Abstract
A one-consonant group approach to the authorship attribution has been proposed. The approach is based on determining, by the chi-square test, the consonant group in which the difference between the texts by different authors is statistically significant. The developed model determines author-differentiating capability of each consonant group in a relation of the number of comparisons, in which the difference between the texts by two authors is statistically significant to the total number of comparisons. The determined general author-differentiating capability of the group of stop consonants, which is a statistical parameter of the authorial style, is the highest in the comparisons of texts from the publicist and belles-lettres styles. The one-consonant group approach simplifies the whole process of authorship attribution and ensures a higher level of automation. The conducted experiments on the Java programming language have proved that the chi-square test is a powerful nonparametric statistical test that can be used for author identification on the level of English consonants with a test validity of 95%.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 1138 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | Electronics |
Volume | 9 |
Issue number | 7 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 13 Jul 2020 |
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
- 202021 Industrial electronics
Keywords
- MIB
- consonant group
- nonparametric statistical test
- java-based model
- chi-square test
- author-differentiating capability
- software framework
- Java-based model
- Software framework
- Consonant group
- Author-differentiating capability
- Chi-square test
- Nonparametric statistical test