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Coh-Metrix Measures Text Characteristics at Multiple Levels of Language and Discourse
Arthur C. Graesser
Danielle S. McNamara
Zhiqiang Cai
Mark Conley
Haiying Li
James Pennebaker
出版
ERIC Clearinghouse
, 2014
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=2dk8zAEACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
Coh-Metrix analyzes texts on multiple measures of language and discourse that are aligned with multilevel theoretical frameworks of comprehension. Dozens of measures funnel into five major factors that systematically vary as a function of types of texts (e.g., narrative vs. informational) and grade level: narrativity, syntactic simplicity, word concreteness, referential cohesion, and deep (causal) cohesion. Texts are automatically scaled on these five factors with Coh-Metrix-TEA (Text Easability Assessor). This article reviews how these five factors account for text variations and reports analyses that augment Coh-Metrix in two ways. First, there is a composite measure called "formality", which increases with low narrativity, syntactic complexity, word abstractness, and high cohesion. Second, the words are analyzed with Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count, an automated system that measures words in texts on dozens of psychological attributes. One next step in automated text analyses is a topics analysis that scales the difficulty of conceptual topics. [This article was published in "Elementary School Journal," v115 n2 p210-229 Dec 2014 (see EJ1047713).].