Abstract

The present paper explores whether researchers' blogs may be useful as corpora to detect specialised neologisms in economic-administrative domains, such as Finance, Management or Macroeconomics. Three different blogs have been selected as corpora ( Crisis, restructuring and growth, Center for service innovation and Focus , respectively), all representing cross-disciplinary research projects within the economic-administrative domains at the Norwegian School of Economics. In the study I focus on specialised neologisms, i.e., expressions or terms which are used to describe concepts relevant within the cross-disciplinary research projects. This includes expressions originating from English which are now either used as English loan (anglicisms) in Norwegian (‘self-serving biases'), as calques, such as ‘spill-over-effekter' (‘spill-over effects') or ‘multikanalsetting' (‘multi-channel setting'), or as Norwegian substitute words like ‘samskaping' (‘co-creation') (Sandoy 1997). The analysis builds on a study which explores methods for detecting specialised neologisms in the Norwegian Newspaper Corpus (NNC; http://avis.uib.no/), with particular focus on financial jargon (Kristiansen 2012a). A motivation behind the study is to contribute to lexicographical and terminological work with focus on maintaining and developing Norwegian special language of economic-administrative domains. Furthermore, it aims at providing a basis for discussion among researchers about which expressions should be used to denote the various topics and concepts in question. This will in turn be important input to those involved in popularising the research and to lecturers in the relevant domains. The methodology is based on the NNC and in particular its neology extractor which detects and produces lists of word forms of newly harvested texts not previously recorded in the NNC (i.e. some 5 million word forms) (Andersen and Hofland 2012). The corpora have been established by Knut Hofland at the Computational Language Unit at Uni Computing. Keywords: scientific blog, neologism, economic terminology

Highlights

  • The analysis builds on a study which explores methods for detecting specialised neologisms in the Norwegian Newspaper Corpus (NNC; http://avis.uib.no/), with particular focus on financial jargon (Kristiansen 2012a)

  • The methodology is based on the NNC and in particular its neology extractor which detects and produces lists of word forms of newly harvested texts not previously recorded in the NNC (Andersen and Hofland 2012)

  • By specialised neologisms I here refer to terminology and expressions which are used in connection with economic-­‐administrative domains and not new words in general

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Summary

Introduction1

A typical characteristic of domains related to business is that they are highly dynamic. The analysis of neologisms in the researchers’ blogs aims at contributing to lexicographical and terminographical work focusing on maintaining and developing Norwegian special language of economic-­‐administrative domains. It aims at providing a basis for discussion among researchers about which expressions should be used to denote the various topics and concepts in question. The research themes include innovations in customer and brand experiences, co-­‐creation and open innovation processes, business model innovations and infrastructure and structural innovations Together these three projects embrace the breath of research at NHH, which is a typical business school focusing on economic-­‐administrative domains, such as economics, finance, accounting, strategy and management and organisational studies.

Harvesting neologisms
Categorisation of specialised neologisms in the blogs
Neologisms in context
Findings
Concluding remarks
Full Text
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