Rexha Andi, Kröll Mark, Ziak Hermann, Kern Roman
2018
The goal of our work is inspired by the task of associating segments of text to their real authors. In this work, we focus on analyzing the way humans judge different writing styles. This analysis can help to better understand this process and to thus simulate/ mimic such behavior accordingly. Unlike the majority of the work done in this field (i.e., authorship attribution, plagiarism detection, etc.) which uses content features, we focus only on the stylometric, i.e. content-agnostic, characteristics of authors.Therefore, we conducted two pilot studies to determine, if humans can identify authorship among documents with high content similarity. The first was a quantitative experiment involving crowd-sourcing, while the second was a qualitative one executed by the authors of this paper.Both studies confirmed that this task is quite challenging.To gain a better understanding of how humans tackle such a problem, we conducted an exploratory data analysis on the results of the studies. In the first experiment, we compared the decisions against content features and stylometric features. While in the second, the evaluators described the process and the features on which their judgment was based. The findings of our detailed analysis could (i) help to improve algorithms such as automatic authorship attribution as well as plagiarism detection, (ii) assist forensic experts or linguists to create profiles of writers, (iii) support intelligence applications to analyze aggressive and threatening messages and (iv) help editor conformity by adhering to, for instance, journal specific writing style.
Bassa Akim, Kröll Mark, Kern Roman
2018
Open Information Extraction (OIE) is the task of extracting relations fromtext without the need of domain speci c training data. Currently, most of the researchon OIE is devoted to the English language, but little or no research has been conductedon other languages including German. We tackled this problem and present GerIE, anOIE parser for the German language. Therefore we started by surveying the availableliterature on OIE with a focus on concepts, which may also apply to the Germanlanguage. Our system is built upon the output of a dependency parser, on which anumber of hand crafted rules are executed. For the evaluation we created two dedicateddatasets, one derived from news articles and one based on texts from an encyclopedia.Our system achieves F-measures of up to 0.89 for sentences that have been correctlypreprocessed.