“Basic Information Structure” and “Academic Language”: An Approach to Discourse Analysis

2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-149
Author(s):  
Martin Adam

Abstract The theory of functional sentence perspective (FSP) and its research methods have been considered one of the prominent tools of discourse analysis and information processing. It is widely known that, combining the approaches adopted both by formalists and functionalists, the theory of FSP draws on the findings presented by the scholars of the Prague Circle. The father of FSP himself - Jan Firbas - drew on the findings of his predecessor, Vilem Mathesius, who formulated the basic principles of what was to be labelled FSP only later. Apart from the principal FSP representatives and more recent followers (as a rule associated with Prague or Brno universities), this homage paper overviews somewhat less familiar - yet significant - pioneers in the field of theories of information structure, viz. Henri Weil, Samuel Brassai, Georg von der Gabelentz and Anton Marty. It will discuss some of their writings and achievements that were forming (and inspiring) the theory of FSP.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bo Sun

Information processing is one of the main concerns in the field of artificial intelligence, because it can benefit many related downstream tasks. To facilitate information processing, information structure parsing is assumed to be of great significance. This article proposes a discourse analysis based approach so that information structure of Chinese legal texts can be recognized automatically. This article employs Discourse Information Theory to explore information features of Chinese legal texts. The texts used in this study include 6 types, each type containing 60 training texts and 30 testing texts. After that, a set of rules is formulated to classify legal texts and identify the categories of information units. Finally, to examine the performance of the rules, a comparison is made by designing a Support Vector Machine classifier and a Viterbi algorithm decoder. The experiment demonstrates that the rule based approach outperforms the statistics based approaches. This research suggests that discourse analysis may provide some linguistic features conducive to discourse parsing.


2019 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
pp. 57-71
Author(s):  
Allison Wynhoff Olsen

[full article, abstract in English; abstract in Lithuanian] “Learning” is defined and constructed in classrooms as teachers and students interact through the use of language. As such, “learning” is situated language practices. Theories of socially- constructed uses of language and interactions provide foundation for this work. Through a microethnographic discourse analysis, the findings show a teacher and students constructing shared cultural models of “learning,” holding each other accountable to particular academic and pedagogical practices as well as uses of academic language. The teacher employed linguistic strategies to make visible and engage students in the academic language and “thinking” practices that counted as “learning.”


2012 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 150-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ken Hyland

Automated, frequency-driven approaches to identifying commonly used word combinations have become an important aspect of academic discourse analysis and English for academic purposes (EAP) teaching during the last 10 years. Referred to as clusters, chunks, or bundles, these sequences are certainly formulaic, but in the sense that they are simply extended collocations that appear more frequently than expected by chance, helping to shape meanings in specific contexts and contributing to our sense of coherence in a text. More recently, work has extended to “concgrams,” or noncontiguous word groupings where there is lexical and positional variation. Together, these lexical patterns are pervasive in academic language use and a key component of fluent linguistic production, marking out novice and expert use in a range of genres. This article discusses the emerging research which demonstrates the importance of formulaic language in both academic speech and writing and the extent to which it varies in frequency, form, and function by mode, discipline, and genre.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 ◽  
pp. 03003
Author(s):  
Natalia Desiajeva ◽  
Larisa Assuirova ◽  
Elvira Krivorotova ◽  
Ekaterina Nikolajeva ◽  
Lyudmila Khaymovich

The purpose of the research is to identify the influence of an educational text on the organisation of information activities of schoolchildren. Methods: content analysis, structural and semantic analysis of educational texts and the results of their interpretation. Research results: identification of features of the educational text as an information structure (the integrity of multi-layer content, reproducibility, presence of system connections with the thematic information field), description of the information activity of a complex of educational texts united by the function of updating the value attitude to knowledge, which can be represented in three main types: impersonal, authorised and personal. Each of these types is correlated with the level of perception of information by the student-reader, which can be a. detached and impersonal, b. in conscious collaboration with the author, c. to their own cognitive experience. As a result of the research, the basic information-significant structural components of educational texts are also identified: the title and the beginning correlated with the key meaning of the text, the means of axiological field and dialogisation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (7) ◽  
pp. 109-114
Author(s):  
Lanlan Shi

