@mastersthesis{Baljko7,
   author = "Melanie Baljko",
   title = "Ensuring stylistic congruity in collaboratively written text: Requirements analysis and design issues",
   school = "Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto",
   month = "May",
   year = "1997",
   abstract = "Often, texts that have been written collaboratively do not ``speak
                with a single voice.''  Eliminating stylistic incongruity, a difficult
                undertaking for both collaborative and singular writers, is the
                desired function of a software tool.  This thesis describes the first
                cycle of an iterative software development process towards meeting
                this goal.  The user requirements are analyzed with respect to a model
                that synthesizes established research, and then the requirements are
                taxonomized.  Then, a framework for performing computational stylistic
                assessments is developed for later tool design.  An experiment
                designed to measure the subjectivity in stylistic assessment --- a
                relevant issue for making deterministic, computational stylistic
                assessments --- was performed; the results indicate that future
                stylistic assessment tools must account for different patterns of
                assessment.  Several design directions motivated by these results are
                suggested.",
   download = "http://ftp.cs.toronto.edu/pub/gh/Baljko-MSc-thesis.pdf",
   note = "Published as technical report CSRI-365"
}


