Corpus-linguistic research papers

Term papers in corpus linguistic seminars should follow the IMRaD structure, consisting of four sections: Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion. This is a standard structure of scientific papers, we have adapted it specifically to corpus linguistic research papers below. A more detailed overview of the core parts of a corpus-linguistic research paper can be found here.

The introduction should simply be titled Introduction. It must answer the following questions:

In addition, it may answer the following questions:

The methods section can simply be titled Methods, but depending on the focus that you give different aspects of the research design, it can also be titled Methods and Materials, Methods and Data, Data Extraction and Annotation or something similar. It must answer the following questions:

The results section should simply be titled Results. It must contain a compact presentation of your data (in the form of tables and/or diagrams) that answer the following questions:

The discussion section can simply be titled Discussion, but depending on your focus you can also use combinations of the words Summary, Conclusion, and Outlook (if you have a long discussion section, you can use these as subheadings). The section must answer the following questions:

In addition, it may contain answers to the following questions: