Amanote Research

Amanote Research

    RegisterSign In

Predicting the Confusion Level of Text Excerpts With Syntactic, Lexical and N-Gram Features

doi 10.21125/edulearn.2018.1959
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract

Available in full text

Date

July 1, 2018

Authors
Tiago Silva PedroJosé Luís SilvaRúben Pereira
Publisher

IATED


Related search

Contextual Phrase-Level Polarity Analysis Using Lexical Affect Scoring and Syntactic N-Grams

2009English

Lexical Features Are More Vulnerable, Syntactic Features Have More Predictive Power

2019English

Combining Lexical and Syntactic Features for Detecting Content-Dense Texts in News

Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research
Artificial Intelligence
2017English

Lexical and Syntactic Causatives in Oromo

Language
LinguisticsLanguage
1988English

Lexical Chunking Effects in Syntactic Processing

Cognitive Linguistics
LinguisticsEducational PsychologyLanguageDevelopmental
2008English

Automatic Dialogue Act Recognition With Syntactic Features

Language Resources and Evaluation
LinguisticsEducationLibraryLanguageInformation Sciences
2014English

Types of Lexical Complexity in English: Syntactic Categories and the Lexicon

Studia Anglica Posnaniensia
LinguisticsLiteratureLiterary TheoryLanguage
2012English

Lexical Decision in Sentences: Effects of Syntactic Structure

Memory and Cognition
ArtsNeuropsychologyCognitive PsychologyHumanitiesPhysiological PsychologyMedicineExperimental
1984English

Perceptual and Lexical Priming of Syntactic Construction in Young Children

2019English

Amanote Research

Note-taking for researchers

Follow Amanote

© 2025 Amaplex Software S.P.R.L. All rights reserved.

Privacy PolicyRefund Policy