posted on 2020-04-06, 14:14authored byNeslihan Suzen, Evgeny M Mirkes, Alexander N Gorban
In this paper, we present a scientific corpus of abstracts of academic papers
in English -- Leicester Scientific Corpus (LSC). The LSC contains 1,673,824
abstracts of research articles and proceeding papers indexed by Web of Science
(WoS) in which publication year is 2014. Each abstract is assigned to at least
one of 252 subject categories. Paper metadata include these categories and the
number of citations. We then develop scientific dictionaries named Leicester
Scientific Dictionary (LScD) and Leicester Scientific Dictionary-Core (LScDC),
where words are extracted from the LSC. The LScD is a list of 974,238 unique
words (lemmas). The LScDC is a core list (sub-list) of the LScD with 104,223
lemmas. It was created by removing LScD words appearing in not greater than 10
texts in the LSC. LScD and LScDC are available online. Both the corpus and
dictionaries are developed to be later used for quantification of meaning in
academic texts.
Finally, the core list LScDC was analysed by comparing its words and word
frequencies with a classic academic word list 'New Academic Word List (NAWL)'
containing 963 word families, which is also sampled from an academic corpus.
The major sources of the corpus where NAWL is extracted are Cambridge English
Corpus (CEC), oral sources and textbooks. We investigate whether two
dictionaries are similar in terms of common words and ranking of words. Our
comparison leads us to main conclusion: most of words of NAWL (99.6%) are
present in the LScDC but two lists differ in word ranking. This difference is
measured.