2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.jeap.2019.05.005
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Reporting research in applied linguistics: The role of nativeness and expertise

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Cited by 16 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
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“…In a comparison of a learner corpus of academic essays written by first-year undergraduate students and a reference corpus of published research articles in the same disciplines, Liardét and Black (2019) revealed that novice writers on average used fewer reporting verbs than expert writers. This finding is supported by Marti et al (2019) comparative study on reporting verbs. Furthermore, as shown in Liardét and Black (2019), compared to the reporting verbs in learners' essays, a larger proportion of the reporting verbs used by experts are used to convey writers' evaluative stance.…”
Section: Citation Practices In Academic Writingsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…In a comparison of a learner corpus of academic essays written by first-year undergraduate students and a reference corpus of published research articles in the same disciplines, Liardét and Black (2019) revealed that novice writers on average used fewer reporting verbs than expert writers. This finding is supported by Marti et al (2019) comparative study on reporting verbs. Furthermore, as shown in Liardét and Black (2019), compared to the reporting verbs in learners' essays, a larger proportion of the reporting verbs used by experts are used to convey writers' evaluative stance.…”
Section: Citation Practices In Academic Writingsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…In addition, the present study reveals that there are significant differences in the use of subcategories of reporting verbs by non-native novice writers and experts. It can be confirmed in the study of Marti, Yilmaz and Bayyurt (2019). Marti and his companies investigated the differences between native and non-native writers in their reporting practices, which suggests that professional knowledge is an important factor in differences of academic writing.…”
Section: Similarities and Differences In Ttr And Types Of Reporting V...mentioning
confidence: 76%
“…Friginal (2013) compared the L1 upper-level college writers and the professional writers in forestry and found that students used more Show and Think verbs and fewer Argue verbs than professionals did. Marti et al (2019) set out to explore differences by levels of expertise (expert/novice) and nativeness (L1 English/Turkish) in applied linguistics, and reported that both native and non-native expert writers show little variation in their reporting practices yet remarkable variation ("discursively hybrid") was found between non-native novice writers and the other groups (p.98). These studies pointed out several key variables in RV usage patterns, including disciplinary diversity, levels of expertise as well as native/non-native disagreement.…”
Section: A Semantic Categorization Of Rvsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Relevant investigations have been pursued into the inclusion of RVs in academic writing mostly in terms of semantic categorization or evaluation (Kwon et al, 2018;Uba, 2019), syntactic patterns (Jarkovská & Kučírková, 2021;Shaw, 1992), types and functions by different populations (Liardé t & Black, 2019; Marti et al, 2019;Thompson & Ye, 1991;Yeganeh & Boghayeri, 2015) as well as disciplinary differences (Hyland & Jiang, 2019;Jarkovská & Kučírková, 2021;Uba, 2019). All have provided valuable insights into the understanding of citation practice in scholarly writing.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%