Researching Vocabulary A Vocabulary Research Manual

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2010-09-15
Publisher(s): Palgrave Macmillan
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Summary

Researching Vocabularyis written for language researchers who want to carry out valid and reliable studies on first and second language vocabulary. The author is a well-known vocabulary researcher and he outlines the dos and don'ts of good lexical research. Practical advice is given on a wide variety of research methodologies, ranging from paper-and-pencil tests of acquisition to the newest psycholinguistic techniques utilizing fMRI scanning. Some of the many topics include initial learning of the form-meaning link, attrition, the role of frequency and the L1 in vocabulary research, receptive and productive knowledge of vocabulary, formulaic language, word associations, vocabulary measurement, vocabulary learning strategies, and computer simulations of vocabulary acquisition. The book includes a Resources section which outlines the lexical tests, corpora, software, internet sites, and other resources available to vocabulary researchers. A list of past and present vocabulary researchers, annotated with their specialisms, is also provided.

Author Biography

NORBERT SCHMITT is Professor of Applied Linguistics at the University of Nottingham, UK. He is interested in all aspects of second language vocabulary acquisition, processing, use, and pedagogy. His current research focuses on formulaic language, the interface of vocabulary and reading, vocabulary testing, and implict vs. explicit knowledge of vocabulary.

Table of Contents

Quick Checklistp. xi
General Editors' Prefacep. xiii
Prefacep. xiv
Acknowledgementsp. xvi
Overview of Vocabulary Issues
Vocabulary Use and Acquisitionp. 3
Ten key issuesp. 3
Vocabulary is an important component of language usep. 3
A large vocabulary is required for language usep. 6
Formulaic language is as important as individual wordsp. 8
Corpus analysis is an important research toolp. 12
Vocabulary knowledge is a rich and complex constructp. 15
Vocabulary learning is incremental in naturep. 19
Vocabulary attrition and long-term retentionp. 23
Vocabulary form is importantp. 24
Recognizing the importance of the L1 in vocabulary studiesp. 25
Engagement is a critical factor in vocabulary acquisitionp. 26
Vocabulary and readingp. 29
A sample of prominent knowledge gaps in the field of vocabulary studiesp. 35
Foundations of Vocabulary Research
Issues of Vocabulary Acquisition and Usep. 47
Form-meaning relationshipsp. 49
Single orthographic words and multi-word itemsp. 49
Formal similarityp. 50
Synonymy and homonymyp. 52
Learning new form and meaning versus 'relabelling'p. 52
Meaningp. 52
Imageability and concretenessp. 53
Literal and idiomatic meaningp. 53
Multiple meaning sensesp. 54
Content versus function wordsp. 54
Intrinsic difficultyp. 55
Network connections (associations)p. 58
Frequencyp. 63
The importance of frequency in lexical studiesp. 63
Frequency and other word knowledge aspectsp. 64
L1/L2 frequencyp. 66
Subjective and objective estimates of frequencyp. 67
Frequency levelsp. 68
Obtaining frequency informationp. 70
L1 influence on vocabulary learningp. 71
Describing different types of vocabularyp. 75
Receptive and productive masteryp. 79
Vocabulary learning strategies/self-regulating behaviorp. 89
Computer simulations of vocabularyp. 97
Psycholinguistic/neurolinguistic researchp. 105
Formulaic Languagep. 117
Identificationp. 120
Strength of association - hypothesis testsp. 124
Strength of association - mutual informationp. 130
A directional measure of collocationp. 131
Formulaic language with open slotsp. 132
Processing formulaic languagep. 134
Acquisition of formulaic languagep. 136
The psycholinguistic reality of corpus-extracted formulaic sequencesp. 141
Nonnative use of formulaic languagep. 142
Researching Vocabulary
Issues in Research Methodologyp. 149
Qualitative researchp. 149
Participantsp. 150
The need for multiple measures of vocabularyp. 152
The need for longitudinal studies and delayed posttestsp. 155
Selection of target lexical itemsp. 158
Sample size of lexical itemsp. 164
Interpreting and reporting resultsp. 166
Measuring Vocabularyp. 173
Global measurement issuesp. 173
Issues in writing vocabulary itemsp. 174
Determining pre-existing vocabulary knowledgep. 179
Validity and reliability of lexical measurementp. 181
Placing cut-points in studyp. 187
Measuring vocabulary sizep. 187
Units of counting vocabularyp. 188
Sampling from dictionaries or other referencesp. 193
Recognition/receptive vocabulary size measuresp. 196
Recall/productive vocabulary size measuresp. 203
Measuring the quality (depth) of vocabulary knowledgep. 216
Developmental approachp. 217
Dimensions (components) approachp. 224
Measuring automaticity/speed of processingp. 242
Measuring organizationp. 247
Measuring attrition and degrees of residual lexical retentionp. 256
Example Research Projectsp. 260
Resources
Vocabulary resourcesp. 279
Instrumentsp. 279
Vocabulary levels testp. 279
Vocabulary size testp. 293
Meara's_lognostics measurement instrumentsp. 306
Corporap. 307
Corpora representing general English (mainly written)p. 309
Corpora representing spoken Englishp. 320
Corpora representing national varieties of Englishp. 323
Corpora representing academic/business Englishp. 324
Corpora representing young native Englishp. 325
Corpora representing learner Englishp. 325
Corpora representing languages other than Englishp. 326
Parallel corporap. 326
Monolingual corporap. 327
Corpus compilationsp. 331
Web-based sources of corporap. 333
Bibliographies concerning corporap. 335
Concordancers/toolsp. 335
Vocabulary listsp. 345
Websitesp. 347
Bibliographiesp. 351
Important personalities in the field of vocabulary studiesp. 352
Notesp. 359
Referencesp. 362
Indexp. 385
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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