Do you write like a male or female?

I can’t imagine how or why it works (the accompanyint NYTimes article is subscriber only), but for me it did: three very different samples of writing accurately pinpointed me as male. Try it here.

It correctly judged me as male:

Female Score: 302
Male Score: 562

Interesting. I submitted part of my thesis and got an overwhelmingly male score, but then I submitted part of a work of fiction and got a female score.

eta: I’m female.

It judged me as male (which is true) from several samples, both fiction and non-fiction (although the fiction had a higher female score). but I have to question its methodology.

It seems to give the words “with”, “if”, and “not” the most weight toward a female score and “around”, “what”, “more”, and “are” get the most consideration as being “masculine keywords”. I would love to read the article explaining how this algorithm came about, but you need a login for the NY times to read it. Would anyone who has one mind posting the articles here?

I love this thing!

I was writing a book with two main characters, one male, one female, and I was quite happy to see that the female sections registered as having been written by a woman, and the male sections as having been written by a man. Exactly what I wanted to accomplish. (Well, except that I never could actually get the thing finished.)

link?

The link may require registration, I’m not sure.

Heh…I just ran some dialogue from a story of mine through. It identified a number of lines from female characters as being written by females, vice-versa for the male character lines—and for a few “subtitle” lines from a character who’s speech is being translated on the fly (and not especially well) by an AI, it couldn’t tell if it was male or female.

:smiley:

[OT]

Nope, it worked for me. But how?? Can any NYT subscriber link to any article and let anyone see it…?

[/OT]

Once again, my writing seems to indicate that I’m male. When I’ve used androgynous screen names, people always think I’m male. But I’m female, I swear. I GAVE BIRTH. Harrumph.

Mrs essell is famous in her online communities for being of ambiguous gender when judged on her writing.

I ran through myself, my wife and a couple of close friends. It got all of us backwards.
So either we’re all backwards, or there’s a cultural gap for non american writing it can’t bridge.

I submitted a couple posts from here. Both came back male. The large one came out like so.

Female Score: 590
Male Score: 691

By the way, this post is completely male, 28 to 0.

Yep, that’s what I got as well.

cheers

Female here, and my writing (according to the genie) is also masculine.

I’ve confused heck out of airline staff in small airports like Timaru before now (“Put your bag here, sir – Oh! I’m so sorry, I don’t realise …!”) that the masculine-feminine mix-up stuff doesn’t bug me.

I submitted two examples from research papers I wrote last semester. Both came up male. Then I submitted an excerpt from a lesbian-noirish short story I wrote as a joke for a literature class. This also came up male :eek:

I’m gonna go do something pink and girly now.

I tried it on 3 separate blog entries and all of them came up male. Which surprised me, because if you read my entries it’s fairly obviously a female voice - and. From my vague recollection of the single linguistics class I took at uni, I remember that lots of hedging language (which I tend to do a lot) was a clear female giveaway.

Blog entries -shorter text came up female, longer text came out male. Short stories -male narrator came out male, one female narrator came out female, one female narrator with a very terse stream of consciousness came out male. I’m definitely female.

I’ve tried it before, both on my own writing and on excerpts from novels. It works about 50% of the time.

I’m female. I copied in a few of my blog posts and got Female Score: 971 / Male Score: 673.

The first page of my 2005 NaNoWriMo novel, which had a male first-person narrator, also came up female. Oops. An excerpt from the middle, with more dialogue in, came up as male, but the score was close, 912 to 971.

A music history paper I wrote last year came up very male: Female Score: 1887 / Male Score: 3632. According to the analysis, it’s mainly because I said “the” a lot.

What do you mean exactly by “hedging language”? Do you have any examples?

I posted the first page of my latest book. Surprisingly, it chose female correctly. I figured the violence and language would make it think male, but I guess that’s not how it determines it. I’ll have to try it on some of my other books.

Mine came out male, as I figured. What surprised me is that it seems to be based on the use of ‘the’ ‘is’ and ‘are’ among other words. The ‘feminine’ keywords include ‘me’ ‘myself’ and ‘she’ and almost no articles where many of the ‘masculine’ keywords are articles or words like ‘at’ and ‘to’.

I’m guessing that anybody who’s done a fair number of academic essays and who tends to write in that mode will be deemed ‘masculine’ because the ‘feminine’ keywords include a lot of pronouns that don’t fit in academic writing.