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In the Introduction, the editors describe the motivations and aims underlying the publication of the book against the background of the importance of corpus linguistics in current research and the associated methodological diversification. The didactic orientation of the book is outlined, as is its organization into four major parts and the contribution made by each chapter. Going beyond a summary of the contents, the editors voice some reflections on the state of the art in corpus linguistics and desiderata for future research. Finally, recommendations for further reading are listed and provided with comments.
This chapter sets out by discussing the way in which multidimensional techniques and visualizations have been used to analyse linguistic data. While, for instance, multidimensional scaling and unrooted phenograms (or NeighborNets) have primarily been designed for exploratory purposes, the author argues that they are in fact regularly used to put linguistic assumptions or hypotheses to the test. Cluster goodness (in terms of internal coherence and external distance from other clusters) in such approaches are typically evaluated based on a two-dimensional visualization. The author compares the affordances and limitations of visual inspection with a quantitative set of metrics that directly relates to visual displays but adds a degree of precision not attained by the human eye. The empirical part of the paper applies both approaches to a study of concessive constructions in six varieties of English, based on spoken and written material from the International Corpus of English. The author suggests that the new metrics can be usefully applied to a variety of multidimensional techniques to endow them with a measure of objectivity.