The standard scientific methodology in linguistics is empirical testing of falsifiable hypotheses. As such the process of hypothesis generation is central, and involves formulation of a research question about a domain of interest and statement of a hypothesis relative to it. In corpus linguistics the domain is text, and generation involves abstraction of data from text, data analysis, and formulation of a hypothesis based on inference from the results. Traditionally this process has been paper-based, but the advent of electronic text has increasingly rendered it obsolete both because the size of digital corpora is now at or beyond the limit of what can efficiently be used in the traditional way, and because the complexity of data abstracted from them can be impenetrable to understanding. Linguists are increasingly turning to mathematical and statistical computational methods for help, and cluster analysis is such a method. It is used across the sciences for hypothesis generation by identification of structure in data which are too large or complex, or both, to be interpretable by direct inspection. This book aims to show how cluster analysis can be used for hypothesis generation in corpus linguistics, thereby contributing to a quantitative empirical methodology for the discipline.
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Specifications
Book Details
Title
Cluster Analysis for Corpus Linguistics
Imprint
De Gruyter Mouton
Product Form
Hardcover
Publisher
De Gruyter
Source ISBN
9783110350258
Genre
Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN13
9783110350258
Book Category
Arts, Language and Linguistic Books
BISAC Subject Heading
LAN009000
Book Subcategory
Language and Linguistic Books
ISBN10
9783110350258
Language
English
Dimensions
Height
230 mm
Length
155 mm
Weight
703 gr
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