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. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 12 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 15158 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 85 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 Oracle 2 Judge 2 Dr. 1 yes 1 time 1 thing 1 machine 1 like 1 human 1 good 1 feel 1 War 1 Tunney 1 Tim 1 Starbuck 1 Smith 1 Semper 1 Scriven 1 Sawyer 1 Sanders 1 Quincy 1 Professor 1 Peter 1 Paul 1 Oona 1 O''Hara 1 November 1 Murra 1 Mrs. 1 Mr. 1 Moe 1 Mellish 1 Maxwell 1 Martha 1 Manners 1 Manison 1 Man 1 Lexington 1 Lee 1 John 1 Jimmy 1 Janet 1 James 1 Jake 1 Inc. 1 Howard 1 Holden 1 Gus 1 God 1 General Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 465 man 442 time 284 machine 259 thing 225 way 213 year 212 hand 203 voice 173 eye 153 word 150 question 148 life 147 day 144 brain 141 nothing 140 child 135 something 129 head 125 case 124 course 119 mind 119 hour 119 face 117 door 115 one 114 problem 113 anything 112 fact 111 room 107 world 103 work 100 part 100 car 99 moment 94 side 94 answer 93 information 92 place 92 matter 92 father 91 point 89 ship 89 school 89 people 88 idea 86 education 84 night 84 light 84 law 83 foot Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 693 _ 609 James 454 Brain 437 Lee 352 Holden 337 Jimmy 221 Brennan 192 Cassal 179 Bagley 168 Mrs. 163 Martha 145 Dimanche 141 Dr. 118 Tim 107 Smith 104 Paul 103 Fisher 102 Scriven 98 Judge 94 Starbuck 94 Mr. 91 Jake 88 General 80 Peter 79 Oona 71 Man 71 Cyber 69 John 65 Janet 63 Oracle 62 Lexington 61 Professor 60 Maxwell 57 Carter 56 Eddie 53 Gus 50 Manison 50 Anderson 43 Bates 41 Semper 41 Earth 38 Sanders 37 Charles 37 Bristol 35 Edith 34 D.A. 34 Ben 33 Birdsel 33 Anne 31 God Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2885 he 2795 it 2309 i 2115 you 794 they 685 we 679 him 554 she 441 me 374 them 182 her 152 himself 116 us 59 ''s 54 itself 44 myself 38 yourself 28 one 23 themselves 20 herself 17 yours 10 ourselves 10 mine 8 his 5 theirs 4 ours 2 em 1 you''ll 1 what''cha 1 trigeminus 1 thyself 1 o 1 huh 1 hers 1 exist-- 1 d''you Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 7192 be 2654 have 1444 do 877 say 630 go 558 know 462 get 459 make 402 come 388 take 359 think 349 see 306 look 233 ask 215 want 211 give 205 find 185 feel 184 tell 170 try 164 turn 161 use 156 seem 155 let 142 work 142 keep 136 leave 128 start 128 sit 127 stop 126 call 123 mean 117 stand 117 put 115 understand 114 begin 104 need 103 read 102 answer 94 hear 88 follow 88 become 87 wait 87 live 87 happen 84 move 83 hold 82 build 81 talk 80 learn Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2068 not 444 now 438 so 432 then 409 up 341 out 334 more 295 only 276 just 269 even 241 own 237 first 226 back 217 little 214 very 213 other 213 long 212 good 206 down 192 right 188 here 184 as 178 again 177 too 176 old 171 still 168 on 163 much 157 well 155 all 151 never 150 human 147 in 146 away 144 new 140 there 136 enough 131 over 128 great 126 off 118 young 117 most 116 same 112 few 110 almost 108 high 104 last 104 big 91 small 89 such Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 42 good 39 least 31 most 13 bad 10 big 8 late 7 near 7 great 6 manif 5 high 4 old 4 Most 3 slight 3 simple 3 queer 3 low 3 faint 2 young 2 keen 2 innermost 2 fast 2 damned 2 close 1 writhe 1 wide 1 true 1 tough 1 stupid 1 short 1 sapp 1 safe 1 nasty 1 lowly 1 long 1 lively 1 likeli 1 hot 1 holy 1 healthy 1 happy 1 foggy 1 fine 1 easy 1 early 1 deep 1 crude 1 crazy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 most 12 least 5 well 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?