The Psychological Meaning of Words: Liwc and Computerized Text Analysis Methods (2010) : Tausczik, Yla R. and Pennebaker, James W. DOI: https://t.co/VZv4EyMKUV #game #meta #rule #theory #my_bibtex
Learning about LIWC and role in #iCBT👇. Entered an email from myself to a colleague as a test. Authenticity score: 82/100, Clout score: 23/100. High score = better performance. I think its assessment of me is pretty accurate @vari_wileman https://t.co/
The Psychological Meaning of Words: Liwc and Computerized Text Analysis Methods (2010) : Tausczik, Yla R. and Pennebaker, James W. DOI: https://t.co/VZv4Ez4mjv #game #meta #rule #theory #my_bibtex
Tausczik, Y. R., Pennebaker, J. W. (2010). The psychological meaning of words: LIWC and computerized text analysis methods. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 29(1), 24-54. https://t.co/YJCXBtBgya @federalreserve #PatternRecognition #DeepLearning h
Congratulations to @jwpennebaker and Yla Tausczik! This paper is crucial for anyone interested in psychology of language research and automated text analysis.
Congratulations to Jamie Pennebaker (@jwpennebaker) and Yla Tausczik! Their 2010 paper in JLSP just received a 10-year Impact Award from @SAGE_Publishing. It has been cited over 4,200 times and remains a seminal text in psychology of language research: h
(3/4) Since the start of 2021, the study has provided evidence-based insight into issues such as the US Capitol's insurrection and how politicians responded to the verdict of the Derek Chauvin trial. https://t.co/S9lBH1GQrZ
(2/4) The top-cited paper, "The Psychological Meaning of Words," has been cited over 2,000 times since 2010. In 2016, it was included in a policy briefing from @nberpubs on successful leadership. https://t.co/S9lBH1GQrZ @jwpennebaker
@jillzzy I have no idea why it’s not loading—it’s a good paper though. It’s also available here: https://t.co/C5jevWxBx8
Here is another #qualitative #tool used in #linguistics #LIWC a #text #analysis #program https://t.co/ZO6bTIYVwk
@Ben_C_J Are you familiar with LIWC? That's the program that I'm using in my PhD research where I'm looking at psycholinguistic sex differences and sexual orientation differences in a sample of novels comprising >60 million words. For more info on LIWC