21, 2025 Apple CEO Tim Cook wrapped up a six-day visit to China with a pledge to bring the more...

October 20, 2025 Rogers Communications is extending its free satellite messaging trial to Dec. 8, raising questions about whether Canadians more...

October 18, 2025 Public announcement systems at several airports in Canada and the United States were hijacked this week to more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn