Qualitative Decisions in Quantitative Text Analysis Research

Traditional forms of quantitative text analysis are based on counting the occurrence or co-occurrence of concepts indicated by words or phrases. Today more and more attention is given to what is said exactly in a sentence, especially in a clause. For this approach, the semantic grammar is relevant,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSociological methodology Vol. 42; no. 1; pp. 88 - 90
Main Author Popping, Roel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Los Angeles, CA Sage Publications 01.08.2012
SAGE Publications
American Sociological Association
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Summary:Traditional forms of quantitative text analysis are based on counting the occurrence or co-occurrence of concepts indicated by words or phrases. Today more and more attention is given to what is said exactly in a sentence, especially in a clause. For this approach, the semantic grammar is relevant, indicated as Subject-Verb-Valence-Object. To catch the meaning of such texts interpretation is necessary, and qualitative decisions come into the picture. The paper on event counts by Franzosi, De Fazio, and Vicari does not give attention to this fact. It refers to only one problem: Although there can be good reasons to use sentences in passive voice, they are nevertheless hard to read. A sentence in passive voice can be rewritten in active voice; a coder only has to recognize the passive voice. Generally the manifest content is considered, but the investigator might also be interested in the latent character of a message, in the "behavioral and situational" contexts of content (George 1959:27).
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ISSN:0081-1750
1467-9531
DOI:10.1177/0081175012460854