id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_7oeuogr3grai7jg3266i56thxa Mike Kestemont Authenticating the writings of Julius Caesar 2016 29 .pdf application/pdf 9993 840 56 In this paper, we shed new light on the authenticity of the Corpus Caesarianum, a group of five commentaries describing the campaigns of Julius Caesar (100-44 BC), the founder of the Roman empire. Most computational authorship studies in computer science are still restricted to present-day document collections. In this paper, we illustrate the broader applicability of computational authorship verification by reporting a high-profile case study from Classical Antiquity (Koppel & Seidman, 2013; Stover of written documents (Stamatatos et al., 2000), the former encapsulating all aspects of an individual author's language use at the textual level (Hermann et al., 2015). Ever since the Federalist papers, research into English-language documents has dominated authorship studies. author in the problem, O1 uses thresholding: unknown documents resulting in a distance below this model has been shown to work surprisingly well for authorship attribution in many studies (Stamatatos, ./cache/work_7oeuogr3grai7jg3266i56thxa.pdf ./txt/work_7oeuogr3grai7jg3266i56thxa.txt