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Hi Marco,<br><br>
The following study may be of interest:<br><br>
R. SIMPSON-VLACH and N. C. ELLIS (2010). An Academic Formulas List: New
Methods in Phraseology Research. <i>Applied Linguistics:</i> 31/4:
487–512 <br><br>
In this study the authors have asked teachers to rate a series of
co-occurrences selected on the basis of n-gram length, frequency band and
MI band.<br><br>
<font face="Arial, Helvetica">Best wishes,<br><br>
Sylviane <br><br>
--------------<br>
Sylviane Granger<br>
Centre for English Corpus Linguistics<br>
University of Louvain<br><br>
<br><br>
</font>Le 13:43 24/04/2013,marco baroni écrit:<br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite="">Dear Corpora-ers,<br><br>
Is anybody aware of experimental studies where researchers have looked at
whether subjects' explicit intuitions about the probability of
co-occurrence of two terms correlate with (functions of) the frequency of
co-occurrence of two terms in a corpus?<br><br>
I am aware of studies correlating other psychological variables, such as
the degree of association of words in free association norms, with corpus
co-occurrence, but I was not able to find anything relevant to the
specific question I'm asking above.<br><br>
Any advice greatly appreciated.<br><br>
Ciao,<br><br>
Marco<br><br>
-- <br>
Marco Baroni<br>
Center for Mind/Brain Sciences<br>
University of Trento<br>
<a href="http://clic.cimec.unitn.it/marco" eudora="autourl">
http://clic.cimec.unitn.it/marco</a><br><br>
<br>
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