Technical Communication Quarterly

4 articles
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quantitative research ×

November 2025

  1. Anthropomorphizing Artificial Intelligence: A Corpus Study of Mental Verbs Used with AI and ChatGPT
    doi:10.1080/10572252.2025.2593840

July 2025

  1. Journals as Disciplinary Archives: A Linguistic Corpus Analysis of Technical Communication Quarterly Abstracts, 1992–2023
    doi:10.1080/10572252.2025.2490507

January 2020

  1. Points of Departure: Rethinking Student Source Use and Writing Studies Research Methods: edited by Tricia Serviss and Sandra Jamieson, Boulder, CO, Utah State University Press, 2017, 266 pp., $33.95 (paperback), $27.00 (electronic), Publisher webpage: https://upcolorado.com/utah-state-university-press/item/3188-points-of-departure
    Abstract

    [T]he (re)turn to quantitative research in recent years has brought with it the renewed hope that such research will be shared – and shared widely in a way that helps us answer more global question...

    doi:10.1080/10572252.2019.1613335

April 2004

  1. The CCCC Outstanding Dissertation Award in Technical Communication: A Retrospective Analysis
    Abstract

    This article presents the history, purposes, outcomes, and significance of the CCCC Outstanding Dissertation Award in Technical Communication during its first five years. It analyzes the topical areas and research methods of the 34 dissertations nominated for the award from 1999 to 2003, as well as the evaluations of the judges. Methods of the nominated dissertations are interpretive (41%) and empirical (59%), but many dissertations combine methods. In the empirical category, qualitative methods (17) outnumber quantitative methods (3). The most frequent topical areas are workplace practice (8), rhetoric of the disciplines (7), and information design (6). Topics that are not widely investigated include issues of race and class and international communication.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1302_2