CLMar 3, 2023

Who could be behind QAnon? Authorship attribution with supervised machine-learning

arXiv:2303.02078v110 citationsh-index: 8
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses authorship attribution for a pseudonymous online movement that has led to real-world violence, though it is incremental in applying supervised machine learning to a specific case.

The study tackled the problem of identifying the author(s) behind the QAnon pseudonym 'Q' by analyzing linguistic properties of social media posts, concluding that two individuals, Paul F. and Ron W., are the closest matches to Q's linguistic signature.

A series of social media posts signed under the pseudonym "Q", started a movement known as QAnon, which led some of its most radical supporters to violent and illegal actions. To identify the person(s) behind Q, we evaluate the coincidence between the linguistic properties of the texts written by Q and to those written by a list of suspects provided by journalistic investigation. To identify the authors of these posts, serious challenges have to be addressed. The "Q drops" are very short texts, written in a way that constitute a sort of literary genre in itself, with very peculiar features of style. These texts might have been written by different authors, whose other writings are often hard to find. After an online ethnology of the movement, necessary to collect enough material written by these thirteen potential authors, we use supervised machine learning to build stylistic profiles for each of them. We then performed a rolling analysis on Q's writings, to see if any of those linguistic profiles match the so-called 'QDrops' in part or entirety. We conclude that two different individuals, Paul F. and Ron W., are the closest match to Q's linguistic signature, and they could have successively written Q's texts. These potential authors are not high-ranked personality from the U.S. administration, but rather social media activists.

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