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ArtikelComparing count-based and band-based indices of word frequency: Implications for active vocabulary research and pedagogical applications  
Oleh: Crossley, Scott A. ; Cobb, Tom ; McNamara, Danielle S.
Jenis: Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi: SYSTEM: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics (Full Text) vol. 41 no. 4 (2013), page 965-981.
Topik: Frequency analysis; Frequency lists; Band-based frequency measures; Count-based frequency measures; Computational linguistics; Lexical sophistication; Active and passive lexical proficiency; Learner corpora
Fulltext: System_41_4_2013_Crossley.pdf (231.79KB)
Isi artikelIn assessments of second language (L2) writing, quality of lexis typically claims more variance than other factors, and the most readily operationalized measure of lexical quality is word frequency. This study compares two methods of automatically assessing word frequency in learner productions. The first method, a band-based method, involves lexical frequency profiling, a procedure that first groups individual words into families and then sorts these into corpus-based frequency bands. The second method, a countbased method, assigns a normalized corpus frequency count to each individual word form used, yielding an average count for a text. Both band and count-based methods were used to analyze 100 L2 learner and 30 native speaker freewrites that had been classified according to proficiency level (i.e., native speakers and beginning, intermediate and advanced L2 learners). Machine learning algorithms were used to classify the texts into their respective proficiency levels with results indicating that count-based word frequency indices accurately classified 58% of the texts while band-based indices reported accuracies that were between 10% and 22% lower than count-based indices.
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