Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of...

51
Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson

Transcript of Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of...

Page 1: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Diction 5.0

By Ben Giffordand Terri Johnson

Page 2: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

About the creators

Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of Texas at Austin, Roderick P. Hart--he is very focused on political communication. He's "passionate about many things, but especially about his family and basketball." and

Craig Carroll, associate professor and department chair of Communication and Journalism at Lipscomb University

Page 3: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Features

• Examines text for 5 main semantic features:o Activityo Optimismo Certaintyo Realismo Commonality

Page 4: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

FeaturesIt also has built-in dictionaries for numerical terms, ambivalence, self-referencing, tenacity, leveling terms, collectives, praise, satisfaction, inspiration, blame, hardship, aggression, accomplishment, communication, cognition, passivity, spatial terms familiarity, temporal terms, present concerns, human interest, concreteness, past concern, centrality, rapport, cooperation, diversity, exclusion, liberation, denial, and motion

Page 5: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Features

• Reports an average frequency and whether the variable falls within a standard range.

• Diction can analyzeo the first 500 words of a given passageo up to 500,000 words in 500 word units averaged togethero any passage up to 5,000 words in length (500-word units)o Units smaller than 500 words

Page 6: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Comparing Bill Clinton and Barack Obama

• Make sure you have some text (.txt file)

Page 7: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Create a new project fileFile > New or Ctrl +N

Page 8: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Add the text filesEdit > Add File(s) or InsertThen navigate to your .txt files and open them

Page 9: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Check the properties

Go to File->Properties.This is especially important if you want to use SPSS

In the processing tab, check under Large File Options. “Averaged” is probably your best bet.

Page 10: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Properties continuedGive the output file a unique name. Under “Numeric Filename” highlight the text immediately before “.num” and replace it with a chosen name.

*Note: this is different from saving the entire project. When you save a project, this file is created and saved separately and can be used in SPSS

Page 11: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Choose Norms Profile• Diction notes when text falls outside of a normal range based

on previous content analyseso The default for this a "single normative profile"o Can tailor to more specific needs

Public speeches Poetry Newspaper Editorials Music lyrics etc.

• It's simple to change the profile

Page 12: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Choose Norms Profile Cont.• Go to View ->Normative Values• To choose a more specific set of norms, make a general

selection under Class, and then a more specific selection under Type.

Page 13: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Choose Norms Profile Cont.• Some normative values are "better" than others.• Searching for "Normative Values" under help-> help topics

will bring up a list of all the different profiles.

e.g. the creatorssampled 2,357campaignspeeches, but only 78 poetryand verse samples

Page 14: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Process your filesProcessing-> All Files (Ctrl+Shift+G)or Selected Files (Ctrl+G)

Page 15: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

You may have to add new wordsto the insistence score

More on that soon,but just go ahead and hit “yes”(there’s really no reason not to)

Page 16: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Viewing output

Output forone file

Abridged outputFor all files.

Page 17: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Clinton ResultsIt’s possible to look at some raw results. This presentation will touch on some of the variables. A full list is available in the manual.

Page 18: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Clinton Results

Interesting, but probably not statistically significant or practical.

Diction brings up a count of all words that appear three or more times (in a 500-word passage) called “Insistence Score”

Looks for nouns, noun-derived objects, or words that can be used as both a verb and a noun/noun-derived object

Page 19: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Clinton Results

Calculated VariablesInsistence - repetition of key termsEmbellishment - Ratio of  adj. to verbsVariety - Different words/total wordsComplexity - Avg. # of chars. per word

Master VariablesThese scores use built-in dictionaries(See next slide)

Page 20: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Clinton ResultsActivity: Language featuring movement, change, the implementation of ideas and the avoidance of inertia.ex. formula: [Aggression + Accomplishment + Communication + Motion] - [Cognitive Terms + Passivity + Embellishment]

Optimism: Language endorsing some person, group, concept or event or highlighting their positive entailments.

Certainty: Language indicating resoluteness, inflexibility, and completeness and a tendency to speak ex cathedra (authority from office/position)

Realism: Language describing tangible, immediate, recognizable matters that affect people’s everyday lives

Commonality: Language highlighting the agreed -upon values of a group and rejecting idiosyncratic modes of engagement.

