The research showed that if the victim is strangled, the killer is most likely male, or male with a female accomplice, and if the setting is a country house, the killer is most likely female.
Language used throughout the book to describe a female killer is usually more negative than when describing a male killer, the experts found.
Analysis showed female killers are normally discovered because of a domestic item, and male killers are normally found out through information or logic.
The panel found that if Hercule Poirot is the detective, and the cause of death is stabbing, the killer will be mentioned more frequently at the beginning of the book.
But if Miss Marple is the detective, and the motive for the murder is money or an affair, the killer will be mentioned more in the later stages of the novel than the beginning.
Dr Bernthal said Christie's novels tend to include a "main clue", which is revealed approximately halfway through the text and is usually highlighted as it appears in the text so the reader is likely to remember it.
Meanwhile, according to the team of researchers led by Dr Jeannerod, a key element of Christie's writing style is to keep it simple - using middle-range language and repeating it.
Analysis found the most used word in Christie's novels is "said".
The research was commissioned by Drama to celebrate their Agatha Christie Hour.
The TV channel is screening 10 of her most famous stories on weekdays between August 3 and 14 to mark the 125th anniversary of her birth.
-AAP