Category: Linguistics

  • “Uncovering the Discourse of Depression in Hong Kong Online News during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Critical Analysis”

    2000 words. Topic: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Depression in Hong Kong Online English News under COVID -19 [i will give you my data set and you have to use antconc 4.2.4 to generate data for Corpus analysis and CDA; 2000 words; no AI used] The study aims to explore how Hong Kong online news media depict depression during the COVID-19 pandemic. By analyzing the language used in online news reports on depression conveyed by media outlets from January 1, 2020, to December 31, 2022, the research seeks to uncover the underlying ideologies embedded within the discourse in two English online newspapers over the same pandemic period. This study intends to shed light on how depression is framed and discussed during times of crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic. Hence, the following research question has been identified in accordance with the objectives of this study: (1) What linguistic patterns being used in news reports about depression in Hong Kong online English newspapers during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 to 2022? (2) How do these linguistic features in news reports about depression in Hong Kong online English newspapers during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 to 2022 reveal or reinforce the underlying social ideologies? [TBC, to fit your analysis content] for your reference: Data for this study was collected from two prominent Hong Kong online English newspapers, namely the South China Morning Post and the Hong Kong Free Press, accessible throughout their website. The first stage of the data collection process involved a keyword search, yielding a total of 278 newspaper articles from the first selection. All included newspaper articles contain two inclusion criteria: (1) the presence of the major search term “depression”, and (2) publication within the two years from January 1, 2020, to December 31, 2022. In the second stage, the data filtration process was conducted by eliminating any irrelevant content and news features, leaving only 64 of them to be used as the data. For specificity, all the newspaper articles were filtrated and any of them were found not to primarily contain keywords of (1) “depress”; (2) “COVID”, “pandemic”, “epidemic” or “coronavirus”, and (3) “mental” was excluded. At the same time, newspaper articles with the exclusion criteria were also eliminated: (1) guest-written posts from the News feature of Opinion and Common/Letters; (2) non-local articles covering only China; (3) articles with an entertainment feature like Style magazine; and (4) articles with irrelevant search term usage in the content of this topic like Business, Economy and Law and Crime, as they may only use depression to express a specific crime case, economic situation or person that is not related to the research topic of mental health issue during COVID-19. This yielded a number of 214 news articles excluded, leaving 64 newspapers for inclusion in the database. Among these, 80% were from the South China Morning Post and 20% from the Hong Kong Free Press. At last, before uploading the data into Antconc 4.2.4, all the articles were manually copied and pasted into plain text format (.txt) as a raw document and a text clean-up in order to remove extratextual information such as advertisement and repeated content.

  • Title: The Role of Language in Shaping Our Psychological Experiences

    I need help with my language psychology homework. There are 4 short questions to be answered and a 
    response essay with at least 5 references based on the prompt. The instructions and related articles are 
    attached.

  • “The Construction of Depression in Hong Kong Online English News during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Critical Discourse Analysis”

    2000 words. Topic: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Depression in Hong Kong Online English News under COVID -19
    [i will give you my data set and you have to use antconc 4.2.4 to generate data for Corpus analysis and CDA; 2000 words; no AI used]
    The study aims to explore how Hong Kong online news media depict depression during the COVID-19 pandemic. By analyzing the language used in online news reports on depression conveyed by media outlets from January 1, 2020, to December 31, 2022, the research seeks to uncover the underlying ideologies embedded within the discourse in two English online newspapers over the same pandemic period. This study intends to shed light on how depression is framed and discussed during times of crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic. Hence, the following research question has been identified in accordance with the objectives of this study:
    (1) What linguistic patterns being used in news reports about depression in Hong Kong online English newspapers during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 to 2022?
    (2) How do these linguistic features in news reports about depression in Hong Kong online English newspapers during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 to 2022 reveal or reinforce the underlying social ideologies?
    [TBC, to fit your analysis content]
    for your reference:
    Data for this study was collected from two prominent Hong Kong online English newspapers, namely the South China Morning Post and the Hong Kong Free Press, accessible throughout their website. The first stage of the data collection process involved a keyword search, yielding a total of 278 newspaper articles from the first selection. All included newspaper articles contain two inclusion criteria: (1) the presence of the major search term “depression”, and (2) publication within the two years from January 1, 2020, to December 31, 2022. In the second stage, the data filtration process was conducted by eliminating any irrelevant content and news features, leaving only 64 of them to be used as the data. For specificity, all the newspaper articles were filtrated and any of them were found not to primarily contain keywords of (1) “depress”; (2) “COVID”, “pandemic”, “epidemic” or “coronavirus”, and (3) “mental” was excluded. At the same time, newspaper articles with the exclusion criteria were also eliminated: (1) guest-written posts from the News feature of Opinion and Common/Letters; (2) non-local articles covering only China; (3) articles with an entertainment feature like Style magazine; and (4) articles with irrelevant search term usage in the content of this topic like Business, Economy and Law and Crime, as they may only use depression to express a specific crime case, economic situation or person that is not related to the research topic of mental health issue during COVID-19. This yielded a number of 214 news articles excluded, leaving 64 newspapers for inclusion in the database. Among these, 80% were from the South China Morning Post and 20% from the Hong Kong Free Press. At last, before uploading the data into Antconc 4.2.4, all the articles were manually copied and pasted into plain text format (.txt) as a raw document and a text clean-up in order to remove extratextual information such as advertisement and repeated content.

  • The Pragmatics of Definiteness: A Study of Native Speaker Judgments in English

    Approximately 10 pages, 12pt font, single-spaced, Times New Roman
    Sensible margins!
    Include page numbers!
    Content-organization:
    The goal of this assignment is for you to write about the pragmatic comications of some topic which invalves the use of natural language in o Your paper should:
    • make clear what the topic is and what its pragmatic relevance is
collecting data (e.g. if you asked for native speaker judgments from others)
    : Descuite the passat upirational stunese resuls and whether
    they fulfill or don’t fulfill your starting hypothesis/hypotheses.
    Structure of the paper:
    Introduction (just a paragraph or two)
    Briefly introduce what the paper is about (what language we’re looking at & topics you will cover wrt. this language);
    Body (with sections & subsections): this is the bulk of the paper
    Describe the topic in greater detail with relevant examples (avoid making general/sweeping
    statements
    without
    supporting examples or evidence);
    Describe the pragmatic relevance of the topic (again, avoid statements that are broad and vague; be as specific and precise as possible);
    Present the starting hypothesis/hypotheses you would like to test (ideally, you would motivate the hypothesis: i.e. why this hypothesis as opposed to some other hypothesis)
    Where appropriate – ideally in all cases where you are gathering data/judgments from someone else – carefully describe the methodology of data collection:
    How many speakers will you be consulting
    What kinds of questions/prompts will you give them
    How will you incorporate the role of context in your prompts? E.g. If you’re testing speakers’ intuitions about definiteness, how will you ensure that the speakers
have
    enough
    contextual
    information/background to give the right pragmatic judgments about uniqueness/familiarity/specificity etc?
    Any other information you deem relevant for the methodology (topic-specific) – there might be none, and that’s OK;
    Present the results of your study in detail. Here especially it is important to corroborate your findings with examples (with contextual cues included);
    Did the results fulfill your starting hypothesis/hypotheses?
    If so, what pragmatic implications does this have? o If not, why do you think it doesn’t, and how might you need to modify your hypothesis to accommodate these results
    Conclusion/reflection (just a paragraph or two)
    Summarize the study & findings so far and mention/discuss any open questions remaining or directions for future research
    YOU HAVE TO USE THE DATA ON THE PICTURE NOT A DIFFERENT ONE