Page 21: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Clinton Results

Diction flags any of these variables that it deems "out of range"

Page 22: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

When you’re ready to use SPSS…

Find where your .num file went. Copy it (Ctrl+C)

Save first (File -> Save, Ctrl + s). This creates the .num file

Page 23: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Move some stuff aroundCreate folders in C:\ called “RAWDATA” and “spssdata” if they aren’t there already. Go to C:\RAWDATA. Paste your .num file (Ctrl+V). Right-click it and click “rename.” Rename it “mystudy.dat”Click “Yes”

Page 24: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Open SPSSGet to the default blank view.Go to File->Open->Syntax…Navigate to C:\Program Files\Diction\Stats\

Page 25: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Open ‘SPSS-DIC.SPS’This file is a pain… no really. Open it, you’ll see.

Page 26: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

You need to make this…

Page 27: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Look like something like this

Page 28: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Consult the Diction manual

Go to page 54 (of the Diction 4.0 manual) and look at Figure 28.

You need to make SPSS-DIC.SPS look somewhat like that file. The most important part is that each word in all CAPS is on its own line.

Figure out where there is a line break at hit “enter” at each one.

Page 29: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

After that long and tedious process

Run the syntax. Cross fingers. Pray.

This must match up with the .dat file you created

Page 30: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

If it worked

You should have an SPPS sheet filled with data

From here, the sky is the limit

Page 31: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

For example

A simple means comparison shows Clinton was much more ambivalent in the speeches

sampled

Page 32: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Though the results are not significant

Page 33: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

WordStat

By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson

Page 34: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Craig Stovall    JetBlue Airlines

Page 35: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

To obtain a free trial of WordStat

Page 36: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

About WordStat

• Content analysis module of SimStat• Analyzes textual information

o open-ended responseso interview transcriptso journal articleso websites

• Can be used for automatic categorization of text• Can be used for manual coding• Facilitates the development of new dictionaries

Page 37: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Features• Integrated text-mining analysis• Visualization tools• Hierarchical categorization dictionary• User-generated dictionary• Keyword-in-context (KWIC) retrieval tools• Statistical analysis capabilities

o factor analysiso word frequencies 

Page 38: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

To Create Dictionary 

Go to My Computer ...C drive...Program Files...Provalis Research...Dictionary...Copy Existing CAT file...Rename to ______.cat...Right click new cat file...Open with notepad ("choose program" if notepad is nonexistent)  

Page 39: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Create dictionary using correct formatting: Category flush left, word tabbed in with " (1)" after (space is important). Everything single-space.<--Category

  <--Words

Page 40: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Dictionary needs fixing

Dictionary results

Page 41: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

To Open WordStat ...Go to CATA...Provalis Research...Simstat...Simstat for Windows

Page 42: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Go to File>Data>New

Page 43: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

You'll get a screen that looks like this:

Page 44: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Create Variables...1) Person (integer)   tab to add additional variables...2) Speech (memo)

(text files will always be memo variables)

Page 45: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

A Content Analysis on Speeches by Clinton and Obama

Step #1-Enter data• In this case, enter "1" for a speech by Obama, "2" for a Clinton speech.• Copy/paste the text into the window below when the appropriate "memo" column is

highlighted.• To add another line, hit "tab" while in the right-most column.

Page 46: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

A Content Analysis on Speeches by Clinton and Obama

Step #2 -Select the variables•  Execute the STATISTICS...CHOOSE X-Y command

Page 47: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

• Move the PERSON variable to the INDEPENDENT•  Move the SPEECH variable to the DEPENDENT•  Press the OK button

Page 48: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

A Content Analysis on Speeches by Clinton and Obama

Step # 3- Run the content analysis module• Execute STATISTICS...CONTENT ANALYSIS

Step # 4- Choose the proper dictionaries (for Inclusion) 

 

Page 49: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Speeches by Clinton and Obama

Step # 5- View the results• Click different tabs (word count and crosstabs)• Click that button

          

Page 50: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

Clinton and Obama SpeechesMore Results

Page 51: Diction 5.0 By Ben Gifford and Terri Johnson. About the creators Diction was created by the Dean of the College of Communication at The University of.

THE END...

(or should we say this is just the beginning)