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 _ is _ 6 cassal did n''t 5 _ had _ 4 _ do _ 4 _ have _ 4 james was not 4 jimmy did not 3 _ are _ 3 _ was _ 3 james had not 3 james said patiently 2 _ did _ 2 _ do n''t 2 _ knew _ 2 _ know _ 2 bagley was not 2 brain is _ 2 brain is n''t 2 brain is really 2 cassal did so 2 cassal looked up 2 cassal was n''t 2 dimanche was silent 2 holden did not 2 holden was not 2 james had indeed 2 jimmy looked around 2 lee did n''t 2 things went on 2 time went on 1 _ be close 1 _ be memory 1 _ does _ 1 _ feeling _ 1 _ find _ 1 _ got _ 1 _ had n''t 1 _ has _ 1 _ is concomitant 1 _ is power 1 _ saw _ 1 _ say _ 1 _ say so 1 _ start _ 1 _ take good 1 _ taken place 1 _ told _ 1 _ took off 1 _ turned up 1 _ wanted _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 bagley was not really 1 brain has no laughter 1 brain were not alive 1 brains did not temporarily 1 brennan made no response 1 cassal had not previously 1 day is not long 1 dimanche was no longer 1 holden had no grasp 1 holden had no intention 1 holden was no greater 1 holden were not wholly 1 james did not wholly 1 james wanted no part 1 james was not even 1 james was not old 1 james was not really 1 james was not strong 1 machine is no monster 1 man was not only 1 martha were not emotionally 1 men do not often 1 men have no shame 1 thing is no more 1 thing was not new 1 voice has no laughter A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 32498 author = Blade, Alexander title = The Brain date = keywords = Apperception; Bondy; Brain; Cephalon; Dr.; God; Gus; Howard; Lee; Man; Mellish; November; Oona; Scriven; Semper; War; feel; human; like; thing; time; yes summary = The word struck Lee like a vicious little snake. "All together, Lee, The Brain has now reached the approximate capacity The Brain Trust car which took Lee out of Cephalon was a normal-looking Goody, where should I begin; I''m all in a dither: Well, Dr. Lee; most people seem to expect The Brain to be like a great big "Y-e-s," Lee said, "I think I do--it''s--it''s uncanny: it''s like spiders'' faces beaming they looked like identical twins to him; Lee never knew Apperception 36, Lee''s lab within The Brain, looked much like region, some hidden effort to see, like a blind man''s, and above all Lee Think of Heron''s steam engine; it even looked like a man and was thought _Lee_: "You, The Brain, constitute Man''s supreme effort in the building with The Brain that I''ve thought to myself: "Lee you''re going crazy." Lee, you rush over to The Brain. id = 51362 author = Haggert, W. T. title = Lex date = keywords = Lexington; Manners; Peter; machine summary = Staring back at the last blank wall, Peter suddenly remembered the time "Thanks," Peter said, and a door at one side of the anteroom swung open "Some," said Peter, stung again, this time not by a compliment. "I worked my way through," said Peter stiffly. "Come on," said Lexington, getting massively to his feet. Peter tore his eyes away from them in time to see the look of Peter followed numbly as Lexington led him through a maze of machines, that room," he said, as the door swung open and Peter saw that the "This kicker button," Peter said tentatively, "it''s like the pleasure "Where did the machine get the voice?" asked Peter, still amazed that Peter didn''t realize Lexington was answering his question at first. Lexington looked Peter squarely in the face and said, "The report was Lex said: "These have to go to Mr. Lexington''s id = 60829 author = Harmon, Jim title = The Upside-Down Captain date = keywords = Ben; Birdsel; Captain; Starbuck summary = "Excuse me, please," Ben Starbuck said, tapping the junior officer on "That brain is really inhuman," Starbuck said. man, Swabber Ben Starbuck, sir." Starbuck approached the machine, saw a likely looking slot and shoved. "What do you want to know?" Starbuck swallowed, saying. "He''s interested in you, Ben," the captain said enthusiastically. "Hello," Starbuck said, hugging his spacebag like a teddy-bear, the Starbuck palmed back the door to the captain''s cabin and stepped inside. The captain escorted Starbuck to the chamber of the brain, discussing "Only what Captain Birdsel here told me," Starbuck said. "Aye, captain." