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Detection and Analysis of Depression-Related Language in an Online Community: Machine Learning, Topic Modeling, and Corpus-Linguistic Approaches

Corpus-based Studies across Humanities
Depression is one of the most common mental disorders worldwide and may affect an individual’s ability to perform essential life activities. Still, “less than 25 % of individuals with depression receive adequate treatment” (American Association of ...
Youngmeen Kim, Ute Römer-Barron
semanticscholar   +1 more source

A corpus-based analysis of object indexing in Hewramî

Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory
Hewramî (ISO 639-3) is an Iranic language featuring tense-sensitive alignment, characterised in terms of indexing by employing two sets of bound person markers for expressing direct objects.
Masoud Mohammadirad
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Stance Markers in Industry Report: A Corpus-Based Study of the Deloitte Art & Finance Report

Corpus-based Studies across Humanities
Extensive linguistic research has been conducted on stance, while few studies have explored stance in industry reports, an important business genre. Therefore, this paper examines the usage of stance markers in the latest three editions of Art & Finance ...
Yan Qin, Ruilin Liao
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Compilation and Analysis of a Parallel English-Arabic Corpus of Stand-Up Comedy Shows Subtitles

Corpus-based Studies across Humanities
Translating stand-up comedy punchlines from the English-Arabic linguistic and cultural divide presents various patterns of adaptation and transformation. This paper examines a parallel corpus of thirty stand-up comedy shows streamed on Netflix.
S. Asadi, Hussein Abu-Rayyash
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Does corpus size influence normalised frequencies?

Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory
Several frequency-based measures are influenced by corpus size (e.g. lexical diversity or text similarity measures). It is largely unquestioned, however, that normalised frequencies correct for the influence of corpus size – but it has not yet been ...
Sascha Wolfer, Alexander Koplenig
semanticscholar   +1 more source

A Corpus-Based Analysis of “Ageing Population” Discourse in Hong Kong Legislative Council Hansards

Corpus-based Studies across Humanities
Drawing on corpus linguistic approaches and Fairclough’s three-dimensional model, the study analysed “ageing population” discourse in 303 English Hansard records from Hong Kong’s Sixth Legislative Council (2016–2021) containing 15.7 million tokens ...
Emmanuel Mensah Bonsu
semanticscholar   +1 more source

A multivariate corpus analysis of locative inversion in Mandarin Chinese

Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory
This study seeks to contribute to the understanding of the semantics and pragmatics associated with locative inversion (LI), a construction characterised by a preverbal locative phrase and a postverbal noun phrase.
Yuting Li
semanticscholar   +1 more source

When shields and distances are key: a corpus-based study of Slovene bare pronouns in negated clauses

Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory
In some strict Negative Concord (NC) languages, Negative Concord Items (NCIs) can be freely used in negated clauses, while pronominal Polarity Sensitive Items (PSIs) are blocked. Despite being a strict NC language, Slovene does not exhibit such blocking.
Kristina Gregorčič
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Using machine learning to automate data annotation in corpus linguistics

International Journal of Corpus Linguistics
A wealth of linguistic data has been annotated by corpus linguists, and this extant annotated data can be used to automatically replicate and apply the linguist’s annotation scheme by means of machine learning models.
Lauren Fonteyn   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Lexical factors in English definiteness marking: a corpus-based investigation

Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory
Using data from the British National Corpus, this paper examines the correlation between particular nouns and verbs and the definiteness of direct objects. We find that many nouns, and even more verbs, strongly prefer either definite or indefinite direct
Florent Perek, Lotte Sommerer
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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