Readability

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Revision as of 08:22, 30 January 2023 by Griet (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Assessing readability== How to assess readability? In this demo you can assess the readability of ten texts by comparing them with each other. The idea is that you assign an absolute score - ranging from 0 (easy) to 100 (difficult) - to each text and motivate your score using the free text field. *[https://lt3.ugent.be/resources/assessing-readability/ Information] * De Clercq, Orphée and Véronique Hoste. 2016. All Mixed Up? Finding the Optimal Feature Set for Gener...")
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Assessing readability

How to assess readability? In this demo you can assess the readability of ten texts by comparing them with each other. The idea is that you assign an absolute score - ranging from 0 (easy) to 100 (difficult) - to each text and motivate your score using the free text field.

  • Information
  • De Clercq, Orphée and Véronique Hoste. 2016. All Mixed Up? Finding the Optimal Feature Set for General Readability Prediction and its Application to English and Dutch. Computational Linguistics, Association for Computational Linguistics, 42(3):457-490.
  • Demo

Classical formulas

In this demo, you can enter a Dutch text of maximum 1,000 characters. The text is then analyzed: various text characteristics (word length, sentence length, TTR, ...) are outputted and different scores calculated based on classical readability formulas. In a next phase, the text is also analyzed with a syntactic parser offering insights into the grammatical complexity of the text.

  • Information
  • De Clercq, Orphée and Véronique Hoste. 2016. All Mixed Up? Finding the Optimal Feature Set for General Readability Prediction and its Application to English and Dutch. Computational Linguistics, Association for Computational Linguistics, 42(3):457-490.
  • Demo

Machine learning

  • Information
  • De Clercq, Orphée and Véronique Hoste. 2016. All Mixed Up? Finding the Optimal Feature Set for General Readability Prediction and its Application to English and Dutch. Computational Linguistics, Association for Computational Linguistics, 42(3):457-490.
  • Demo