Skip to main content
Article
Arabic authorship attribution: An extensive study on twitter posts
ACM Transactions on Asian and Low-Resource Language Information Processing
  • Malik H. Altakrori, McGill University
  • Farkhund Iqbal, Zayed University
  • Benjamin C.M. Fung, McGill University
  • Steven H.H. Ding, McGill University
  • Abdallah Tubaishat, Zayed University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-1-2018
Abstract

© 2018 ACM Law enforcement faces problems in tracing the true identity of offenders in cybercrime investigations. Most offenders mask their true identity, impersonate people of high authority, or use identity deception and obfuscation tactics to avoid detection and traceability. To address the problem of anonymity, authorship analysis is used to identify individuals by their writing styles without knowing their actual identities. Most authorship studies are dedicated to English due to its widespread use over the Internet, but recent cyber-attacks such as the distribution of Stuxnet indicate that Internet crimes are not limited to a certain community, language, culture, ideology, or ethnicity. To effectively investigate cybercrime and to address the problem of anonymity in online communication, there is a pressing need to study authorship analysis of languages such as Arabic, Chinese, Turkish, and so on. Arabic, the focus of this study, is the fourth most widely used language on the Internet. This study investigates authorship of Arabic discourse/text, especially tiny text, Twitter posts. We benchmark the performance of a profile-based approach that uses n-grams as features and compare it with state-of-the-art instance-based classification techniques. Then we adapt an event-visualization tool that is developed for English to accommodate both Arabic and English languages and visualize the result of the attribution evidence. In addition, we investigate the relative effect of the training set, the length of tweets, and the number of authors on authorship classification accuracy. Finally, we show that diacritics have an insignificant effect on the attribution process and part-of-speech tags are less effective than character-level and word-level n-grams.

Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery
Keywords
  • Authorship attribution,
  • Short text,
  • Social media,
  • Twitter,
  • Visualization
Scopus ID
85056768969
Indexed in Scopus
Yes
Open Access
No
https://doi.org/10.1145/3236391
Citation Information
Malik H. Altakrori, Farkhund Iqbal, Benjamin C.M. Fung, Steven H.H. Ding, et al.. "Arabic authorship attribution: An extensive study on twitter posts" ACM Transactions on Asian and Low-Resource Language Information Processing Vol. 18 Iss. 1 (2018) - 51 ISSN: <a href="https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/issn/2375-4699" target="_blank">2375-4699</a>
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/abdallah-tubaishat/22/