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Keyness Analysis×Analyse de collocations×
DomaineLinguistiqueFouille de textes
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine19971990
Auteur d'origineMike ScottChurch & Hanks
TypeCorpus comparison of relative word frequenciesStatistical text-mining technique
Source fondatriceScott, M. (1997). PC analysis of key words — and key key words. System, 25(2), 233–245. DOI ↗Church, K.W. & Hanks, P. (1990). Word Association Norms, Mutual Information, and Lexicography. Computational Linguistics, 16(1), 22-29. link ↗
AliasKeyword Analysis, Corpus Keyness, Keyness Statisticsword association, collocation extraction, Birliktelik Analizi (Collocation Analysis)
Apparentées33
RésuméKeyness analysis identifies the words that are characteristically frequent (or infrequent) in a target corpus relative to a reference corpus, using statistical tests to measure how unexpected each word's frequency is. Introduced by Mike Scott in 1997, it answers the question 'what is this text or collection distinctively about?' and is a central technique in corpus linguistics and corpus-assisted discourse analysis for surfacing the salient vocabulary of a genre, period, author, or social group.Collocation analysis is a statistical text-mining technique that identifies word pairs or expressions that frequently occur together, using association measures rather than chance co-occurrence. Introduced in the lexicography work of Church and Hanks (1990), it is used for terminology extraction and language analysis, surfacing the multi-word units that carry meaning in a corpus.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Keyness Analysis · Collocation Analysis. Consulté le 2026-06-24 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare