The automatic construction of learners’ dictionaries requires robust methods for identifying non-literal word combinations, or collocations, which represent a significant challenge for second-language (L2) learners. This paper addresses the critical initial step of accurately extracting collocation candidates from corpora to build a learner’s dictionary for Italian. The adopted method and the implemented application are significant for learning the Italian language. We present a comparative study of three methodologies for identifying these candidates within a 41.7-million-word Italian corpus: a Part-Of-Speech-based approach, a syntactic dependency-based approach, and a novel Hybrid method that integrates both. The analysis yielded 2,097,595 potential collocations. Results indicate that the Hybrid method achieves superior performance in terms of Recall and Benchmark Match, identifying the most significant portion of candidates, 42.35% of the total. We conducted an in-depth analysis to refine the extracted dataset, calculating multiple statistical metrics for each candidate, which are described in detail in the paper. Such analysis allows for the classification of collocations by relevance, difficulty, and frequency of use, forming the basis for the future development of a high-quality, web-based dictionary tailored to the proficiency levels of Italian learners.
Perri et al. (Fri,) studied this question.