Category Archives: Corpora

Video: Corpus Linguistics and the Analysis of L2 Spoken and Written Texts, 26 October 2021

Corpus Linguistics and the Analysis of L2 Spoken and Written Texts
Dr Kris Kyle, University of Oregon
26 October, 19:00 (Madrid-Paris-Brussels-Berlin time) Zoom registration link

Productive lexical proficiency has been an important topic in applied linguistics for over 25 years (e.g., Crossley et al., 2011; Kyle & Crossley, 2015; Laufer & Nation, 1995). During this time, word frequency measures have played a dominant role (Laufer & Nation, 1995). While word frequency is undoubtedly important, a number of recent studies have demonstrated that lexical proficiency is most accurately modeled when multiple lexical and lexicogrammatical features are used (e.g., Kim et al., 2018; Kyle et al., 2018;). In this talk, an overview of selected measures of lexical proficiency at the word (e.g., concreteness, contextual diversity, lexical access, etc.) and lexicogrammatical (i.e., n-gram, dependency relations and verb-verb argument construction strength of association) level is provided. The use of these features is then highlighted in two learner corpus research studies.

Kristopher Kyle is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Oregon. His research interests include second language acquisition, second language writing, and second language assessment. He is addresses these topics using corpus linguistic methods through the adaptation and development of natural language processing tools.

Coordination: Prof Pascual Pérez-Paredes

This event is sponsored by the Facultad de Letras, Universidad de Murcia, and the English Department, Universidad de Murcia.

Coruña Corpus of English Scientific Writing (CC)


The different subcorpora of the Coruña Corpus of English Scientific Writing (CC), now all online and open acess at the Repository of the University https://ruc.udc.es/dspace/handle/2183/21846?locale-attribute=en, were accompanied by a volume with methodological and pilot studies. John Benjamins has just published a book about the last of the corpora uploaded, the Corpus of English Life Science Texts (CELiST).

All families and genera. Exploring the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts. Edited by Isabel Moskowich (University of A Coruña), Inés Lareo (University of Vigo) and Gonzalo Camiña (University of Nantes)
https://benjamins.com/catalog/z.237

For more info check out the Research Group on Multidimensional Corpus Based Studies in English @MuStE_UdC