Has anyone ever reliably done this? Are you willing to put in the amount of work needed to achieve this? If you do it thoroughly I imagine that the amount of work might be comparable to a significant portion of the work involved in putting together a dissertation for a doctorate. (If that is your plan, to incorporate this in a dissertation or some form of scientific paper, the best of luck to you).Fede wrote:How should I proceed if I wanted to establish a "fingerprint" of a player's style?
Assuming this has successfully been done, where will you be? You can say that using methodology X, Y and Z you have evidence that there is an X% probability that the player who was supposed to be playing was not playing. What good will that do? Does it prove anything? Are you ready to put in the work it will take to refute the refutations of your method?
All I am saying is that you should carefully consider what you will achieve, or if you will in fact achieve anything before you embark on a course of action.
Don't get me wrong, I would like nothing more than a method that can conclusively prove that player X is lying when he says he played a certain game. I suspect it will be much easier to prove that player X did not play a game, rather than to prove that player Y, or computer program Z did in fact play it.