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A Method for Analyzing Sentence-Level Differences in Disciplinary Knowledge Making
56
Citations
23
References
1992
Year
Disciplinary DifferencesKnowledge ProductionMethodological IssueEducationPsycholinguisticsSemanticsCorpus LinguisticsSocial SciencesText MiningApplied LinguisticsGrammatical SubjectsComputational LinguisticsKnowledge EngineeringGrammarDiscourse AnalysisLanguage StudiesMethodological PerspectiveAutomated Knowledge AcquisitionResearch SynthesisMethodological ArticleKnowledge StructuringDisciplinary Knowledge MakingEpistemologyTheoretical IssueKnowledge ManagementKnowledge IntegrationLinguistics
This article proposes a method for examining how disciplinary differences in knowledge making are created or reflected at the sentence level. The method focuses on the grammatical subjects of sentences as key indicators of disciplinary knowledge making. Grammatical subjects of all sentences in sample academic journal articles were classified by a system identifying (a) the kind of abstraction or particularism involved and (b) the ways in which the researcher may or may not have foregrounded research methods and warrants. Findings from the sample articles in subfields of psychology, history, and literature indicated that psychology articles were more likely to foreground research methods and warrants and least likely to be particularistic. History articles tended to be intermediate. Literature articles were most likely to be particularistic and least likely to focus on research methods and warrants.
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