Litcius/Paper detail

The Idea of Progress in Forensic Authorship Analysis

Tim Grant

2022Cambridge University Press eBooks39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This Element examines progress in research and practice in forensic authorship analysis. It describes the existing research base and examines what makes an authorship analysis more or less reliable. Further to this, the author describes the recent history of forensic science and the scientific revolution brought about by the invention of DNA evidence. They chart the rise of three major changes in forensic science – the recognition of contextual bias in analysts, the need for validation studies and shift in logic of providing identification evidence. This Element addresses the idea of progress in forensic authorship analysis in terms of these three issues with regard to new knowledge about the nature of authorship and methods in stylistics and stylometry. The author proposes that the focus needs to shift to validation of protocols for approaching case questions, rather than on validation of systems or general approaches. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

Topics & Concepts

Data scienceStylometryIdentification (biology)Circumstantial evidenceComputer scienceForensic scienceKnowledge baseComputer forensicsElement (criminal law)Engineering ethicsEngineeringDigital forensicsArtificial intelligencePolitical scienceHistoryComputer securityLawArchaeologyBotanyBiologyAuthorship Attribution and ProfilingNames, Identity, and Discrimination ResearchHate Speech and Cyberbullying Detection