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Automated Authorship Attribution Using Advanced Signal Classification Techniques

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, February 2013
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Title
Automated Authorship Attribution Using Advanced Signal Classification Techniques
Published in
PLOS ONE, February 2013
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0054998
Pubmed ID
Authors

Maryam Ebrahimpour, Tālis J. Putniņš, Matthew J. Berryman, Andrew Allison, Brian W.-H. Ng, Derek Abbott

Abstract

In this paper, we develop two automated authorship attribution schemes, one based on Multiple Discriminant Analysis (MDA) and the other based on a Support Vector Machine (SVM). The classification features we exploit are based on word frequencies in the text. We adopt an approach of preprocessing each text by stripping it of all characters except a-z and space. This is in order to increase the portability of the software to different types of texts. We test the methodology on a corpus of undisputed English texts, and use leave-one-out cross validation to demonstrate classification accuracies in excess of 90%. We further test our methods on the Federalist Papers, which have a partly disputed authorship and a fair degree of scholarly consensus. And finally, we apply our methodology to the question of the authorship of the Letter to the Hebrews by comparing it against a number of original Greek texts of known authorship. These tests identify where some of the limitations lie, motivating a number of open questions for future work. An open source implementation of our methodology is freely available for use at https://github.com/matthewberryman/author-detection.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Spain 1 2%
Mexico 1 2%
United States 1 2%
Australia 1 2%
Unknown 56 93%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 18 30%
Student > Master 9 15%
Researcher 7 12%
Lecturer 4 7%
Other 4 7%
Other 8 13%
Unknown 10 17%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Computer Science 27 45%
Arts and Humanities 4 7%
Engineering 3 5%
Linguistics 2 3%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 2 3%
Other 9 15%
Unknown 13 22%