105. Egbert, J., Hanks, E. & Biber, D. (under review). Continuous keyness? Identifying words and features that correspond with continuous extralinguistic variables.
104. Sönning, L., & Egbert, J. (under revision). Sensitivity of dispersion measures to distributional patterns and corpus design.
103. Gracheva, M. & Egbert, J. (under revision). Accounting for situational variation within registers: Toward a framework for analyzing communicative purpose.
102. Gracheva, M. & Egbert, J. (forthcoming). Register, genre, and types of texts. In H. Nesi & P. Milin (Eds.), International Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 3rd Edition. New York: Elsevier.
101. Lee, T. & Egbert, J. (forthcoming). Artificial meaning? University of Florida Law Review.
100. Egbert, J. & Lee, T.R. (forthcoming). Legal language. In R. Reppen, L. Goulart & D. Biber (Eds.), The Cambridge Handbook of English Corpus Linguistics. Cambridge University Press.
99. Egbert, J. & Baker, P. (forthcoming). Keyword analysis. In R. Reppen, L. Goulart & D. Biber (Eds.), The Cambridge Handbook of English Corpus Linguistics. Cambridge University Press.
98. Egbert, J., Biber, D., Gray, B. & Larsson, T. (2025). Achieving stability in corpus-based analysis of linguistic types. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics.
97. DeRosia, E., Egbert, J. & Lee, T.R. (2025). Triangulating the likelihood of confusion: Linguistics and consumer surveys. BYU Law Review.
96. Larsen, K., Lindman, M., Hashimoto, B., Hanks, E. & Egbert, J. (2025). A register approach to specialized word list creation: Enhancing the Contracts Word List. Register Studies.
95. Gracheva, M. & Egbert, J. (2025). Corpus linguistics and register. In H. Nesi & P. Milin (Eds.), International Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 3rd Edition. New York: Elsevier.
94. Egbert, J., Gray, B. & Biber, D. (2024). Designing and evaluating corpora for domain representativeness. In G. Brookes and M. Mahlberg (Eds.), Bloomsbury Handbook of Corpus Linguistics. Bloomsbury.
93. Egbert, J., & Lee, T. R. (2024). Prototype-by-component analysis: A corpus-based, intensional approach to ordinary meaning in statutory interpretation. Applied Corpus Linguistics, 4(1), 100078.
92. Egbert, J., Biber, D., Keller, D., & Gracheva, M. (2024). Register and the dual nature of functional correspondence: accounting for text-linguistic variation between registers, within registers, and without registers. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory.
91. Egbert, J., Wood, M. & Lee, T. (2024). The pragmatics of institutional discourse. In C. Chapelle (Ed.). The encyclopedia of applied linguistics. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
90. Hanks, E., Hashimoto, B., & Egbert, J. (2024). The Contracts Word List: Integral vocabulary for reading and writing English contracts. English for Specific Purposes, 75, 37-48. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.esp.2024.03.002
89. Hanks, E., Egbert, J., Larsson, T., McEnery, T., Brezina, V., Biber, D., Reppen, R. & Bottini, R. (2024). Building a spoken corpus of American English conversation: Challenges and innovations in corpus compilation. Special issue of Research in Corpus Linguistics.
88. Biber, D. & Egbert, J. (2024). Exploring fictional styles along universal dimensions of register variation. In R. Hesselbach, J.C. Tello, U. Henny Krahmer, C. Schoch, & D. Schlor (Eds), Digital stylistics in romance studies and beyond. Heidelberg University Press.
87. Lee, T. R., Solum, L. B., Phillips, J. C., & Egbert, J. (2023). Corpus Linguistics and the Original Public Meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment. Duke Law Journal Online.
86. Egbert, J. & Biber, D. (2023). Key feature analysis—A simple, yet powerful method for comparing text varieties. Corpora.
85. McEnery, T., Brookes, G., Hanks, E., Gerigk, K. & Egbert, J. (2023). Swearing, discourse and function in conversational British English. Journal of Pragmatics.
84. Tobia, K, Egbert, J. & Lee, T.R. (2023). Triangulating ordinary meaning. Georgetown Law Journal Online.
83. Dixon, T., Egbert, J., Larsson, T., Kaatari, H., & Hanks, E. (2023). Toward an empirical understanding of formality: Triangulating corpus data with teacher perceptions. English for Specific Purposes, 71, 161-177.
