Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Isobelle Clarke

Preview
UKRI announces winners of £120 million Future Leaders Fellowships Research into the causes of lung cancer and Alzheimer’s disease are among 77 projects to be funded by UKRI’s Future Leaders Fellowships.

I am so pleased to announce that I have been awarded a @ukri.org Future Leaders Fellowship www.ukri.org/news/ukri-an... to undertake the project 'A Multi-Dimensional Understanding of the Digital Far Right'.

7 months ago 61 10 16 0
Writing Wrongs

‼️ Out now ‼️
🎙️ Writing Wrongs 🎙️ our Season One Series finale:
⁉️ The Questions and Answers Episode ⁉️

You can listen on Spotify 👉 t.co/fES8uEi14m Apple Podcasts or any podcast platform or direct from our webpages by going to 👉www.aston.ac.uk/research/forensic-lingui...

8 months ago 3 4 1 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

💥An action-packed morning at #LancsSS25 ! With talks from @tinekebrunfaut.bsky.social , @issyclarke.bsky.social , @vaclavbrezina.bsky.social , a practical session on collocations and the launch of #Lancsbox X 5.5.0!

10 months ago 10 3 0 0

I'll take that...

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
Post image

'Masculinities and Language' by @paulari.bsky.social and me, out now! You can read the whole thing #openaccess here: tinyurl.com/9h6wn83a

1 year ago 94 34 3 3
Video

A forensic meteorologist?! ⛅

@issyclarke.bsky.social shares what they do in our podcast 'Writing Wrongs' (www.aston.ac.uk/research/for...), featuring @drniccimacleod.bsky.social and @timgrant123.bsky.social. You can't miss it!

1 year ago 14 5 1 1

Last chance to register for the Zoom link! Join us tomorrow for Professor Chris Hart's lecture "Using the NewsScape Corpus to Explore Multimodal Meaning-Making in TV News Communication About Immigration". Hosted by our department of Applied Linguistics and Discourse Studies at Carleton University.

1 year ago 3 1 0 0
Preview
Imposters Tending To The Wild with Dr Isobelle Clarke Writing Wrongs · Episode

In this episode of the Writing Wrongs #podcast from @aifl.bsky.social, @timgrant123.bsky.social & @issyclarke.bsky.social discuss their experience of doing an authorship analysis to help the police identify the builder of a crude bomb.

Listen here: open.spotify.com/episode/6nay...

1 year ago 10 5 0 0
First page of journal article entitled "COVID-19 vaccine conspiracy theories, discourses of liberty, and “the new normal” on social media" in the journal Linguistics Vanguard

Abstract

Public distrust in government, pharmaceutical companies, healthcare professions, and medical science and technology has been consistently linked with vaccine rejection. Policymakers, therefore, want to better understand links between distrust of institutions and vaccine refusal. This paper reports on a case study of posts (tweets) to the social media platform Twitter (now X) collected as part of the TRAC:COVID (Trust and Communication: A Coronavirus Online Visual Dashboard) project. The TRAC:COVID dashboard combines methods from corpus linguistics with various visualization techniques to enable users to explore approximately 84 million posts containing reference to COVID-19 published between 1 January 2020 and 30 April 2021 (encompassing the dates of UK coronavirus lockdowns). The dashboard and all sampling considerations (including an overview of the detailed search query used) are available at https://www.traccovid.com. Specifically, the paper analyses a subsample of posts that make reference to vaccines and contain at least one hashtag relating to various categories of dis/misinformation. By employing keyword co-occurrence analysis – a method for examining statistically significant keywords using multiple correspondence analysis – we find that these posts draw on various “discourses of liberty” to protest against perceived infringements on “health freedoms” through the imposition of new norms of behaviour (e.g., mask-wearing).

