Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. Eric Lease Morgan May 27, 2019 Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 108568 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 85 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mr. 3 like 3 Paul 2 look 2 New 2 Mrs. 2 John 1 yes 1 tyrone 1 time 1 think 1 sure 1 right 1 little 1 life 1 let 1 good 1 german 1 french 1 english 1 computer 1 come 1 american 1 York 1 Wilhelm 1 White 1 West 1 Washington 1 Walter 1 Virus 1 Violette 1 Vinney 1 Vardon 1 United 1 Troubleaux 1 Tom 1 Times 1 Terry 1 Surrey 1 Sunday 1 Story 1 States 1 State 1 Spook 1 Sonja 1 Sir 1 Senator 1 Security 1 Scott 1 Schrotter Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1166 computer 1030 man 989 time 762 day 704 thing 700 way 688 people 607 year 556 hand 540 life 530 one 524 eye 468 room 434 tyrone 411 nothing 389 friend 376 world 368 face 358 word 333 head 321 something 310 woman 310 anything 307 moment 298 girl 279 name 277 hour 275 house 274 mother 272 mind 267 war 262 heart 261 story 261 place 260 work 259 voice 255 virus 252 child 251 question 250 paper 250 door 250 case 248 part 245 course 236 phone 235 side 233 country 230 love 225 night 223 number Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1592 Scott 809 Wilhelm 807 _ 491 Miles 467 Alix 459 Mr. 371 Paul 313 Homosoto 249 Pierre 236 New 213 Mrs. 212 Spook 211 President 206 Evie 204 John 192 York 181 Schrotter 181 Mason 168 Harry 152 Foster 150 Pilar 149 Kate 149 Duncan 146 NSA 144 Doug 132 Max 129 Alex 128 George 128 Frampton 123 Dr. 120 Sir 119 FBI 113 Frau 111 Rickfield 111 Higgins 110 Ahmed 109 Washington 108 Malvine 107 Miss 106 Berlin 103 Senator 102 National 100 Arthur 97 States 96 Walter 95 Captain 94 Daphne 93 United 91 State 91 City Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7831 i 6970 he 6623 it 6118 you 2692 they 2547 she 2084 him 2070 we 1748 me 1199 them 896 her 579 himself 499 us 231 one 208 myself 165 herself 153 themselves 153 itself 129 yourself 78 ''s 55 ourselves 27 ya 26 yours 25 mine 24 oneself 19 his 17 ''em 15 hers 7 theirs 6 huh 5 ours 3 yourselves 3 em 2 thee 2 bookshelf 1 you''ve 1 you''ll 1 yerself 1 y 1 wholesale--"they 1 whence 1 ty 1 thyself 1 they?--yours 1 i''m 1 hisself 1 him!--as 1 de- 1 d''you 1 bessy''s--"she Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20306 be 7380 have 4171 do 2862 say 1734 go 1690 know 1301 think 1274 make 1273 get 1135 come 1114 see 1106 take 934 look 742 ask 721 give 709 want 659 tell 614 find 587 call 493 feel 491 speak 452 let 449 leave 437 seem 403 mean 391 keep 385 put 360 try 357 hear 347 turn 346 talk 341 use 339 answer 335 work 325 sit 324 begin 323 believe 309 need 292 stand 290 live 290 like 273 bring 262 hold 261 read 258 write 254 become 226 help 224 understand 224 meet 219 love Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5628 not 1852 so 1261 up 1037 more 1008 only 985 then 928 very 928 out 882 now 836 good 815 little 732 well 707 other 697 just 676 too 651 much 642 never 639 first 604 as 574 own 574 even 515 down 513 back 506 long 492 again 487 here 482 great 464 all 454 many 454 few 448 most 432 on 414 really 408 right 391 there 387 old 385 still 367 same 363 last 355 young 348 ever 347 off 343 once 339 away 335 in 330 always 327 quite 318 new 309 enough 300 over Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 179 good 166 most 164 least 43 bad 35 high 32 late 29 Most 24 great 19 large 18 slight 18 near 14 deep 13 dear 11 big 10 fine 9 faint 8 low 7 small 6 true 6 old 5 wise 5 rich 5 new 5 early 4 young 4 sweet 4 simple 4 manif 4 hard 4 happy 4 furth 4 eld 4 close 4 MOST 3 strong 3 noble 3 lovely 3 loud 3 long 3 l 3 keen 3 j 3 innermost 3 fast 3 brief 2 warm 2 temp 2 smart 2 sharp 2 proud Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 282 most 34 least 17 well 2 hard 1 youngest 1 bluest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 2 wschwartau@mcimail.com 2 p00506@psi.com 1 president@whitehouse.gov Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 _ is _ 10 scott did n''t 8 _ do n''t 7 _ are _ 6 wilhelm did not 6 wilhelm had not 5 _ do _ 5 alix did not 5 miles was n''t 5 scott had not 5 wilhelm was not 4 homosoto did n''t 4 one does not 4 people do n''t 4 scott had just 4 scott was n''t 4 tyrone came back 4 tyrone did n''t 4 wilhelm was silent 3 _ did _ 3 _ mean _ 3 _ was _ 3 eyes were not 3 one did n''t 3 one was n''t 3 people are so 3 scott came back 3 tyrone was n''t 3 tyrone was not 3 wilhelm went on 2 _ feel _ 2 _ have _ 2 _ say _ 2 _ see _ 2 _ think _ 2 alix had n''t 2 alix was n''t 2 alix went away 2 days went by 2 eyes were wet 2 hands were as 2 homosoto took over 2 homosoto was now 2 life is death 2 life is only 2 man does not 2 miles did n''t 2 miles looked up 2 miles said arrogantly 2 miles was adamant Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 one has no right 2 wilhelm did not immediately 2 wilhelm made no reply 1 alix found no joy 1 alix had not always 1 computer has no ability 1 computers are not safe 1 computers have not yet 1 day has no time 1 eyes gave no indication 1 eyes were not nervous 1 head had no recognizable 1 homosoto had no comment 1 homosoto had no idea 1 homosoto was no slouch 1 life had no general 1 life is no good 1 lives are not only 1 miles had no direct 