Ole Schützler is Professor for Varieties of English at Leipzig University. Mostly working within the frameworks of quantitative sociolinguistics/sociophonetics and corpus linguistics, he takes a general interest in synchronic and diachronic variation and change in English with a special focus on Scottish Englishes. Julia Schlüter is Associate Professor for English Linguistics at the University of Bamberg. Her research interests lie in the areas of phonological and grammatical variation in British and American English past and present, empirical – especially corpus-based – methodologies, and applications of linguistic insights and techniques to the teaching of English.
'This work by Schützler and Schlüter carefully explores the impact of methodological decisions on how results are interpreted. This timely work is a must-read for advanced corpus students and established researchers.' Randi Reppen, Northern Arizona University 'Methodology matters, lest we end up comparing apples and oranges. With its focus on comparative meta-methodological studies, a must-read for advanced corpus linguists who would like to make more informed choices and who might well end up combining the crunch of apples with the zest of oranges in future methodological menues.' Marianne Hundt, University of Zurich