First page of journal article entitled "COVID-19 vaccine conspiracy theories, discourses of liberty, and “the new normal” on social media" in the journal Linguistics Vanguard Abstract Public distrust in government, pharmaceutical companies, healthcare professions, and medical science and technology has been consistently linked with vaccine rejection. Policymakers, therefore, want to better understand links between distrust of institutions and vaccine refusal. This paper reports on a case study of posts (tweets) to the social media platform Twitter (now X) collected as part of the TRAC:COVID (Trust and Communication: A Coronavirus Online Visual Dashboard) project. The TRAC:COVID dashboard combines methods from corpus linguistics with various visualization techniques to enable users to explore approximately 84 million posts containing reference to COVID-19 published between 1 January 2020 and 30 April 2021 (encompassing the dates of UK coronavirus lockdowns). The dashboard and all sampling considerations (including an overview of the detailed search query used) are available at https://www.traccovid.com. Specifically, the paper analyses a subsample of posts that make reference to vaccines and contain at least one hashtag relating to various categories of dis/misinformation. By employing keyword co-occurrence analysis – a method for examining statistically significant keywords using multiple correspondence analysis – we find that these posts draw on various “discourses of liberty” to protest against perceived infringements on “health freedoms” through the imposition of new norms of behaviour (e.g., mask-wearing).

COVID-19 vaccine conspiracy theories, discourses of liberty, and "the new normal" on social media

🆕 out today w/@issyclarke.bsky.social & the www.traccovid.com team @mybcu.bsky.social

📄 doi.org/10.1515/ling...

🔓 www.researchgate.net/publication/...

@sotauol.bsky.social @livunienglish.bsky.social

1 year ago 30 9 1 1
Advertisement

Episode 3 discusses a contemporary Scottish terrorism case, and the linguistic work by Tim and
@issyclarke.bsky.social that contributed to the investigation. Tim and Isobelle talk about how they assisted to help resolve the case.

1 year ago 3 2 1 0

Looking forward to welcoming both in person and online attendees to Lancaster for our 2025 health and science communication workshop series this March! We've got great speakers and fascinating topics lined up...

For more information and to register, see: baalhealthsci.wordpress.com/2025/02/04/2...

1 year ago 6 5 0 0
Post image

✨ Out now in Linguistics Vanguard ✨
Thrilled to share "Using ATLAS.ti to interpret keyword co-occurrence analysis: a case study on the representation of vaccin* across pseudoscience and conspiracy websites", co-authored with my amazing PI @issyclarke.bsky.social !
➡️ www.degruyter.com/document/doi...

1 year ago 7 2 0 0

We’re the ESRC Centre for Corpus Approaches to Social Science (CASS) at Lancaster University.

Follow along for updates, insights, and a closer look at the power of language.

#LanguageMatters #CorpusLinguistics

1 year ago 5 4 0 0
Preview
Learner Language, Discourse and Interaction Cambridge Core - Discourse Analysis - Learner Language, Discourse and Interaction

What do you find when you compare how speakers of British English and learners of British English hold conversations? This is exactly what I look at in a few million words of data, with Issy Clarke and Gavin Brookes in a new FREE book out with CUP today! Link here: www.cambridge.org/core/books/l...

1 year ago 58 33 1 0

On top of this publication today, I'd just like to say that editing this series is the best fun I've had as an academic for many years.

Tammy Gales and I started it in the dark days of 2020 and with 13 published and 12 in the pipeline we've been busy.

#academicsky

1 year ago 20 2 1 0

Count me in!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Advertisement

Sign me up

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

I need a Starter Pack with everyone who writes stuff on their to-do list *after* they've done it so they can cross sth. off because these are my people! 📝✔️🙃

1 year ago 29 3 4 1
Front page of an article in Language and Health

Front page of an article in Language and Health

New paper co-authored with @elenasemino.bsky.social
in Language and Health: A linguistic analysis of female and male opening posts on an online forum dedicated to pain

Open Access and available online: doi.org/10.1016/j.la...

1 year ago 47 14 0 1
Post image

Trust us, you don't want to miss this week's Thursday seminar: '"You need to work her down to the bone": how seduction experts project an image of trustworthiness' with Annina Van Riper from the University of Birmingham.
It's hybrid! You can now get your tickets here: tinyurl.com/584eraxz

1 year ago 12 7 0 1

Issy Clarke is maintaining the starter pack of forensic linguists. If you'd like to be included, let her know.

1 year ago 12 3 0 0

Would love to be added, please?

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

Oh brilliant! Sorry I didn't see yours before I started. I've consolidated them now and happy to maintain it ☺️ sending you big hugs and hopefully see you soon!

1 year ago 1 0 1 0

Hello fellow forensic linguists, I thought I'd create a little space for us all. I'm new here so let me know if I've not seen you and need adding ❤️

go.bsky.app/Jtyb67V

1 year ago 44 19 9 2
Advertisement