The Best Posts To Help Understand Google’s New “Books Ngram Viewer”: "
I’m still trying to “get my head around” how to use Google’s new “Books Ngram Viewer,” the amazing application announced yesterday that allows you to easily analyze “the 500 billion words contained in books published between 1500 and 2008 in English, French, Spanish, German, Chinese and Russian.” I’m sure there are ways to use it effectively with students — English Language Learners and mainstream — but I just haven’t had a chance to think about how.
Please feel free to share ideas in the comments section.
In the meantime, though, I thought I’d start collecting posts and article that provide information about the service itself.
Here are my choices for The Best Posts To Help Understand Google’s New Books Ngram Viewer:
In 500 Billion Words, New Window on Culture is from The New York Times
New Visualization Tool from Google With Data From 5.2 Million Digitized Books is from Read Write Web
The cultural genome: Google Books reveals traces of fame, censorship and changing languages is from Discover
New Tool Tracks Culture Through the Centuries via Google Books is from Scientific American
Peter Pappas shares some good ideas on how to use it with students at his post, How To Quantify Culture? Explore 500 Billion Published Words
Word-Wide Web Launches is an interesting article and video from The Wall Street Journal
You can see great examples of the Ngram Viewer in action over at The Atlantic, which has created a slideshow of comparing the usage of a number of words over time.
Here are more examples: 10 Fascinating Word Graphs, From 200 Years of Google Books
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