82. Larsson, T., Kaatari, H., Dixon, T. & Egbert, J. (2023). Examining novice writers’ perceptions of formality. Journal of English for Research Publication Purposes.
81. Biber, D. & Egbert, J. (2023). What is a register? Accounting for linguistic and situational variation within – and outside of – textual varieties. Register Studies.
80. Egbert, J. & Wood, M. (2023). The Corpus of United States State Statutes—Design, construction and use. Applied Corpus Linguistics.
79. Egbert, J., Gray, B., Larsson, T.. (2023). Register variation and corpus linguistics. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory.
78. Larsson, T., Staples, S., & Egbert, J. (2022). Teaching, learning, and researching with corpora. Applied Corpus Linguistics. In T. Larsson, S. Staples, J. Egbert (Eds.), Teaching, learning, and researching with corpora: Papers in honor of Dr. Randi Reppen, 2(3), 100025.
77. Egbert, J. & Gracheva, M. (2022). Linguistic variation within registers: Granularity in textual units and situational parameters. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory.
76. Burch, B. & Egbert, J. (2022). Word use equivalence and hierarchical word tiers. Journal of Quantitative Linguistics.
75. Hanks, L & Egbert, J. (2022). The interplay of laughter and communicative purpose in conversational discourse: A corpus-based study of British English. Corpus Pragmatics.
74. Laippala, V., Rönnqvist, S., Oinonen, M., Kyröläinen, A., Salmela, A., Biber, D., Egbert, J. & Pyysalo, S. (2022). Register identification from the unrestricted open Web using the Corpus of Online Registers of English. Language Resources and Evaluation.
73. Egbert, J. & Burch, B. (2022). Which words matter most? Operationalizing lexical prevalence for rank-ordered word lists. Applied Linguistics.
72. Staples, S., Gray, B., Biber, D. & Egbert, J. (2022). Writing Trajectories of Grammatical Complexity at the University: Comparing L1 and L2 English Writers in BAWE. Applied Linguistics.
71. Phillips, J. C., & Egbert, J. (2022). A Corpus Linguistic Analysis of “Foreign Tribunal”. Va. L. Rev, 108.
70. Chaves, A. P., Egbert, J., Hocking, T., Doerry, E., & Gerosa, M. A. (2022). Chatbots language design: The influence of language variation on user experience with tourist assistant chatbots. ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction, 29(2), 1-38.
69. Burch, B. & Egbert, J. (2022). Confidence intervals for ratios of means applied to corpus-based word frequency classes. Journal of Applied Statistics.
68. Larsson, T., Egbert, J. & Biber, D. (2022). On the status of statistical reporting versus linguistic description in corpus linguistics: A ten-year perspective. Corpora.
67. Gracheva, M. & Egbert, J. (2022). Within-author style variation in literary nonfiction: The situational perspective. In R. Moratto and Defeng, L. (Eds.), Advances in Corpus Applications in Literary and Translation Studies. Routledge.
66. Fahy, M., Egbert, J., Biber, D., & Szmrecsanyi, B. (2021). Comparing multinomial logistic regression, conditional inference trees and random forests: Three-way genitive variation in letters, news, and science writing. Comparative approaches to methods in corpus linguistics.
65. Egbert, J. & Plonsky, L. (2021). Bootstrapping techniques. In Magali Paquot and Stefan Th. Gries (Eds.), Practical Handbook of Corpus Linguistics, New York: Springer.
64. Plonsky, L. & Egbert, J. (2021). Meta-analyzing corpus linguistic research. In Magali Paquot and Stefan Th. Gries (Eds.), Practical Handbook of Corpus Linguistics, New York: Springer.
63. Keller, D. & Egbert, J. (2021) Hypothesis testing ordinary meaning. Brooklyn Law Review.
62. Biber, D., & Egbert, J. (2021). Variação de registro na Internet: uma análise multidimensional. Matraga-Revista do Programa de Pós-Graduação em Letras da UERJ, 28(53), 383-438.
61. Repo, L., Skantsi, V., Rönnqvist, S., Hellström, S., Oinonen, M., Salmela, A., Biber, D., Egbert, J., Pyysalo, S. & Laippala, V. (2021). Beyond the English web: Zero-shot cross-lingual and lightweight monolingual classification of registers. arXiv preprint arXiv:2102.07396.
