Visible to the public Biblio

Filters: Keyword is authorship  [Clear All Filters]
2023-02-03
Nelson, Jared Ray, Shekaramiz, Mohammad.  2022.  Authorship Verification via Linear Correlation Methods of n-gram and Syntax Metrics. 2022 Intermountain Engineering, Technology and Computing (IETC). :1–6.
This research evaluates the accuracy of two methods of authorship prediction: syntactical analysis and n-gram, and explores its potential usage. The proposed algorithm measures n-gram, and counts adjectives, adverbs, verbs, nouns, punctuation, and sentence length from the training data, and normalizes each metric. The proposed algorithm compares the metrics of training samples to testing samples and predicts authorship based on the correlation they share for each metric. The severity of correlation between the testing and training data produces significant weight in the decision-making process. For example, if analysis of one metric approximates 100% positive correlation, the weight in the decision is assigned a maximum value for that metric. Conversely, a 100% negative correlation receives the minimum value. This new method of authorship validation holds promise for future innovation in fraud protection, the study of historical documents, and maintaining integrity within academia.
2022-01-25
Boris, Ryabko, Nadezhda, Savina.  2021.  Development of an information-theoretical method of attribution of literary texts. 2021 XVII International Symposium "Problems of Redundancy in Information and Control Systems" (REDUNDANCY). :70–73.
We propose an information-theoretical method of attribution of literary texts, developed within the framework of information theory and mathematical statistics. Using the proposed method, the following two problems of disputed authorship in Russian and Soviet literature were investigated: i) the problem of false attribution of some novels to Nekrasov and ii) the problem of dubious attribution of two novels to Bulgakov. The research has shown the high efficiency of the data-compression method for attribution of literary texts.
2019-02-22
Neal, T., Sundararajan, K., Woodard, D..  2018.  Exploiting Linguistic Style as a Cognitive Biometric for Continuous Verification. 2018 International Conference on Biometrics (ICB). :270-276.

This paper presents an assessment of continuous verification using linguistic style as a cognitive biometric. In stylometry, it is widely known that linguistic style is highly characteristic of authorship using representations that capture authorial style at character, lexical, syntactic, and semantic levels. In this work, we provide a contrast to previous efforts by implementing a one-class classification problem using Isolation Forests. Our approach demonstrates the usefulness of this classifier for accurately verifying the genuine user, and yields recognition accuracy exceeding 98% using very small training samples of 50 and 100-character blocks.