Menù principale
B024242 - CORPUS LINGUISTICS
Main information
Teaching Language
Course Content
Suggested readings
Learning Objectives
Prerequisites
Teaching Methods
Further information
Type of Assessment
Course program
Academic Year 2017-18
Coorte 2017 - Second Cycle Degree in THEORIES OF COMMUNICATION
Course year
First year - First Semester
Belonging Department
Humanities (DILEF)
Course Type
Single education field course
Scientific Area
L-LIN/01 - HISTORICAL AND GENERAL LINGUISTICS
Credits
6
Teaching Hours
36
Teaching Term
18/09/2017 ⇒ 20/12/2017
Attendance required
Yes
Type of Evaluation
Final Grade
Course Content
show
Course program
show
Lectureship
Mutuality
Course teached as:
B024242 - LINGUISTICA DEI CORPORA
Second Cycle Degree in MODERN PHILOLOGY
Curriculum LINGUISTICA STORICA, TEORICA, E APPLICATA
B024242 - LINGUISTICA DEI CORPORA
Second Cycle Degree in MODERN PHILOLOGY
Curriculum LINGUISTICA STORICA, TEORICA, E APPLICATA
Teaching Language
Italian
Course Content
The building of linguistic resources and their exploration; spoken corpora and speech analysis: pragmatic foundations and prosodic functions; written corpora and text analysis: textual linguistics.
Suggested readings (Search our library's catalogue)
E Cresti. A. Panunzi, "Introduzione ai corpora dell'italiano", Bologna, Mulino, 2013.
P. Sorianello, "Prosodia. Modelli e ricerca empirica", Roma, Carocci, 2003, 2014(3).
A. Ferrari, "Linguistica del testo", Roma, Carocci, 2014.
Further readings:
K. Aijmer, Ch. Rühlemann,"Corpus Pragmatics. A Handbook", Cambridge, CUP, 2014.
C. Bazzanella, "Linguistica e pragmatica del linguaggio. Un'introduzione", Roma/Bari, Laterza, 2015(5).
T. McEnery, A. Hardie, "Corpus Linguistics", Cambridge, CUP, 2012.
T. Raso, H. Mello (eds), "Spoken Corpora and Linguistic Studies", Amsterdam/Philadelphia, Benjamins, 2014.
P. Sorianello, "Prosodia. Modelli e ricerca empirica", Roma, Carocci, 2003, 2014(3).
A. Ferrari, "Linguistica del testo", Roma, Carocci, 2014.
Further readings:
K. Aijmer, Ch. Rühlemann,"Corpus Pragmatics. A Handbook", Cambridge, CUP, 2014.
C. Bazzanella, "Linguistica e pragmatica del linguaggio. Un'introduzione", Roma/Bari, Laterza, 2015(5).
T. McEnery, A. Hardie, "Corpus Linguistics", Cambridge, CUP, 2012.
T. Raso, H. Mello (eds), "Spoken Corpora and Linguistic Studies", Amsterdam/Philadelphia, Benjamins, 2014.
Learning Objectives
The course aims to provide the main knowledge and understanding tools for corpus-based linguistic studies, also in the perspective of applying the acquired knowledge within broader contexts and developing new ideas within research contexts. The knowledge objectives regard, more specifically, the acquisition of: specialized terminology; computer tools for the analisys of linguistic and textual data; theoretical and practical tools for the analysis of spoken language, including the prosodic dimension; theoretical and practical tools for the analysis of corpora in a textual perspective.
Among the course objectives, there are also the acquisition of the abilities to communicate in a clear way the acquired knowledge, and to develop integrated learning abilities that allow the student to formulate autonomous judgements and to deal with complex issues in the linguistic field.
The extra-disciplinary goal of the course is to stimulate students to develop: (a) an informed use of the academic environment, of the CdS, of the assistance facilities for managing the student careers; (b) a conscious participation and an effective student-teacher collaboration; (c) an aware use of the learning resources provided by both CdS and Scuola.
Among the course objectives, there are also the acquisition of the abilities to communicate in a clear way the acquired knowledge, and to develop integrated learning abilities that allow the student to formulate autonomous judgements and to deal with complex issues in the linguistic field.
The extra-disciplinary goal of the course is to stimulate students to develop: (a) an informed use of the academic environment, of the CdS, of the assistance facilities for managing the student careers; (b) a conscious participation and an effective student-teacher collaboration; (c) an aware use of the learning resources provided by both CdS and Scuola.
Prerequisites
Basic knowledge of general linguistics.
Teaching Methods
Face to face lessons; practical exercises for linguistic analysis and corpora building.
Further information
The slides of the course will be available.
Type of Assessment
The examination will be oral for all students. During the exam, the students will present a work (previously agreed with the teacher) regarding the transcription and annotation of a spontaneous speech recording, or a corpus based (spoken/written) linguistic analysis of a grammatical or lexical phenomenon. The examination will consist of at least three questions on the different sections of the course, in order to cover all the topics addressed during the lessons, and namely: (a) corpus definition, structure, and annotation; (b) characteristics of spoken language and its analysis; (c) written corpora: lexical, grammatical and textual analysis.
Students need to demonstrate a sufficient knowledge of all parts of the program in order to pass the examination. Moreover, the examiners will also assess the communication skills of the students as well as their ability to establish connections among the different topics and to re-elaborate the knowledge acquired during the course in an autonomous way. The final mark will consist of the average mark obtained in the different sections.
In brief, the examination aims to assess: (a) the knowledge of the theoretical fundations and the specific terminology of the discipline; (b) the knowledge of the specific characteristics of spoken and written language; (c) the ability to linguistically analyze spoken and written corpora, including dedicated computational tools.
Students need to demonstrate a sufficient knowledge of all parts of the program in order to pass the examination. Moreover, the examiners will also assess the communication skills of the students as well as their ability to establish connections among the different topics and to re-elaborate the knowledge acquired during the course in an autonomous way. The final mark will consist of the average mark obtained in the different sections.
In brief, the examination aims to assess: (a) the knowledge of the theoretical fundations and the specific terminology of the discipline; (b) the knowledge of the specific characteristics of spoken and written language; (c) the ability to linguistically analyze spoken and written corpora, including dedicated computational tools.
Course program
(1) The corpus as source for linguistic data: sampling and representativeness; corpus building; lexicon distribution and frequency lists; exploring the corpus: concordances, collocations, regular expressions. (2) Spoken language analysis: dealing with oral data; functions of prosody; oral communication and pragmatics. (3) An introduction to textual linguistics: written corpora, textual structure, communication units.