Shakespeare Statistics


Authorship of Arden of Faversham

BRD-Flagge auf deutsch               All data were generated by R Stylo (see: Computational Stylistics Group Homepage).



Rolling delta is a feature of the R Stylo suite, a program to measure the delta distances between reference texts and a target text. Delta was developed by John Burrows in 2002, and Rolling delta overcame the problem that one delta figure covered a whole text by introducing windows of a particular size that ‘rolled’ through the text with an overlap, so that many measurements were taken. In this way collaborations of authors and affinities between texts could be detected. To reduce subjectivity in the choice of reference texts a totality of over 150 drama reference texts from the Renaissance period that had been collected over the years were used in the analysis. This took my PC to the end of its tether, but the results gained from 4000-word windows, a step size of 250 words and character trigrams as variables give clear indications of authorships and textual affinities. A spreadsheet noted the titles of plays in column A, column B noted the delta values of each play at 2000 words (4000-word window). Column C returned the delta measurements taken at 2250 word (step size 250 words), and this continued to the right depending on the length of the target text. In each column (except A) the three lowest deltas were marked and all play titles without any marking were erased. The remaining texts went into a new table (after a 90° turn) which can be found below. Column A gives the measuring at a distance of 250 words. From column B to the right the texts (and authors) with the lowest deltas are noted. The last two columns on the right return the scenes of the play and their accumulated word counts, adapted to the 250-word distances of column A. The lowest delta in each line is marked in green, the second-lowest in yellow, and the third lowest in red.




13.09.2019
"the play belongs to Shakespeare in its entirety" (Jack Elliott and Brett Greatley-Hirsch: "Arden of Faversham and 'The Print of Many'"
in NOS: Authorship Companion ed. by Gary Taylor and Gabriel Egan (2017), p. 181

Compare these evaluations with the results of Rolling Classify and the General Imposters Method.