60. McCarthy, A. D., Yancey, K. P., LaFlair, G. T., Egbert, J., Liao, M., & Settles, B. (2021, November). Jump-starting item parameters for adaptive language tests. In Proceedings of the 2021 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (pp. 883-899).
59. Egbert, J., Wizner, S., Keller, D., Biber, D., Baker, P., & McEnery, T. (2021). Identifying and describing functional conversation units in the BNC Spoken 2014. Text & Talk.
58. Laippala, V., Egbert, J., Biber, D. & Kyrolainen, A. (2021). Exploring the role of lexis and grammar for the stable identification of register in an unrestricted corpus of web documents. Language Resources and Evaluation, 55, 757 – 788.
57. Biber, D., Egbert, J., Keller, D., & Wizner, S. (2021). Towards a taxonomy of conversational discourse types: An empirical corpus-based analysis. Journal of Pragmatics, 171, 20-35.
56. Goulart, L., Gray, B., Staples, S., Black, A., Shelton, A., Biber, D., Egbert, J. & Wizner, S. (2020). Linguistic perspectives on register. Annual Review of Linguistics, 6, 435-455.
55. Cunningham, C.D. & Egbert, J. (2020). Using empirical data to investigate the original meaning of “emolument” in the Constitution, Georgia State Law Review, 36.
54. Ren, H., Wood, M., Cunningham, C.D., Abbady, N., Römer, U., Kuhn, H. & Egbert, J. (2020). “Questions involving national peace and harmony” or “Injured plaintiff litigation”? The original meaning of “cases” in Article III of the Constitution, Georgia State Law Review, 36.
53. Biber, D., Staples, S., Gray, B. & Egbert, J. (2020). Investigating grammatical complexity in L2 English writing research: Linguistic description versus predictive measurement. Journal of English for Academic Purposes.
52. Biber, D., Reppen, R., Staples, S. & Egbert, J. (2020). Exploring the longitudinal development of linguistic complexity in the disciplinary writing of L2-English university students. International Journal of Learner Corpus Research, 6(1): 38 – 71.
51. Egbert, J. & Mahlberg, M. (2020). Fiction—One register or two? Narrative and speech in novels. Register Studies, 2(1): 72 – 101.
50. Hashimoto, B., Keller, D., Sudina, E., Yaw, K., Egbert, J., & Plonsky, L. (2020). Research in Progress: Applied Linguistics at Northern Arizona University, USA. Language Teaching, 1 – 6.
49. Egbert, J., Burch, B., & Biber, D. (2020). Lexical dispersion and corpus design. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics, 25(1): 87 – 113.
48. Cunningham, C.D. & Egbert, J. (2020). Corpora and analyzing legal discourse in the United States. In E. Friginal and J. Hardy (Eds.), Routledge handbook of corpus approaches to discourse analysis. New York: Routledge.
47. Biber, D. & Egbert, J. (2020). Orality on the searchable web: A comparison of involved web registers and face-to-face conversation. In E. Jonsson & T. Larsson (Eds.), Voices past and present - Studies of involved, speech-related and spoken texts. In honor of Merja Kytö. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
46. Egbert, J. & Biber, D. (2020). It’s just words, folks. It’s just words”: Donald Trump’s distinctive linguistic style. In M. Eitelmann and U. Schneider (Eds.), Linguistic enquiries into Donald Trump’s language. London: Bloomsbury.
45. Laippala, V., Kyllönen, R., Egbert, J., Biber, D., & Pyysalo, S. (2019). Toward multilingual identification of online registers. In Proceedings of the 22nd Nordic Conference on Computational Linguistics (pp. 292-297).
44. Egbert, J. & Davies, M. (2019). If olive oil is made of olives, then what’s baby oil made of? The shifting semantics of Noun+Noun sequences in American English. In J. Egbert & P. Baker (Eds.), Using corpus methods to triangulate linguistic linguistic analysis. New York: Routledge.
43. Egbert, J. & Baker, P. (2019). Introduction. In J. Egbert & P. Baker (Eds.), Using corpus methods to triangulate linguistic linguistic analysis. New York: Routledge.
