There are several unresolved problems in forensic authorship profiling, including a lack of research
focusing on the types of texts that are typically analysed in forensic linguistics (e.g. threatening letters,
ransom demands) and a general disregard for the effect of register variation when testing linguistic
variables for use in profiling. The aim of this dissertation is therefore to make a first step towards filling
these gaps by testing whether established patterns of sociolinguistic variation appear in malicious
forensic texts that are controlled for register. This dissertation begins with a literature review that
highlights a series of correlations between language use and various social factors, including gender,
age, level of education and social class. This dissertation then presents the primary data set used in this
study, which consists of a corpus of 287 fabricated malicious texts from 3 different registers produced
by 96 authors stratified across the 4 social factors listed above. Since this data set is fabricated, its
validity was also tested through a comparison with another corpus consisting of 104 naturally occurring
malicious texts, which showed that no important differences exist between the language of the
fabricated malicious texts and the authentic malicious texts. The dissertation then reports the findings
of the analysis of the corpus of fabricated malicious texts, which shows that the major patterns of
sociolinguistic variation identified in previous research are valid for forensic malicious texts and that
controlling register variation greatly improves the performance of profiling. In addition, it is shown that
through regression analysis it is possible to use these patterns of linguistic variation to profile the
demographic background of authors across the four social factors with an average accuracy of 70%.
Overall, the present study therefore makes a first step towards developing a principled model of forensic
authorship profiling.
Date of Award | 26 Feb 2015 |
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Original language | English |
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Supervisor | Jack W Grieve (Supervisor), Tim Grant (Supervisor) & Richard M Coulthard (Supervisor) |
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- forensic linguistics
- authorship profiling
- authorship analysis
- threatening texts
- styometry
- register variation
- stylistics
Authorship profiling in a forensic context
Nini, A. (Author). 26 Feb 2015
Student thesis: Doctoral Thesis › Doctor of Philosophy