tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4953008377950396317.post1305323102701228..comments2024-03-17T06:13:15.256-07:00Comments on SearchReSearch: Answer: How often do we write... this?Dan Russellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13603209997260423532noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4953008377950396317.post-12460840124127205812015-12-22T12:36:32.756-08:002015-12-22T12:36:32.756-08:00Interesting post, thank you!
For #1, I wonder if ...Interesting post, thank you!<br /><br />For #1, I wonder if London dominates because so many English-language books and other published texts were published there and therefore London appears on the book's title pages with the publishers name. <br /><br />For #2, can the search be limited to those liquids *as* beverages, not as topics of industry or nutritional research (or coffee beans or water buffalo or beer fries)?<br /><br />It's really hard to nail down the context of the usage of a word. Steve Cramerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13111555584724427916noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4953008377950396317.post-34642002288818062182015-12-15T07:27:22.327-08:002015-12-15T07:27:22.327-08:00Good Morning, Dr. Russell.
This Challenge has lo...Good Morning, Dr. Russell. <br /><br />This Challenge has lots of lessons and many questions and as you said, we can invest many time finding words and results. <br /><br />[ word frequency database ] is a great query. I decided to try Ngram because you wrote " in a large collection of written English text". That was a big clue. <br /><br />What do you mean with "Mechanical Turk"? I tried [define Mechanical Turk]Wikipedia gives twp possible answers but I better ask you. <br /><br />In Q2, I found that clicking water divided it in many subgroups(don't know how to do this again.) In this case water is a beverage because Ngram looks context or water can be like New York state Vs city? and all kinds of waters are together. <br /><br />In the additional features, at the bottom says: "Run your own experiment! Raw data is available for download" that sounds interesting and complicated.<br /><br />Thanks Dr. Russell. A new SearchReSearch Tools for us. <br />Ramon Gonzalezhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16129830563029534511noreply@blogger.com