studyguide:research-report
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Next revision | Previous revision | ||
studyguide:research-report [2020/10/04 10:24] – created astefanowitsch | studyguide:research-report [2025/03/12 11:58] (current) – astefanowitsch | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | ====== Structure of a corpus-linguistic research report ====== | ||
+ | A corpus-linguistic research report documents five aspects of your study: the **aims** of your study, the **materials** from which your data are derived, the **procedures** by which you have extracted and annotated the data, the **results** of your analysis and **discussion** of how your results relate to the aims of your study. Each of these aspects must be described in sufficient detail for another researcher to understand your research design decisions and to replicate your study. | ||
+ | |||
+ | **Aims**. Describe your hypothesis or research question and explain how you plan to investigate it. If you are evaluating a hypothesis, state specific predictions that can be tested using a corpus. If you are exploring a more open research question, state as precisely as possible what you will look for in your corpus. | ||
+ | |||
+ | **Materials**. Describe your corpus. If it is an existing corpus, state exactly which version of the corpus you used and explain why you chose this particular corpus. If it is a corpus you assembled specifically for your research project, explain as precisely as possible what texts you included in the corpus and how you selected them (if they are publicly available, state the source and where to find it). If your study is based on a sample rather than the entire corpus, explain how you selected this sample. | ||
+ | |||
+ | **Procedures**. There are two broad steps that must be described: First, the procedure(s) you used to extract the data from your corpus, second, the procedure(s) you applied to the data after extracting them. | ||
+ | |||
+ | **//Data extraction// | ||
+ | |||
+ | **//Data annotation// | ||
+ | |||
+ | **// | ||
+ | |||
+ | **Results**. Show the results of your analysis. First, give descriptive statistics (frequencies, | ||
+ | |||
+ | **Discussion**. State whether your results support your hypothesis or falsify it. You should not not add any interpretation at this point, but you may state ways in which your design might have influenced your results and suggest additional ways in which your initial hypothesis could be tested. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | A full [[studyguide: |