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  2. Content analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_analysis

    The simplest and most objective form of content analysis considers unambiguous characteristics of the text such as word frequencies, the page area taken by a newspaper column, or the duration of a radio or television program. Analysis of simple word frequencies is limited because the meaning of a word depends on surrounding text.

  3. Text mining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text_mining

    Quantitative text analysis: a set of techniques stemming from the social sciences where either a human judge or a computer extracts semantic or grammatical relationships between words in order to find out the meaning or stylistic patterns of, usually, a casual personal text for the purpose of psychological profiling etc. [14]

  4. Online content analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_content_analysis

    Online content analysis or online textual analysis refers to a collection of research techniques used to describe and make inferences about online material through systematic coding and interpretation. Online content analysis is a form of content analysis for analysis of Internet-based communication.

  5. Causal analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causal_analysis

    Causal analysis is the field of experimental design and statistics pertaining to establishing cause and effect. [1] Typically it involves establishing four elements: correlation, sequence in time (that is, causes must occur before their proposed effect), a plausible physical or information-theoretical mechanism for an observed effect to follow from a possible cause, and eliminating the ...

  6. Text Analysis Portal for Research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text_Analysis_Portal_for...

    TAPoR (Text Analysis Portal for Research) is a gateway that highlights tools and code snippets usable for textual criticism of all types. The project is housed at the University of Alberta , and is currently led by Geoffrey Rockwell, Stéfan Sinclair, Kirsten C. Uszkalo, and Milena Radzikowska.

  7. Concision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concision

    In common usage and linguistics, concision (also called conciseness, succinctness, [1] terseness, brevity, or laconicism) is a communication principle [2] of eliminating redundancy, [3] generally achieved by using as few words as possible in a sentence while preserving its meaning. More generally, it is achieved through the omission of parts ...

  8. Causal loop diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causal_loop_diagram

    reinforcing if, after going around the loop, one ends up with the same result as the initial assumption. balancing if the result contradicts the initial assumption. Or to put it in other words: reinforcing loops have an even number of negative links (zero also is even, see example below) balancing loops have an odd number of negative links.

  9. Explicit semantic analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explicit_semantic_analysis

    ESA was designed by Evgeniy Gabrilovich and Shaul Markovitch as a means of improving text categorization [2] and has been used by this pair of researchers to compute what they refer to as "semantic relatedness" by means of cosine similarity between the aforementioned vectors, collectively interpreted as a space of "concepts explicitly defined ...