Digital Humanities Workshop 2021
DOI: 10.1145/3526242.3526256
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Computational Authorship Analysis of Homeric Language

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Iliad and Odyssey are products of a collective effort involving numerous authors, each contributing unknown portions of text, and it still cannot be determined whether a single individual (or distinct group of poets) contributed larger chunks of such additional verses, or even whole Books. In the paper "Computational Authorship Analysis of Homeric Language" [8], Maria Fasoi, John Pavlopoulos (figure 17) and Maria Konstantinidou employed character-level statistical language modeling to analyse the computational authorship of Homeric text and study the linguistic proximity and divergence Figure 12: Presentation of paper [12].…”
Section: Dhw 2021 Papers Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Iliad and Odyssey are products of a collective effort involving numerous authors, each contributing unknown portions of text, and it still cannot be determined whether a single individual (or distinct group of poets) contributed larger chunks of such additional verses, or even whole Books. In the paper "Computational Authorship Analysis of Homeric Language" [8], Maria Fasoi, John Pavlopoulos (figure 17) and Maria Konstantinidou employed character-level statistical language modeling to analyse the computational authorship of Homeric text and study the linguistic proximity and divergence Figure 12: Presentation of paper [12].…”
Section: Dhw 2021 Papers Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…between the books of Iliad and Odyssey. Fasoi et al [8] show that some pairs of books are much closer than others and that some books are linguistically far from the rest. Furthermore, Fasoi et al [8] investigated the linguistic association between the Homeric poems and four Homeric hymns, showing that "To Aphrodite" is linguistically close and that "To Hermes" is linguistically far from both, Iliad and Odyssey.…”
Section: Dhw 2021 Papers Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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