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Lista de candidatos sometidos a examen:
1) support groups (*)
(*) Términos presentes en el nuestro glosario de lingüística

1) Candidate: support groups


Is in goldstandard

1
paper corpusSignostxt454 - : ‘Communities of practice’ appear as groups of people respond to a mutual situation; participants come together because they have a shared interest in a particular time and place (^[47]Eckert & McConnell-Ginet, 2013). Within these communities of practice, support groups provide comfort to participants and make them feel better; they are an effective vehicle for obtaining help (^[48]Barak, Boniel-Nissim & Suler, 2008). They may operate without a leader or manager because they are mainly based on the premise that people who share similar problems can understand each other better than those who do not. Support groups can also increase solidarity among their members as well as their physical well-being (^[49]White & Dorman, 2001). Moreover, online support groups offer specific added value: anonymity and invisibility (^[50]Barak et al ., 2008). Anonymity allows participants to feel less vulnerable and to open up with greater ease because their comments remain within the forum and cannot be linked

2
paper corpusSignostxt454 - : Notwithstanding the aforementioned studies, most of which analyse online communities which support cancer patients, ^[63]Mo et al. (2009) stress the need for a systematic analysis of more online support groups to enable the development of effective online support group interventions, in their case, by health care professionals. This article describes an analysis of online support groups for physical changes and disorders which are closely connected to gender and sexuality: Online support groups for menopause and erectile dysfunction . The relevance of this study stems from the fact that there is hardly any systematic research published on online support group interaction in the field of contrastive English-Spanish studies. This research could therefore contribute “to the development of a body of socio-culturally sensitive research on cross-cultural computer-mediated communication” (^[64]Lorenzo-Dus & Bou-Franch, 2013: 19).

Evaluando al candidato support groups:


1) online: 7
4) participants: 3

support groups
Lengua: eng
Frec: 32
Docs: 3
Nombre propio: / 32 = 0%
Coocurrencias con glosario:
Puntaje: 0.738 = ( + (1+3.4594316186373) / (1+5.04439411935845)));
Candidato aceptado

Referencias bibliográficas encontradas sobre cada término

(Que existan referencias dedicadas a un término es también indicio de terminologicidad.)
support groups
: 1. In online support groups, without imposing explicit guidelines on participants, do men and women accommodate their style by converging to structural elements?
: Barak, A., Boniel-Nissim, M. & Suler, J. (2008). Fostering empowerment in online support groups. Computers in Human Behavior, 24(5), 1867-1883.
: Davison, K. P., Pennebaker, J. W. & Dickerson, S. S. (2000). Who talks? The social psychology of illness support groups. American Psychologist, 55(2), 205-217.
: Klemm, P., Hurst, M., Dearholt, S. L. & Trone, S. R. (1999). Gender differences on Internet cancer support groups. Computers in Nursing, 17(2), 65-72.
: Pérez-Sabater, C. (2015). The rhetoric of online support groups: A contrastive analysis English-Spanish. Revista Española de Lingüística Aplicada, 28(2), 465-485.
: Seale, C., Ziebland, S. & Charteris-Black, J. (2006). Gender, cancer experience and Internet use: A comparative keyword analysis of interviews and online cancer support groups. Social Science & Medicine, 62(10), 2577-2590.