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This document appears to be page 27 of a scientific or academic paper attached to a House Oversight investigation (likely related to Epstein due to the prompt context, though not explicitly stated in the text). The text details the methodology for cleaning and verifying historical datasets of banned authors during the Nazi era (1925-1945), specifically referencing the 'Hermann lists' and the 'Berlin list.' It discusses technical decisions regarding data entry, including the handling of pseudonyms and the anomaly of Adolf Hitler appearing on a banned book list due to a French commentary edition of Mein Kampf.
This document page details methodologies for analyzing n-gram frequencies over time, specifically addressing how to handle multiple query cohorts by normalizing data to avoid bias from frequency differences. It also outlines the sources used for collecting historical and cultural data, primarily citing Wikipedia and Encyclopedia Britannica, while noting efforts to verify accuracy and minimize manual annotation bias.
This document is a page from a scientific paper published in 'Science' or 'Sciencexpress' on December 16, 2010, bearing the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016999. The text discusses a statistical analysis of fame and censorship using data from Wikipedia and Google Books, analyzing the trajectories of celebrity for figures like Bill Clinton and the impact of Nazi censorship on figures like Marc Chagall. While part of a government oversight release (likely related to Epstein's connections with scientists), the content itself is purely academic.
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