@article{oai:kansaigaidai.repo.nii.ac.jp:00006033, author = {Rogers, James Martin and Daulton, Frank E. and MacLean, Ian B. and Reid, Gordon A.}, journal = {研究論集, Journal of Inquiry and Research}, month = {Sep}, note = {論文, ARTICLE, This study determined whether native speaker intuition could be relied upon to producecontextual content that mostly fell into what is considered high-frequency vocabulary. Native speakers wrote over 160,000 tokens worth of example sentences for high-frequency multi-word units derived from a corpus. The resulting database was examined to determine whether the content added by the native speakers mostly stayed within the high-frequency realm.Results showed that not only did the vast majority of native speakers' tokens fall into the high-frequency realm, the percentage that fell into the high-frequency realm only dropped by 0.84 percent in comparison to the multi-word units alone despite the large amount of data beingadded. This study highlighted how the intuition of experienced ESL practitioners can be relied upon to produce high-frequency contextual content.}, pages = {57--69}, title = {Is native speaker intuition reliable for high-frequency context creation?}, volume = {102}, year = {2015} }