English

Pull out all the stops: Textual analysis via punctuation sequences

Computation and Language 2023-06-22 v2 Machine Learning Physics and Society

Abstract

Whether enjoying the lucid prose of a favorite author or slogging through some other writer's cumbersome, heavy-set prattle (full of parentheses, em dashes, compound adjectives, and Oxford commas), readers will notice stylistic signatures not only in word choice and grammar, but also in punctuation itself. Indeed, visual sequences of punctuation from different authors produce marvelously different (and visually striking) sequences. Punctuation is a largely overlooked stylistic feature in "stylometry", the quantitative analysis of written text. In this paper, we examine punctuation sequences in a corpus of literary documents and ask the following questions: Are the properties of such sequences a distinctive feature of different authors? Is it possible to distinguish literary genres based on their punctuation sequences? Do the punctuation styles of authors evolve over time? Are we on to something interesting in trying to do stylometry without words, or are we full of sound and fury (signifying nothing)?

Cite

@article{arxiv.1901.00519,
  title  = {Pull out all the stops: Textual analysis via punctuation sequences},
  author = {Alexandra N. M. Darmon and Marya Bazzi and Sam D. Howison and Mason A. Porter},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1901.00519},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

Figure 7 has some panels of lower graphical quality because of file sizes

R2 v1 2026-06-23T07:01:46.221Z