Home > Research > Researchers > Yufeng Liu
View graph of relations

Dr Yufeng Liu

Senior Research Associate--ESRC Centre for Corpus Approaches to Social Science

Yufeng Liu

County South

LA1 4YL

Lancaster

Research overview

Yufeng Liu, also known as Kiki, is interested in interdisciplinary studies that regard language as a form of social interaction or simply, as a research tool for different purposes in social science. In her PhD project, she investigated metaphorical framing and stance evaluation in translations of Covid news reports across China, the USA, and the UK. She is familiar with corpus methods, discourse analysis, data mining, time series analysis, and other types of data analytics, but she prefers a "toolkit" approach in research, thereby trying to avoid a paradigmatic view of methodologies in favor of a more eclectic approach that selects methods to suit the matter under investigation. 

She also touches upon multimodality of metaphors, cognitive translation studies and health communication.

Current Research

She is now a senior research associate on the 4D PICTURE project (https://4dpicture.eu/). This project, funded by the EU Horizon with a budget of nine million euros across sixteen partners, aims to transform health care decision-making in oncology by integrating evidence-based decision-support tools and redesigning patients’ care paths using the MetroMapping service design methodology.

The Lancaster team (https://4dpicture.eu/teams/lancaster-university/) will be leading a work package to develop a conversation tool for cancer patients, their significant others, their clinicians and citizens based on the analysis of patient experience data and citizen science methods. This tool builds on the team’s previous work on the Metaphor Menu for People Living with Cancer and the Metaphor in End of Life Care project. Her primary role in the project involves analysing metaphors for cancer in English and sharing expertise with colleagues working on other languages (Dutch, Danish and Spanish). She works closely with Professor Elena Semino, Professor Paul Rayson (School of Computing and Communications), and Professor Sheila Payne (International Observatory on End-of-Life Care).

View all (12) »