• In 1439,
Lorenzo Valla showed that the
Donation of Constantine was a
forgery, an argument based partly on a comparison of the
Latin with that used in authentic 4th-century documents. • In 1952, the Swedish priest
Dick Helander was elected bishop of
Strängnäs. The campaign was competitive and Helander was accused of writing a series of a hundred-some anonymous libelous letters about other candidates to the electorate of the bishopric of Strängnäs. Helander was first convicted of writing the letters and lost his position as bishop but later partially exonerated. The letters were studied using a number of stylometric measures (and also typewriter characteristics) and the various court cases and further examinations, many contracted by Helander himself during the years until his death in 1978, discussed stylometric method and its value as evidence in some detail. • In 1975, after
Ronald Reagan had served as governor of California, he began giving weekly radio commentaries syndicated to hundreds of stations. After his personal notes were made public on his 90th birthday in 2001, a study used stylostatistical methods to determine which of those talks were written by him and which were written by various aides. • In 1996, the stylometric analysis of the controversial, pseudonymously authored book
Primary Colors, performed by
Vassar College professor
Donald Foster brought the topic to the attention of a wider audience after correctly identifying the author as
Joe Klein. (This case was resolved only after a handwriting analysis confirmed the authorship.) • In 1996, stylometric methods were used to compare the
Unabomber Manifesto with letters written by one of the suspects,
Theodore Kaczynski, which resulted in Kaczynski's apprehension and later conviction. • In April 2015, researchers using stylometry techniques identified a play,
Double Falsehood, as being the work of
William Shakespeare. Researchers analyzed 54 plays by Shakespeare and
John Fletcher, and compared average sentence length, studied the use of unusual words and quantified the complexity and psychological
valence of their language. • In 2016,
MacDonald P. Jackson, Emeritus Professor of English at the
University of Auckland, New Zealand and a Fellow of the
Royal Society of New Zealand, who had spent his entire academic career analyzing authorship attribution, wrote a book titled
Who Wrote "The Night Before Christmas"?: Analyzing the Clement Clarke Moore Vs. Henry Livingston Question, in which he evaluates the opposing arguments and, for the first time, uses the author-attribution techniques of modern computational stylistics to examine the long-standing controversy. Jackson employs a range of tests and introduces a new one, statistical analysis of phonemes; he concludes that Livingston is the true author of the classic work. • In 2017, Simon Fuller and
James O'Sullivan published a study claiming that bestselling author
James Patterson does not do any writing in his apparently co-authored novels. According to O'Sullivan, his collaboration with former U.S. president
Bill Clinton,
The President is Missing, is an exception to this rule. • In 2017, a group of linguists, computer scientists, and scholars analysed the authorship of
Elena Ferrante. Based on a corpus created at
University of Padua containing 150 novels written by 40 authors, they analyzed Ferrante's style based on seven of her novels. They were able to compare her writing style with 39 other novelists using, for example, stylo. • In 2018,
Mark Glickman, a senior lecturer in statistics at Harvard University, worked with Ryan Song, a former statistics student at Harvard, and Jason Brown, a professor at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia, applying stylometry to find that, most likely,
The Beatles' song "
In My Life" was composed by John Lennon, but with a 50% chance that Paul McCartney wrote the
middle eight. • In 2019, the ETSO project: Stylometry applied to the Spanish Golden Age Theater, directed by and
Germán Vega García-Luengos (University of Valladolid) managed to gather 3000 plays of the Spanish Golden Age. After applying stylometrical analysis, the attribution of
Mujeres y criados to
Lope de Vega was ratified, and an authorship problem was detected in
La monja alférez, a play attributed to Pérez de Montalbán which, thanks to these analyzes and through historical and philology research, was eventually attributed to
Juan Ruiz de Alarcón. In 2023, the same project found Lope de Vega as the author of
La francesa Laura (The Frenchwoman Laura), despite the manuscript was written years after his death. The comedy was classified as a late work of Lope de Vega and dated from 1628 to 1630, as its flattering treatment of France could be attributed to the momentary good relationship between Spain and France during the
Thirty Years' War, having England as a common enemy. In this analysis, the 500 most frequent words of the text under investigation are compared with the 500 of the rest of the works. In the case of
La francesa Laura, the finding detected that the 100 works with which it was closest were almost all by Lope de Vega. Machine learning methods, such as
support vector machine analysis, were also conducted with a large range of parameters. The traditional philological analysis on the authorship of works has confirmed the investigations of stylometry and artificial intelligence. • In 2020, Rachel McCarthy and
James O'Sullivan argued that
Emily Brontë is the true author of
Wuthering Heights, ending speculation by some critics that the novel might have been written by one of her siblings, specifically either
Branwell or
Charlotte. • In 2020, Hartmut Ilsemann used Rolling Delta and Rolling Classify from the R Stylo program suite to show that the Marlowe corpus is stylistically inhomogeneous, and that the author of the two
Tamburlaines was hardly present in the remaining official corpus of Marlowe. • In 2022, the Italian scholars Simone Rebora and Massimo Salgaro showed, using John F. Burrows' "Delta distance" method, that
Felix Salten is the most probable author of the anonymous novel
Josefine Mutzenbacher from 1906, the final pages excluded. • In 2023, the Swedish journalist Lapo Lappin claimed that two crime novels by the Swedish author
Camilla Läckberg may be the work of a ghost writer, presumably her editor
Pascal Engman. This claim was first denied by the author and her spokesperson. However, Läckberg later admitted that she and Pascal Engman work very closely together and that he edits her texts. • In 2024, Matthew Britt and Jaaron Wingo applied stylometric analysis to a corpus of early Christian Literature, comparing linguistic patterns across texts from the first two centuries CE. Their study examined questions of authorship, interpolations and textual consistency and prompted methodological discussion in scholarly literature. ==Data and methods==