Abstract
Financial fraud detection is a critical application area within the broader domains of cybersecurity and intelligent financial analytics. With the growing volume and complexity of digital transactions, the traditional rule-based and shallow learning models often fall short in detecting sophisticated fraud patterns. This study addresses the challenge of accurately identifying fraudulent financial activities, especially in highly imbalanced datasets where fraud instances are rare and often masked by legitimate behavior. The existing models also lack interpretability, limiting their utility in regulated financial environments. Experiments were conducted on three benchmark datasets: IEEE-CIS Fraud Detection, European Credit Card Transactions, and PaySim Mobile Money Simulation, each representing diverse transaction behaviors and data distributions. The proposed methodology integrates a transformer-based encoder, multi-teacher knowledge distillation, and a symbolic belief–desire–intention (BDI) reasoning layer to combine deep feature extraction with interpretable decision making. The novelty of this work lies in the incorporation of cognitive symbolic reasoning into a high-performance learning architecture for fraud detection. The performance was assessed using key metrics, including the F1-score, AUC, precision, recall, inference time, and model size. Results show that the proposed transformer–BDI model outperformed traditional and state-of-the-art baselines across all datasets, achieving improved fraud detection accuracy and interpretability while remaining computationally efficient for real-time deployment.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 31 |
| Journal | Forecasting |
| Volume | 7 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jun 2025 |
Keywords
- belief–desire–intention (BDI) reasoning
- explainable artificial intelligence (XAI)
- financial fraud detection
- knowledge distillation
- transformer models
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)
- Computer Science Applications
- Computational Theory and Mathematics
- Decision Sciences (miscellaneous)