42. Egbert, J. & Baker, P. (2019). Synthesis and conclusion. In J. Egbert & P. Baker (Eds.), Using corpus methods to triangulate linguistic linguistic analysis. New York: Routledge.
41. Egbert, J. (2019). The corpus in multidimensional analysis. In Tony Berber-Sardinha and Marcia Veirano Pinto (Eds.), Multidimensional Analysis, London: Bloomsbury.
40. Egbert, J. & Staples, S. (2019). Doing multidimensional analysis in SPSS, SAS and R. In Tony Berber-Sardinha and Marcia Veirano Pinto (Eds.), Multidimensional Analysis, London: Bloomsbury.
39. Egbert, J. & LaFlair, G.T. (2019). Statistics for categorical and distribution free data. In Peter De Costa, Aek Phakiti, Sue Starfield, and Luke Plonsky (Eds.), Handbook of Applied Linguistics Research Methodology, London: Palgrave Macmillan.
37. Egbert, J. & Biber, D. (2019). Incorporating text dispersion into keyword analysis. Corpora, 14(1): 77 – 104.
36. Burch, B. & Egbert, J. (2019). Zero-inflated beta distribution applied to word frequency and lexical dispersion in corpus linguistics. Journal of Applied Statistics, 47(2): 337 – 353.
35. Hashimoto, B. & Egbert, J. (2019). More than frequency?: Exploring predictors of word difficulty for second language learners. Language Learning, 69(4): 839 – 872.
34.Biber, D., Egbert, J. & Keller, D. (2019). Reconceptualizing register in a continuous situational space. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory.
33.Chaves, A.P., Egbert, J. & Gerosa, M.A. (2019). Chatting like a robot: the relationship between linguistic choices and users’ experiences. In: ACM CHI Workshop on Conversational Agents: Acting on the Wave of Research and Development, Glasgow, 2019.
32. Chaves, A.P., Doerry, E., Egbert, J. & Gerosa, M.A. (2019). It's How You Say It: Identifying Appropriate Register for Chatbot Language Design. In: Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Human-Agent Interaction, Kyoto, 2019.
31. Phillips, J.C. & Egbert, J. (2018). Advancing law and corpus linguistics: Importing principles and practices from survey and content-analysis methodologies to improve corpus design and analysis. BYU Law Review, 2017(6): 1589 – 1620.
30. Biber, D., Egbert, J. & Zhang, M. (2018). Lexis and grammar as complementary discourse systems for expressing stance and evaluation. In María de los Ángeles Gómez González and J. Lachlan Mackenzie. (Eds.), The Construction of Discourse as Verbal Interaction, Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
29. Egbert, J. & Schnur, E. (2018). Missing the trees for the forest: The role of the text in corpus and discourse analysis. In Anna Marchi and Charlotte Taylor (Eds.), Corpus Approaches to Discourse: A Critical Review, New York: Routledge.
28. Biber, D., Egbert, J. & Zhang, M. (2017). Using corpus-based analysis to study register and dialect variation on the searchable web. In Friginal, E. (Ed.), Studies in Corpus-Based Sociolinguistics, New York: Routledge.
27. Egbert, J. (2017). Corpus linguistics and language testing: Navigating uncharted waters. Language Testing, 34(4): 555-564.
26. Burch, B., Egbert, J., & Biber, D. (2017). Measuring and interpreting lexical dispersion in corpus linguistics. Journal of Research Design and Statistics in Linguistics and Communication Science, 3(2): 189-216.
25. Staples, S., LaFlair, G.T., & Egbert, J. (2017). Comparing language use in oral proficiency interviews to target domains: Conversational, academic, and professional discourse. The Modern Language Journal, 101(1): 194-213.
24. Hartshorn, J., Evans, N., Egbert, J. & Johnson, A. (2017). Reading expectations and challenges for English language learners in lower- and upper-division major courses in US universities. Reading in a Foreign Language. 29(1): 36-60.
23. Egbert, J. & Biber, D. (2016). Do all roads lead to Rome?: Modeling register variation with factor analysis and discriminant analysis. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory.
22. Biber, D. & Egbert, J. (2016a). Register variation on the searchable web: A Multi-Dimensional analysis. Journal of English Linguistics. 44(2): 95-137.
Biber, D. & Egbert, J. (2016b). Using Multi-Dimensional analysis to study register variation on the searchable web. Corpus Linguistics Research. 2: 1-23.
