Buch, Englisch, 454 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm
A New Approach
Buch, Englisch, 454 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm
ISBN: 978-1-041-03186-4
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Traditional approaches focused on significance tests have often been difficult for linguistics researchers to visualise. Statistics in Corpus Linguistics Research: A New Approach breaks significance tests down for researchers in corpus linguistics and linguistic analysis, promoting a visual approach to understanding the performance of tests with real data, and demonstrating how to derive new confidence intervals and tests.
This fully-revised second edition includes a brand-new chapter describing a novel extended ‘MOVER’ method to derive accurate confidence intervals for numerous properties. With sample datasets and easy-to-read visuals, this book focuses on practical issues, such as how to:
• pose meaningful research questions in terms of choice and constraint;
• employ confidence intervals correctly (including in graph plots);
• select a significance test (and interpret its results);
• construct confidence intervals for functions of independent proportions;
• measure the size of the effect of one variable on another or the similarity between two distributions; and
• evaluate whether the results of two experiments significantly differ.
Appropriate for anyone from the student just beginning their career to the seasoned researcher, this book is both a practical overview and valuable resource.
Zielgruppe
Postgraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface Acknowledgments A Note on Terminology and Notation PART 1: Motivations 1 What Might Corpora Tell Us About Language? PART 2: Designing Experiments With Corpora 2 The Idea of Corpus Experiments 3 That Vexed Problem of Choice 4 Choice Versus Meaning 5 Balanced Samples and Imagined Populations PART 3: Confidence Intervals and Significance Tests 6 Introducing Inferential Statistics 7 Plotting With Confidence 8 From Intervals to Tests 9 An Algebra of Intervals 10 Competition Between Choices Over Time 11 The Replication Crisis and the New Statistics 12 Choosing the Right Test PART 4: Effect Sizes and Meta-Tests 13 The Size of an Effect 14 Meta- Tests for Comparing Tables of Results PART 5: Statistical Solutions for Corpus Samples 15 Conducting Research With Imperfect Data 16 Adjusting Intervals for Random-Text Samples PART 6: Concluding Remarks 17 Plotting the Wilson Distribution 18 In Conclusion Appendix A The Interval Equality Principle Appendix B Pseudo-Code for Computational Procedures Glossary References Index