The rapid spread of multimodal misinformation on social media has raised growing concerns, while research on video misinformation detection remains limited due to the lack of large-scale, diverse datasets. Existing methods often overfit to rigid templates and lack deep reasoning over deceptive content. To address these challenges, we introduce FakeVV, a large-scale benchmark comprising over 100,000 video-text pairs with fine-grained, interpretable annotations. In addition, we further propose Fact-R1, a novel framework that integrates deep reasoning with collaborative rule-based reinforcement learning. Fact-R1 is trained through a three-stage process: (1) misinformation long-Chain-of-Thought (CoT) instruction tuning, (2) preference alignment via Direct Preference Optimization (DPO), and (3) Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO) using a novel verifiable reward function. This enables Fact-R1 to exhibit emergent reasoning behaviors comparable to those observed in advanced text-based reinforcement learning systems, but in the more complex multimodal misinformation setting. Our work establishes a new paradigm for misinformation detection, bridging large-scale video understanding, reasoning-guided alignment, and interpretable verification.
Fact-R1: Towards Explainable Video Misinformation Detection with Deep Reasoning
FakeVV, a large-scale video-text dataset, and Fact-R1, a framework combining deep reasoning and rule-based reinforcement learning, improve multimodal misinformation detection.
- Year
- 2025
- Venue
- arXiv 2025
- Authors
- 9
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2505.16836ARXIV-DEFAULT
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