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This chapter interrogates corpus data to analyze the three alternations subject to study in this book one by one using a battery of state-of-the-art analysis techniques in addition to customary descriptive statistics, Conditional Random Forest (CRF) modeling and mixed-effects logistic regression analysis. The goal of the chapter is to uncover qualitative generalizations: for example, we see that while effect directions of constraints on variation are generally stable across varieties of English, effects strengths can be significantly different.
This chapter is inspired by work in comparative sociolinguistics and quantitative dialectometry. We use a corpus-based method (Variation-Based Distance and Similarity Modeling – VADIS for short) to quantify the similarity between, and coherence across, the varieties of English under study as a function of the correspondence of the ways in which language users choose between different ways of saying the same thing. Key findings include the result that probabilistic grammars are remarkably stable across varieties but that coherence across alternations is not perfect.
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