Stylometric Analyses of the Book of Mormon: A Short History

Title

Stylometric Analyses of the Book of Mormon: A Short History

Publication Type

Journal Article

Year of Publication

2012

Authors

Roper, Matthew (Primary), Fields, Paul J. (Primary), and Schaalje, G. Bruce (Primary)

Journal

Journal of Book of Mormon Studies

Pagination

28-45

Volume

21

Issue

2

Terms of use

Items in the BMC Archive are made publicly available for non-commercial, private use. Inclusion within the BMC Archive does not imply endorsement. Items do not represent the official views of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or of Book of Mormon Central.

Bibliographic Citation

Abstract

The abundance of skeptical theories about who wrote the Book of Mormon has led many scholars to seek scientific data to discover the answer. One technique is stylometry. Having first been developed in the 1850s, stylometry seeks to find the “wordprint” of a text. Although these stylistic studies are not as accurate as a human’s fingerprint, they can give researchers a good idea either of differences in style between authors or of who might have written a text from a list of possible authors. Beginning in the 1960s individuals have completed four major stylometric studies on the Book of Mormon, studies that varied in both findings and quality of research. In addition to these four studies, this article presents a fifth study—using extended nearest shrunken centroid (ENSC) classification—that incorporates and improves on the earlier research.

Authorship
Book of Mormon
Stylometry
Stylometric Analysis
Wordprints

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