Thematic Analysis

Codifynd supports content analysis at scale. Analyze the occurrence, context, situation, and relationships of themes and named entities. Thematic analysis can be applied within and across:

  • web sites,
  • policy and program documentation,
  • consultations and public submissions,
  • research compendiums and literature reviews,
  • structured data sets,

Analysis use cases

  • A policy or program team in a government agency wants to identify content relevant to a particular initiative (and its relationships to other initiatives) across multiple web sites, across multiple government agencies.
  • A consulting group has been engaged to undertake an analysis of the implementation of a federal government program across 1000’s of pages of program reports.

Thematic Assurance

Codifynd supports content assurance at scale.  Analyze the consistency, context, situation, and alignment of themes and named entities.  Thematic assurance can be applied within and across:

  • web sites,
  • policy and program documentation

Assurance use cases

  • The web team in a government agency wants to audit the alignment of site content and page metadata with a departmental ontology,
  • A consulting group has been engaged to undertake a review of the content of a portfolio of government sites in terms of their alignment with the strategic objectives of the department.

Thematic Comparison

Codifynd supports content comparison at scale.  Codifynd applies computational linguistic methods to compare the thematic similarity of clusters of content, and to identify the content nodes most relevant to selected themes.  Thematic comparison can be applied within and across:

  • web sites,
  • policy and program documentation,
  • consultations and public submissions,
  • research compendiums and literature reviews,
  • structured data sets.

Use cases

  • The web team in a government agency wants to identify overlaps and redundancy across multiple websites within their portfolio.
  • A consulting group has been engaged to compare content across multiple web sites across multiple government agencies in terms of its relevance to a particular policy initiative.