[bksvol-discuss] Re: I have a question please and thank you.

  • From: "Judy s." <cherryjam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 08 Sep 2009 21:47:35 -0500

Evan, I've wondered about how that algorithm works too, because of the children's books I've proofed that were erroneously marked as adult by the algorithm. I'd bet part of it is based on Bookshare useing a dictionary of words that can be considered adult (with some contexting built in, I'd guess). The final designation of adult comes about by using a weighting of the number of times words/terms/phrases appear factored against the total number of words in a book. So if you have a children's book with very few words, and one of the 'suspect' words appears, although it could be in a totally innocent context, bam! The children's book is going to get rated as adult. I had that happen a few months ago with a board book I was proofreading!


Just guessing here, of course. smile.

Judy s.

EVAN REESE wrote:
What determines adult content is ultimately the proofreader. Bookshare's computer can mark a book either Adult or not, using some secret algorithm that staff refuses to divulge to us, but the proofreader can change the Bookshare computer's choice if he/she feels that a change is justified. It used to be either the submitter and/or the proofreader, but Bookshare took that choice away from submitters and seems to have no inclination to give it back.

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