Natural Language Processing – Pragmatic Analysis via the Speech Act Theory Logic and Classification and Basic Controversial Notions of Linguistic Anthropology Views: The Pre-Researched Discourse Fieldwork Re-Evaluation as the Language on Society Impact Confirmation Hypothesis Aftermath

  • Senka Majetic Dr. M.Sc., Independent Researcher, B&H
Keywords: computer-mediated language, NLP, language and society, discourse, Linguistic Anthropology, speech act theory

Abstract

The research was born from insights into earlier studies related to gender and language which confirmed assumptions that women often advise using instructions. When the research results were transferred to the computer-mediated language medium, the confirmed fact experienced its maximum impact in confirming the influence of language on society, a fact predicted several years ago. The originality of the analysis is based on the research of a specific segment of computer-mediated communication – asynchronous communication. Below is the originality of the patent overview, also included in the introductory notes of the study proposed via this publication. The study involves fieldwork and project proposal research. Analysing the corpus, using the speech acts theory, "universal [linguistic] tendencies" have been proven, as well as the universal language factual notions "often criticised in Linguistic Anthropology", cf. what follows. Insight into a Naturally Processed Language is the naturally derived research outcome!

References

Cameron, D. (2003). Gender and Language Ideologies. In J. Holmes & M. Meyenhoff (Eds.), The Handbook of Language and Gender. Oxford: OUP.
Goodwin, M. H. (2006). The Hidden Life of Girls: Games of Stance, Status, and Exclusion. New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell.
Lenard-Božić, D. (2016). Gender Differences in the Length of Words and Sentences on the Corpus of Congressional Speeches. IJIR, 2/9.
Majetic, S. (2019/20). A sociolinguistic analysis of asynchronous communication with special reference to gender differences in language use [Unpublished Ph. D. dissertation]. Sarajevo: University of Sarajevo.
Published
2025-08-11
How to Cite
Majetic, S. (2025). Natural Language Processing – Pragmatic Analysis via the Speech Act Theory Logic and Classification and Basic Controversial Notions of Linguistic Anthropology Views: The Pre-Researched Discourse Fieldwork Re-Evaluation as the Language on Society Impact Confirmation Hypothesis Aftermath. European Journal of Science, Innovation and Technology, 5(3), 329-344. Retrieved from https://ejsit-journal.com/index.php/ejsit/article/view/686
Section
Articles