21. Szmrecsanyi, B., Biber, D., Egbert, J. & Franco, K. (2016). Towards more accountability: Modeling ternary genitive variation in Late Modern English. Language Variation and Change. 28(1): 1-29.
20. Staples, S., Egbert, J., Biber, D. & Gray, B. (2016). Academic writing development at the university: Phrasal and clausal complexity across level of study, discipline, and genre. Written Communication. 33(2): 149-183.
19. Baker, P. & Egbert, J. (2016). Introduction. In P. Baker & J. Egbert (Eds.), Triangulating methodological approaches in corpus-linguistic research. New York: Routledge.
18. Egbert, J. (2016). Stylistic perception. In P. Baker & J. Egbert (Eds.), Triangulating methodological approaches in corpus-linguistic research. New York: Routledge.
17. Egbert, J. & Baker, P. (2016). Research synthesis. In P. Baker & J. Egbert (Eds.), Triangulating methodological approaches in corpus-linguistic research. New York: Routledge.
16. Biber, D., & Egbert, J.. (2016). Towards a user-based taxonomy of web registers. In Christoph Schubert & Christina Sanchez-Stockhammer (Eds.), Variational Text Linguistics: Revisiting Register in English, Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
15. Biber, D., Egbert, J., Gray, B., Oppliger, R., & Szmrecsanyi, B. (2016). Variationist versus text-linguistic approaches to grammatical change in English: Nominal modifiers of head nouns. In Kyto, M. & Paivi, P (Eds.), Handbook of English historical linguistics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
14. Egbert, J., Staples, S., & Biber, D. (2015). Quantitative corpus research. In James Dean Brown and Christine Coombe (Eds.), The Cambridge guide to research in language teaching and learning, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
13. LaFlair, G., Egbert, J. & Plonsky, L. (2015). Bootstrapping. In Luke Plonsky (Ed.), Advancing quantitative methods in second language research, London: Routledge.
12. Staples, S., Egbert, J., Biber, D., & Conrad, S. (2015). Register variation: A corpus approach. In Deborah Schiffrin, Deborah Tannen, and Heidi Hamilton (Eds.), The handbook of discourse analysis, Oxford: Blackwell.
11. Biber, D. & Egbert, J. (2015). Using grammatical features for automatic register identification in an unrestricted corpus of documents from the open web. Journal of Research Design and Statistics in Linguistics and Communication Science. 2(1): 3-36.
10. Plonsky, L., Egbert, J., & LaFlair, G. (2015). Boostrapping in applied linguistics: Assessing its potential using shared data. Applied Linguistics. 36(5): 591-610.
9. Egbert, J. & Plonsky, L. (2015). Success in the abstract: Linguistic and stylistic predictors of conference abstract ratings. Corpora, 10(3): 291-313.
8. Egbert, J., Biber, D., & Davies, M. (2015). Developing a Bottom-up, User-based Method of Web Register Classification. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 66(9): 1817-1831.
7. Biber, D., Egbert, J., & Davies, M. (2015). Exploring the composition of the searchable web: A corpus-based taxonomy of web registers. Corpora, 10(1): 11-45.
6. LaFlair, G.T., Staples, S., & Egbert, J. (2015). Variability in the MELAB speaking task: Investigating linguistic characteristics of test taker performances in relation to rater severity and score. CaMLA Working Papers.
5. Egbert, J. (2015). Publication type and discipline variation in published academic writing: Investigating statistical interaction in corpus data. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics, 20(1): 1-29.
4. Egbert, J. (2014). Student perceptions of stylistic variation in introductory university textbooks. Linguistics and Education, 25: 64-77.
3. Egbert, J. & Biber, D. (2013). Developing a user-based method of web register classification. In S. Evert, E. Stemle, and P. Rayson (eds.), Proceedings of the 8th Web as Corpus Workshop (WAC-8) @Corpus Linguistics 2013, pp. 16-23.
2. Staples, S., Egbert, J., Biber, D., & McClair, A. (2013). Formulaic sequences and EAP writing development: Lexical bundles in the TOEFL iBT writing section. Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 12(3), 214-225.
1. Egbert, J. (2012). Style in nineteenth century fiction: A multi-dimensional analysis. The Scientific Study of Literature, 2(2), 167-198.