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Soundscapes in English and Spanish: a corpus investigation of verb constructions ... : Soundscapes in English and Spanish: a corpus investigation of verb constructions ...
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Soundscapes in English and Spanish: a corpus investigation of verb constructions ... : Soundscapes in English and Spanish: a corpus investigation of verb constructions ...
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Annotating speaker stance in discourse:the Brexit Blog Corpus
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Visual Analysis of Sentiment and Stance in Social Media Texts ...
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Evaluating stance-annotated sentences from political blogs regarding the Brexit:a quantitative analysis
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Annotating speaker stance in discourse: the Brexit Blog Corpus (BBC) ... : Annotating speaker stance in discourse: the Brexit Blog Corpus (BBC) ...
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Stance Classification in Texts from Blogs on the 2016 British Referendum
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Identifying the Authors’ National Variety of English in Social Media Text
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Visual Analysis of Text Annotations for Stance Classification with ALVA ...
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Evaluative polarity words in risky choice framing
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Abstract:
This article is concerned with how we make decisions based on how problems are presented to us and the effect that the framing of the problem might have on our choices. Current philosophical and psychological accounts of the framing effect in experiments such as the Asian Disease Problem (ADP) concern reference points and domains (gains and losses). We question the importance of reference points and domains. Instead, we adopt a linguistic perspective focussing on the role of the evaluative polarity evoked by the words – negative and positive – used to describe the options in the decision problem. We show that the evaluative polarity of the different wordings in the ADP better explain participants' behaviour than reference points and domains. We propose two models in which the values given to evaluative polarity words (their valence) directly influence the strength of framing. The results indicate that linguistic considerations regarding evaluative polarity have to be considered in relation to the ADP. The account resembles Fuzzy-Trace-Theory but allows for the strength of evaluative polarity to directly affect behaviour. In the discussion, we also assess how evaluative polarity relates to negation, antonyms and the communicative frame within which the choices are presented.
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URL: https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415443/1/Framing_Pragmatics.pdf https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415443/
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Visual analysis of online social media to open up the investigation of stance phenomena
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