Combining rhetorical move analysis with multi-dimensional analysis

[1]  Eric Friginal Linguistic variation in the discourse of outsourced call centers , 2008 .

[2]  Jack Grieve,et al.  Dimensions of Abusive Language on Twitter , 2017, ALW@ACL.

[3]  Susan Conrad Investigating academic texts with corpus-based techniques: An example from biology☆ , 1996 .

[4]  Douglas Biber,et al.  Representativeness in corpus design , 1993 .

[5]  Julie Mathews-Aydinli,et al.  A Function-First Approach to Identifying Formulaic Language in Academic Writing. , 2011 .

[6]  Elena Cotos,et al.  Computer-Assisted Research Writing in the Disciplines , 2016 .

[7]  Bethany Gray,et al.  Linguistic Variation in Research Articles: When discipline tells only part of the story , 2015 .

[8]  Budsaba Kanoksilapatham,et al.  4. Rhetorical moves in biochemistry research articles , 2007 .

[9]  Elena Cotos,et al.  Furthering and applying move/step constructs: Technology-driven marshalling of Swalesian genre theory for EAP pedagogy , 2015 .

[10]  Bethany Gray,et al.  Tagging and Counting Linguistic Features for Multi-Dimensional Analysis , 2019, Multi-Dimensional Analysis.

[11]  Atsushi Mizumoto,et al.  Applying the Bundle–Move Connection Approach to the Development of an Online Writing Support Tool for Research Articles , 2017 .

[12]  Maria José Luzon Marco,et al.  Collocational frameworks in medical research papers: a genre-based study , 2000 .

[13]  Viviana Cortes,et al.  The purpose of this study is to: Connecting lexical bundles and moves in research article introductions , 2013 .

[14]  James K. Jones,et al.  Quantitative methods in corpus linguistics , 2009 .

[15]  John M. Swales,et al.  Strengthening move analysis methodology towards bridging the function-form gap , 2018 .

[16]  Douglas Biber,et al.  Multi-Dimensional Analysis: A Historical Synopsis , 2019, Multi-Dimensional Analysis.

[17]  Eniko Csomay,et al.  Linguistic variation within university classroom talk: A corpus-based perspective , 2004 .

[18]  Elena Cotos Move Analysis , 2018, The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics.

[19]  Douglas Biber,et al.  Discourse on the move , 2007 .

[20]  M. Harrington,et al.  Phraseology used to comment on results in the discussion section of applied linguistics quantitative research articles , 2015 .

[21]  Hesamoddin Shahriari,et al.  A cross-disciplinary investigation of multi-word expressions in the moves of research article abstracts , 2018, Journal of English for Academic Purposes.

[22]  Giovanni Parodi,et al.  The rhetorical organization of the Textbook genre across disciplines: A ‘colony-in-loops’? , 2010 .

[23]  Jesse Egbert,et al.  Doing Multi-Dimensional Analysis in SPSS, SAS, and R , 2019 .

[24]  Ramesh Krishnamurthy,et al.  Issues in creating a corpus for EAP pedagogy and research , 2007 .

[25]  Stephen Evans,et al.  Structural patterns in empirical research articles: A cross-disciplinary study , 2012 .

[26]  Gyula Tankó,et al.  Literary research article abstracts: An analysis of rhetorical moves and their linguistic realizations , 2017 .

[27]  Laurence Anthony,et al.  Mover: a machine learning tool to assist in the reading and writing of technical papers , 2003 .

[28]  Elena Cotos,et al.  A move/step model for methods sections: Demonstrating Rigour and Credibility , 2017 .

[29]  Jesse Egbert,et al.  Publication type and discipline variation in published academic writing: Investigating statistical interaction in corpus data , 2015 .

[30]  Douglas Biber,et al.  Intra-textual variation within medical research articles , 2014 .