From the perspective of functional linguistics, this paper analyzes the features of the discourse pattern of political speeches from the perspective of critical discourse analysis, taking Biden’s 2020 election victory speech as a model, and explores how political speeches realize ideational functions in language through transitivity system, voice system and normalization system, and how they realize interpersonal functions through mood system and modality system, how to realize textual function through theme-rheme structure, information structure, and cohesion system. A political speaker's mastery of his own subjective and objective attitude, the shaping of the credibility and persuasiveness of his speech, the construction of one's own social identity, interpersonal relationship, and ideology can be embodied through the three meta-functions of language.


2011 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 828-860 ◽  
Author(s):  
CÉCILE DE CAT

ABSTRACTThis study provides experimental evidence for preschool children's competence in basic information structure, with particular attention to the notions of topic and focus. It investigates their mastery of structural and definiteness distinctions to encode the information status of discourse referents, and seeks to distinguish linguistic competence from cognitive development as the source for children's ‘errors’. Evidence comes from a story-telling experiment performed on 45 children acquiring French (between the ages of 2 ; 6·22 and 5 ; 6·15). The article demonstrates continuity between the child and adult systems of basic discourse representation. It further argues that children's definiteness errors are not due to a lack of knowledge of the adult rules of information encoding. Rather, such errors stem from cognitive limitations and from assuming a wider common ground than adults would.


2006 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Anthonissen

This paper considers a number of salient, characterising features of the verbal mediation process that took place in the TRC hearings on gross human rights violations. This is done with reference to the methodology developed in Discourse Sociolinguistics. It considers how various participants represent a particular event, each taking the perspective from which they experienced it. It notes the differences in verbal choice, and in textual and information structure of (i.a.) a journalist who witnessed this particular instance of public police excess, of a woman involved because her home was at the scene of the confrontation between police and youngsters, of one of the commanding police officers who had been subpoenaed and thus was not a voluntary witness at the hearing, of a doctor who treated patients after the event, of a school teacher who could articulate the particular kind of protest youngsters engaged in at the time, and so on. It also highlights a particular practice of reformulating which appears to be typical of discourses that mediate past atrocities with a view to founding new and improved democratic practices.


Author(s):  
Darrell Duffie

This chapter describes a simple model of the “percolation” of information of common interest through an over-the-counter market with many agents. It also includes an explicit solution for the cross-sectional distribution of posterior beliefs at each time. It begins with the basic information structure for the economy and the setting for search and random matching. It then shows how to solve the model for the dynamics of the cross-sectional distribution of information. The remainder of the chapter is devoted to market settings and to extensions of the model that handle public releases of information, the receipt of new private information over time, and the release of information among groups of more than two agents at a time.


2014 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriela Zapletalová

The paper approaches academic talks or conference presentations (CPs) as a researchprocess genre which is based on the interplay of the written and spoken modes. The aim of the study is twofold: (1) it attempts to present an in-depth overview of research on multimodality in relation to academic language, and (2) it offers a (mostly quantitative) analysis of slides from PowerPoint presentations. The slides are approached as a platform for the study of so-called visual lexicogrammar. The research is rooted in Halliday’s systemic-functional framework involving the concept of language functions; it also draws on the genre-based approach to discourse analysis (Bhatia 1993, Martin 1997, Swales 1990, 2004) and multimodal theory as elaborated by Iedema (2003), Kress and van Leeuwen (2006) and O’Halloran and Smith (2011). The findings suggest that the visual lexicogrammar is realized through the interplay of visual and scriptural images; scriptural images dominate over visual images, primarily performing a discourse-structuring role in the slides by signalling the ‘IMRAD’ stages.


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