@inbook{f16e867da2434287a31d92827ea9073f,
title = "Authorship analysis in cybercrime investigation",
abstract = "Criminals have been using the Internet to distribute a wide range of illegal materials globally in an anonymous manner, making criminal identity tracing difficult in the cybercrime investigation process. In this study we propose to adopt the authorship analysis framework to automatically trace identities of cyber criminals through messages they post on the Internet. Under this framework, three types of message features, including style markers, structural features, and content-specific features, are extracted and inductive learning algorithms are used to build feature-based models to identify authorship of illegal messages. To evaluate the effectiveness of this framework, we conducted an experimental study on data sets of English and Chinese email and online newsgroup messages. We experimented with all three types of message features and three inductive learning algorithms. The results indicate that the proposed approach can discover real identities of authors of both English and Chinese Internet messages with relatively high accuracies.",
author = "Rong Zheng and Yi Qin and Zan Huang and Hsinchun Chen",
year = "2003",
doi = "10.1007/3-540-44853-5_5",
language = "English (US)",
isbn = "354040189X",
series = "Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)",
publisher = "Springer-Verlag",
pages = "59--73",
editor = "Hsinchun Chen and Zeng, {Daniel D.} and Therani Madhusudan and Richard Miranda and Jenny Schroeder and Chris Demchak",
booktitle = "Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)",
}