Multiple correspondence analysis and corpus linguistics research

Dr Isobelle Clarke, Lancaster University

October 25, 17:30 (Madrid time) / 16:30 (UK time)

This talk is part of the Corpus linguistics & applied linguistics research 2023 online event.

Registration: https://umurcia.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_s0aPEXAFTQe_App0qS7Erg

Abstract

In this talk, I will describe what Multiple Correspondence Analysis (MCA) is and how it can be used for the Multi-Dimensional Analysis of short texts, as well as for corpus-assisted discourse analysis in an approach called Keyword Co-occurrence Analysis, drawing on the results of my own research on tweets (Clarke and Grieve, 2019; Clarke, 2022) and discourses of Islam in the UK press (Clarke et al. 2021; 2022). I will then go on to demonstrate how the results can be used to track communicative functions and discourses over time in diachronic analyses. Finally, I will discuss the limitations of MCA in these tasks.

Dr Isobelle Clarke‘s research interests include corpus linguistics, forensic linguistics, sociolinguistics and news discourse and discourse analysis. Her previous research covers language variation on social media, especially Twitter, and authorship analysis. Her current research examines the representation of Islam in the press and second learner language and spoken language. Dr Clarke received a Leverhulme’s early career researcher fellowship to investigate anti-science discourses, such as anti-vaccination discourse, climate change denials, and anti-GMO discourse.

You can check out the 2021 and 2022 talks here:

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKjKIIQL6u1mXD2V9ZaT-_Q/featured

This online event is organized by the Universidad de Murcia and the E020-07 research group (Lenguajes de especialidad, corpus lingüísticos y lingüística inglesa aplicada a la ingeniería del conocimiento).

Coordination: Prof Pascual Pérez-Paredes & Dr Carlos Ordoñana Guillamón