Multidimensional Register Analysis
Multidimensional (MD) analysis is a corpus-linguistic method, developed by Douglas Biber in the 1980s, for describing how language varies across registers — speech versus writing, conversation versus academic prose, and so on. Its central idea is that many individual linguistic features (pronouns, passives, nominalizations, modals, and dozens more) systematically co-occur, and that these co-occurrence patterns define underlying dimensions of variation. Biber tags and counts a large set of features in every text of a balanced corpus, then uses factor analysis to extract the dimensions, interprets each functionally (Biber's Dimension 1 contrasts 'involved' interactive production with 'informational' production), and scores every text and register along them. The result is a quantitative, multifaceted map of register variation that replaces single rankings (such as a simple formality scale) with several independent dimensions.
קראו את השיטה במלואה
התחברו עם חשבון חינמי כדי לקרוא חלק זה.
מפת שיטות
סביבת השיטות הקרובות — בחרו צומת כדי לחקור.
מקורות
- Biber, D. (1988). Variation across Speech and Writing. Cambridge University Press. ISBN: 9780521425568
- Biber, D. (1995). Dimensions of Register Variation: A Cross-Linguistic Comparison. Cambridge University Press. ISBN: 9780521473316
איך לצטט עמוד זה
ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Multidimensional Analysis of Register Variation. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/he/linguistics/multidimensional-register-analysis
איזו שיטה?
הציבו שיטה זו לצד קרובותיה הקרובות וקראו אותן זו לצד זו — הספרייה מניחה את הספרים על השולחן; הבחירה בידיכם.
- Keyness Analysisבלשנות↔ השוואה
- N-gram Analysisבלשנות↔ השוואה
- Part-of-Speech Taggingבלשנות↔ השוואה
- Variationist Sociolinguisticsבלשנות↔ השוואה