作者
Robert Layton, Paul Watters, Richard Dazeley
发表日期
2010/7/19
研讨会论文
2010 Second Cybercrime and Trustworthy Computing Workshop
页码范围
1-8
出版商
IEEE
简介
Authorship attribution is a growing field, moving from beginnings in linguistics to recent advances in text mining. Through this change came an increase in the capability of authorship attribution methods both in their accuracy and the ability to consider more difficult problems. Research into authorship attribution in the 19th century considered it difficult to determine the authorship of a document of fewer than 1000 words. By the 1990s this values had decreased to less than 500 words and in the early 21st century it was considered possible to determine the authorship of a document in 250 words. The need for this ever decreasing limit is exemplified by the trend towards many shorter communications rather than fewer longer communications, such as the move from traditional multi-page handwritten letters to shorter, more focused emails. This trend has also been shown in online crime, where many attacks such as …
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R Layton, P Watters, R Dazeley - 2010 Second Cybercrime and Trustworthy Computing …, 2010