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Dictionary usage research is a topic of increasing importance within the field of lexicography. At the beginning of the new millennium, the dictionary user was still relatively unknown. However, in the last ten years, more and more user studies have been published. Consequently, methods, data and the conclusions which can be drawn were successively refined. Also, new possibilities of web-based data collection, e.g., the analysis of log files, enriched this field of research. This contribution aims to describe the state of the art in dictionary usage research in the digital era. I begin by providing a short overview of methodological and terminological basics and then place a special focus on three different methods of collecting empirical data on dictionary use: online questionnaires, eye tracking and the analysis of log-files. All these methods are illustrated on user studies conducted at the Institute for the German Language in Mannheim.
Este artículo expone a partir de una serie de ejemplos diferentes situaciones de uso del diccionario bilingüe que evidencian la importancia de llevar a cabo una adecuada adquisición y desarrollo de las competencias lexicográficas en el contexto de enseñanza-aprendizaje de lenguas extranjeras y, en este caso en concreto, del alemán como lengua extranjera. Con este propósito se parte de tres competencias básicas: la selección de la obra lexicográfica adecuada según la situación comunicativa, la desambiguación pertinente en el contexto de la recepción en L2 y traducción de L2 a L1 y la selección y uso del equivalente en el contexto de la producción y traducción en la L2. El objetivo de esta aportación es poner de manifiesto la necesidad de identificar adecuadamente por parte del usuario de un recurso lexicográfico bilingüe la información lexicológica pertinente a la forma, contenido y uso de los lemas consultados tanto en la situación de recepción y producción en L2 como en el contexto de la traducción de y a L2.
This article presents empirical findings about what criteria make for a good online dictionary, using data on expectations and demands collected in an online questionnaire (N~684), complemented by additional results from a second questionnaire (N-390) which looked more closely at whether respondents had differentiated views on individual aspects of the criteria rated in the first study. Our results show that the classical criteria of reference books (such as reliability and clarity) were rated highest by our participants, whereas the unique characteristics of online dictionaries (such as multimedia and adaptability) were rated and ranked as (partly) unimportant. To verify whether or not the poor ratings of these innovative features were a result of the fact that our subjects are unfamiliar with online dictionaries incorporating such features, we incorporated an experiment into the second study. Our results revealed a learning effect: participants in the learning-effect condition, i.e. respondents who were first presented with examples of possible innovative features of online dictionaries, judged adaptability and multimedia to be more useful than participants who were not given that information. Thus, our data point to the conclusion that developing innovative features is worthwhile but that it should be borne in mind that users can only be persuaded of their benefits gradually. In addition, we present data about questions relating to the design of online dictionaries.