1 one ''s not mine 1 one does not often 1 one had no such 1 one has no lasting 1 one is not usual 1 paul took no trouble 1 paul was no parvenu 1 paul was not clearly 1 people mean no harm 1 room was not less 1 scott had no doubts 1 scott had not yet 1 time had no power 1 tyrone ''s not so 1 tyrone was not exactly 1 tyrone was not impressed 1 wilhelm had no cause 1 wilhelm left no will 1 wilhelm saw no more 1 wilhelm thought no more 1 wilhelm took no notice 1 wilhelm was not sufficiently 1 world has not yet Sizes of items; "Measures in words, how big is each item?" ---------------------------------------------------------- 218665 79 133596 4231 120983 38575 62194 35807 7403 59668 Readability of items; "How difficult is each item to read?" ----------------------------------------------------------- 93.0 59668 90.0 35807 86.0 79 78.0 38575 78.0 4231 Item summaries; "In a narrative form, how can each item be abstracted?" ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 35807 Alix, sitting in the window seat, said, ''Aunt Eleanor, I think I''m too Mrs. Frampton said, ''To think of them behaving like that, after all ''That''s like some of Doye''s things,'' said one of the young men, and the ''Look here, it''s time we found those two people,'' said Alix, sitting up. ''Funny things he stands for,'' Alix commented, still thinking of Mr. West. ''Poor things, I''m sure one can''t but be sorry for them,'' said Mrs. Frampton. ''I wonder if many people are like these,'' thought Alix, speculating. hadn''t made that idiotic remark about men and girls; wished Mrs. Frampton hadn''t talked of proper women; wished Kate hadn''t said ''But she ''By the way, Kate,'' said Alix suddenly, giving Mrs. Frampton Kate''s ''A little custard, love?'' Mrs. Frampton said to Alix. Mrs. Frampton said to Alix, ''You do look low, dear. ''There seems no way out,'' said Alix, and looked, as she changed her 38575 said: "I shall break my heart over it, Ethel, but it is a gate opened." a great thing," he said, with a shake of his head, as he saw the West "Of course it will, dear," said Ethel; "you know, things come to you so "Come out into the conservatory, Harry," said Arthur to his friend. Harry Freeling looked at his friend for the first time a little "Never mind Lord Chesterfield," said Effie, smiling, "but let us come she''s a good girl, and if she suits me.'' I''d rather have a man like Mr. Vardon than any of the men we ever meet in London." to allow a young girl like Gladys to throw herself away on a man in post, and I think I ought to let you know it now." Poor little Lady he said again, ''Look here, you know, this isn''t good. _"Poor little thing," said my strong-minded friend compassionately. 4231 tall, good-looking young man, with fair hair, laughing blue eyes, and a When Wilhelm was four years old there came a little sister, a bright, "Fraulein Ellrich has just said the same thing," answered Wilhelm, "Have you come too to say good-by?" cried Loulou, going to meet Wilhelm. a prolonged clasp of the hand, and a look from Wilhelm''s troubled eyes "You are right," said Wilhelm, "and our actions in cases like this are Dr. Schrotter wished to see the spectacle, so Wilhelm asked his new friend Wilhelm thought over this new point of view, but Schrotter went on: As Wilhelm did not immediately answer, Paul said, seizing his hand: put Schrotter on his right hand, and Wilhelm and Paul on his left; near Paul looked at Wilhelm and Schrotter, but as they were silent he said All the time he was speaking he looked Wilhelm straight in the eyes. 59668 Apple, Little Girl with a big--"Too bad," 832. Base-Ball at the Polo Grounds, New York City, 524. Family at Dinner, 249; Art Decoration, 336; Pussy''s Music Lesson, 448; Windows, New York City, 141; The little Dolls'' Dressmaker, 188, 204, like a Bite, 720; "A little too much Fish," 736; "The Three walked away Spring brought to little lame Elsie, 340; Lady''s-Slipper--Young Plant GIRL, THEIR--"No, sir; I''m goin'' to buy you a new Dress," 776; The Boys Lacrosse, A Game of, at the Polo Ground, New York City, 25. "St. Mary''s," The Boys of the, listening to the Story of their old Nicolo, the little Italian Boy, 52. Nicolo, the little Italian Boy, 52. DOGS:--The Story of a little Dog''s Tail, 166; Bran''s Conscience, 251; GAMES, TRICKS, ETC.:--Balancing a Cork--Hunting (City in New Puzzle, 752; A good Shooter, 784; The magic Sack, 794; The Game of Good-morning, little Bird, 494. 79 Now as a New York City Times reporter, Mason understands both the good and the evil of technology and discovers Within 2 minutes of the time Miles Foster announced his resignations as a communications expert with the National Security In only seven years as a reporter Scott Mason had developed quite a reputation for himself, and for the New York City Scott''s credentials as a reporter for the New York City Times got him past the secretary "By the way," Scott said to Tyrone. "You think the NYPD would know what to look for?" Scott said "The New York City Times," Duncan said, confident that Scott "Scott, what is going on here?" Higgins asked but Doug wanted to "Let me ask you," Scott said to the group. "Let me ask you," Scott said to the group. "This doesn''t sound like the Spook I know," Scott said after "Scott''s going after Homosoto," said Tyrone.