What are the best AI tools for academic writing?


By Leveraging the power of the right AI tool, you can significantly improve the clarity, efficiency, and overall quality of your academic writing. In this guide, we reviewed and ranked 11 popular AI tools for academic writing, along with our top 3 choices, so that you can pick the best one.

Contents


With the rise of AI tools, academic writing is undergoing a remarkable transformation. The emergence of new AI-powered tools has revolutionized the way researchers, scholars, and students approach their writing tasks.

AI sebagai writing assistants

 Tempat mencari infomasi dan ide-ide baru kepenulisan: 

https://chatgpt.com/

 https://www.perplexity.ai/

https://www.cognosys.ai/~

 SCI-SPACE: https://typeset.io

tempat mencari referensi dari baru sampai lama, siapa author, berapa  sitasinya, tahun berapa dan pdf full text nya.  https://elicit.com/,  https://consensus.app/,  

lebih lengkap lagi dari elicit dan consensus ada visual map nya: interkoneksi paper-papernya  https://www.connectedpapers.com/,  yang sejenis ada lagi: https://researchrabbitapp.com/

https://openknowledgemaps.org/

cek dan koreksi grammar:  www.grammarly.com , parafrase  www.quillbot.com

keywords: transitivity analysis in jakarta post news

 These studies examine transitivity analysis in Indonesian news media, particularly The Jakarta Post, focusing on various topics. Researchers have applied Halliday's Systemic Functional Linguistics theory to analyze news headlines and articles (N. S. Putri et al., 2021; Elisabeth Hutabarat et al., 2020). The most common processes identified in these analyses are material, verbal, and relational (attributive) processes (N. S. Putri et al., 2021; Elisabeth Hutabarat et al., 2020). Transitivity analysis has been used to investigate the portrayal of specific issues, such as COVID-19 (N. S. Putri et al., 2021; Elisabeth Hutabarat et al., 2020), police image (Siska Ria Lenora et al., 2023), and people with HIV/AIDS (Gigit Eklesia & Akhyar Rido, 2020). These studies reveal how language choices in news articles can reflect underlying ideologies and shape public perception of various topics. Comparative analyses between The Jakarta Post and international media outlets have also been conducted to identify differences in reporting styles and focus (Siska Ria Lenora et al., 2023; Gigit Eklesia & Akhyar Rido, 2020).

Grammar in Systemic Functional Grammar/SFL

  SOURCE;  Grammar in EAP

 https://www.uefap.com/grammar/gramfram-intro-sfl.htm

 
The approach taken for this grammatical description and analysis is Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL). Only Systemic Functional Linguistics would seem to provide a description of how the structure of English relates to the situational variables of the social context (e.g. business, engineering, education) in which the language is functioning. Functional grammar is uniquely able to understand how the grammatical form of language is structured to achieve purposes in a variety of social (e.g. academic, occupational or professional contexts.

The approach taken here is mainly taken from the work of Michael Halliday, in particular the model of language set out in An Introduction to Functional Grammar (Halliday, 1985, 1994; Halliday and Matthiessen, 2004), following on from Malinowski (1923), Firth (1957) and Hymes (1967) (Halliday & Hasan, 1985, pp. 5-9).
Systemic Functional Linguistics has a number of beliefs that make it particularly useful as a basis for developing such a description:
•    Language is functional. That is, language is the way it is because of the meanings it makes. Resources available within the systems of semantics, grammar and vocabulary are utilised in specific ways to make specific meanings.
•    It is a theory of language in context, and suggests that language can only be understood in relation to the context in which it is used. So different purposes for using language and different contexts result in different texts. The construction of language texts in turn impacts on the context. There is thus a two-way relationship between text and context.
•    The process of using language is a semiotic process, a process of making meanings by choosing.
•    The theory focuses on language at the level of the whole text. By text is meant any connected stretch of language that is doing a job within a social context. Thus, the term 'text' is used to refer to stretches of spoken and written language. Text may be as short as one word, e.g. EXIT, or may be as long as a book such as a training manual. This theory differs from most other approaches to language study, which offer systematic analyses of language only up to the level of sentence. It provides little guidance to the LSP learner, who needs to know about structure, organisation and development in connected oral discourse and written texts in context.
The starting point is culture. In the EAP case, the culture is the international academic world; in the EPP case, the culture is the international professional world. All language use takes place within this culture. The context of culture includes:
•    The attitudes, values and shared experiences of the people working in the culture.
•    The culturally evolved ways of behaving.
•    The culturally evolved ways of achieving goals.
Systemic Functional Linguistics
Systemic Functional Linguistics is concerned with understanding how the ways in which language is used for different purposes and in different contexts and how these situations shape its structure.
The key argument is that to understand linguistic meaning we have to appreciate the function of items in a structural context.
The ways in which human beings use language - the meanings that we can make with language - are classified by Halliday (1978, pp. 36-58) into three broad categories or metafunctions (Bloor & Bloor, 2004, pp. 10-11).
1.    Language is used to organise, understand and express our perceptions of the world and of our own consciousness. This function is known as the ideational function. The ideational metafunction is about the natural world in the broadest sense, and is concerned with clauses as representations. The ideational function can be classified into two subfunctions: the experiential and the logical. The experiential function is largely concerned with content or ideas. The logical function is concerned with the relationship between ideas.
2.    Language is used to enable us to participate in communicative acts with other people, to take on roles and to express and understand feelings, attitude and judgements. This function is known as the interpersonal function. The interpersonal metafunction is about the social world, especially the relationship between speaker and hearer, and is concerned with clauses as exchanges.
3.    Language is used to relate what is said (or written) to the real world and to other linguistic events. This involves the use of language to organise the text itself. This is known as the textual function. The textual metafunction is about the verbal world, especially the flow of information in a text, and is concerned with clauses as messages.

 click for more:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1B_angzOBiKvLLGGYutztusakoY154yPi/view?usp=sharing

Benefits of Learning SFL Transitivity

 Learning about SFL (Systemic Functional Linguistics) transitivity can significantly enhance your understanding of text and context in discourse for several reasons:

1. **Understanding Actions and Processes**: SFL transitivity helps analyze how different processes (material, mental, relational, etc.) are represented in a text. This reveals how participants (actors, goals, etc.) are involved in actions, providing insights into the dynamics of a situation.

2. **Identifying Agency and Responsibility**: By examining who does what in a text, you can uncover power dynamics and agency. This is crucial in understanding how roles are constructed and how responsibility is assigned in discourse.

3. **Contextual Interpretation**: Transitivity allows for a deeper contextual analysis by linking linguistic choices to social and cultural contexts. It shows how language reflects and shapes social relations and meanings.