Authorship Attribution of YeomMa , the Novel Under the Pseudonym Seo Dong-san, by Applying Novel Corpus

2019 ◽  
Vol 78 ◽  
pp. 63-91
Author(s):  
Hanbyoul Moon ◽  
Dogil Lee

With the presence of computer and internet, a developing variety of hoodlums are utilizing the web to spread a wide extend of illicit materials and wrong information universally in mysterious manner, making criminal personality following troublesome in the cybercrime examination handle. The virtual world provides criminals with an anonymous environment to conduct malicious activities such as malware, sending random messages, spamming, stealing intellectual property and sending ransom e-mails. All of these activities are text in somehow. Therefore, there is a need for a tool in order to identify the author or creator of this criminality by analyzing the text. Text-based Authorship Attribution techniques are used to identify the most possible author from a bunch of potential suspects of text. In this paper, the novel approach is presented for authorship attribution in English text using ASCII based processing approach Using this ASCII based method for authorship attribution help us to obtain better result in terms of accuracy and computational efficiency. The result is based on the text which is posted on social media considering real world data set.


2010 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. S33-S33
Author(s):  
Wenchao Ou ◽  
Haifeng Chen ◽  
Yun Zhong ◽  
Benrong Liu ◽  
Keji Chen

Author(s):  
Fabrice B. R. Parmentier ◽  
Pilar Andrés

The presentation of auditory oddball stimuli (novels) among otherwise repeated sounds (standards) triggers a well-identified chain of electrophysiological responses: The detection of acoustic change (mismatch negativity), the involuntary orientation of attention to (P3a) and its reorientation from the novel. Behaviorally, novels reduce performance in an unrelated visual task (novelty distraction). Past studies of the cross-modal capture of attention by acoustic novelty have typically discarded from their analysis the data from the standard trials immediately following a novel, despite some evidence in mono-modal oddball tasks of distraction extending beyond the presentation of deviants/novels (postnovelty distraction). The present study measured novelty and postnovelty distraction and examined the hypothesis that both types of distraction may be underpinned by common frontally-related processes by comparing young and older adults. Our data establish that novels delayed responses not only on the current trial and but also on the subsequent standard trial. Both of these effects increased with age. We argue that both types of distraction relate to the reconfiguration of task-sets and discuss this contention in relation to recent electrophysiological studies.


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