Brennlee5415 (talk) 19:44, 4 April 2020 (UTC)

  • Lay Audience
    • properly define any words that will most likely unknown to a lay audience
  • Neutrality
    • focus on providing information on analysis and technique. Don't include any information on how effective this is in comparison to other techniques
  • New information that I'll be working on
    • development of author profiling
    • sample cases of author profiling
    • different characteristics in approaches
      • gender, age, etc
  • Other topics
    • most historical context on author profiling
    • talk about the differences in orthography, syntax, and lexical choices
    • More information on author attribution, author identification, and author profiling


[[Rblonski (talk) 02:36, 20 April 2020 (UTC)Rblonski]] [EDITS TO BE ADDED TO THE ARTICLE]

  • Fixing too-close paraphrasing: [rewritten and information added] The process of Automatic Authorship Identification (AAI), emerged at the end of the 19th century. Thomas Corwin Mendenhall, an American autodidact physicist and meteorologist, was the first to apply this process to the works of Francis Bacon, William Shakespeare, and Christopher Marlowe. From these three historic figures, Mendenhall aimed to uncover their quantitative stylistic differences by inspecting word lengths.


  • Reliable resources:

-The first paragraph uses more of source [3]. I did not see proper/any use of source [2] other than "word length."

-Sources added: [9]. [10], [23],[24], [26], [31], [35], [38],

-The opening definition of Author Profiling, could benefit from information in the first paragraph introduction from source [5]

  • Wikipedia voice/style

-There should be a detailed lead section, clear structure, balanced content, all of which should have good sourcing. Because there isn't a structured voice it doesn't sound like Wikipedia style.

~~~~Rblonski


User:linguagul

  • Lay Audience
    • Avoid too complex terminology. Define any terminology that is used. Make sure they are clear and understandable for a lay audience
  • Neutrality
    • Provide facts, research and resources. Avoid ambiguity do not make personal comments or favor one aspect of the topic over the other.
  • Information already provided on Wikipedia
    • Focused mostly on the technical and historical aspects of the topic. Mention other aspects of the topic (i.e. sociolinguistics, language and law)
  • up-to-dateness
    • The current information appears to be up to date.
  • New Information I want to work on:
    • Methodology of Author Profiling

~~~~ Gul Conger

Author Profiling Techniques 73.196.73.235 (talk) 15:05, 21 April 2020 (UTC)

Author profiling techniques are used for different purposes such as security, business, identifying customer desires and social media. Function words, as well as part-of-speech analysis can be referenced to determine the gender and truth of a text.

Koppel, M., Argamon, S., and Shimoni, A. R. "Automatically Categorizing Written Texts by Author Gender. Literary and Linguistic Computing" vol. 17, pp. 401–412, 2003.[1]



  • Fix:
    • second paragraph of overview change the words "in the first two" and state what is meant by "the first two" to make it more clear to the audience.
  • Neutrality
    • remain neutral throughout and fix any words that may make it seem biased.
  • Plagiarism
    • check for potential plagiarism or too close paraphrasing
  • Make sure each fact has a reference
  • New information
    • How author profiling can apply to other topics (for example: fake profiles)
    • techniques used in author profiling

~~~~ariana.reyes.wiki

User:Lburris89 Lay Audience

  • Add simple descriptions relating orthography, syntax, and lexical choice definitions provided by Brenda to Author Profiling- this could be a heading
  • add link to wikipedia page on idiolect in other class' edits

Neutrality

  • Elaborate on the organization PAN -> ...PAN, a collaborative organization with a yearly focus in author profiling,...
  • Stamatatos, E., Pardo, F.M., Tschuggnall, M., Stein, B., Kestemont, M., Rosso, P., & Potthast, M. (2018). "Overview of PAN 2018 - Author Identification, Author Profiling, and Author Obfuscation." CLEF.[2]
  • Add discussions of other researchers involved both current and historical to relieve the one-sidedness of the mention of PAN

New information

  • Create a section under the new research heading to discuss the new articles I found to add to the sources

LBurris89 (talk) 02:55, 6 April 2020 (UTC) LBurris89 (talk) 00:21, 20 April 2020 (UTC)