2023
DOI: 10.1002/leap.1515
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Promotion and caution in research article abstracts: The use of positive, negative and hedge words across disciplines and rankings

Abstract: as a promotional genre has been an increasing interest in recent years, leading to an intriguing debate on the objectivity of scientific writing. The present study investigated the promotion and caution in research article abstracts through the use of positive, negative and hedge words across disciplines and rankings based on a large and principled dataset (more than 12.6 million words). The corpus was designed and built with full consideration of representativeness, structure, balance, and size in terms of di… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 93 publications
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“…However, since academic writing practices are not universal, academic literacy needs of students across disciplines also vary reflecting the differences in writing conventions which can occur at word-, phrase-, sentence-or text-level. Examples of such disciplinary variables include the specialised technical terminology characteristic of individual fields of study (Liu & Lei, 2019;Nation, 2001); the use of hedges and boosters (Jalilifar, 2007;Takimoto, 2015;Xie & Mi, 2023); voice, stance and engagement (Hyland, 2005;Silver, 2012); citation practices (Hyland, 1999(Hyland, , 2006Pandita & Singh, 2017); self-mention (McGrath, 2016;Mohsen, 2016;Tao, 2021); passive voice (Bada & Ulum, 2018;Leong, 2021); or the variety of genres with a range of structural patterns common in different academic domains (Hyland, 2006). These examples illustrate the challenge that diverse disciplinary backgrounds pose for EAP practitioners who are not specialists in the students' target fields and may thus feel ill-equipped to cope with the differences in disciplinary writing conventions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, since academic writing practices are not universal, academic literacy needs of students across disciplines also vary reflecting the differences in writing conventions which can occur at word-, phrase-, sentence-or text-level. Examples of such disciplinary variables include the specialised technical terminology characteristic of individual fields of study (Liu & Lei, 2019;Nation, 2001); the use of hedges and boosters (Jalilifar, 2007;Takimoto, 2015;Xie & Mi, 2023); voice, stance and engagement (Hyland, 2005;Silver, 2012); citation practices (Hyland, 1999(Hyland, , 2006Pandita & Singh, 2017); self-mention (McGrath, 2016;Mohsen, 2016;Tao, 2021); passive voice (Bada & Ulum, 2018;Leong, 2021); or the variety of genres with a range of structural patterns common in different academic domains (Hyland, 2006). These examples illustrate the challenge that diverse disciplinary backgrounds pose for EAP practitioners who are not specialists in the students' target fields and may thus feel ill-equipped to cope with the differences in disciplinary writing conventions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%