Computers Ranking The World’s Important Authors

If you are asked to rank the world’s important authors, would that be easy for you? I guess, No. And even if you try, I assume you would be in ambivalence. So why not handle this by computers? Allen Riddell, a researcher from Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, has made an algorithm through which, computers can rank the world’s important authors.


Name Of Authors

Riddell has developed an author ranking algorithm that determines the most important authors who died in a given year. The system ranks writers based on the age, length and popularity of their Wikipedia articles, along with the number of titles they have in the public domain.

public domain

If an author gets a lot of attention but doesn’t have many freely available works, that person climbs the charts and is more likely to have titles published on free literature sites like Project Gutenberg.

Computers Ranking The World's Important Authors

Among authors who died in 1965 (and thus would be eligible for public domain status in 2015), the legendary T.S. Eliot is number one — and he’s accompanied by other noteworthy figures, including Malcolm X and Winston Churchill.

Note that, it’s a very impersonal approach, and there are risks that biases among Wikipedia editors will skew the results. Besides, you can also disagree with at least some of the algorithm’s picks, but it’s arguably an easier way to pick literary greats than leaving things up to an academic committee.

Source: Public Domain Rank Browser
Thanks To: MIT, Engadget

Anatol

Anatol Rahman is the Editor at TheTechJournal. He loves complicated machineries, and crazy about robot and space. He likes cycling. Before joining TheTechJournal team, he worked in the telemarketing industry. You can catch him on Google+.

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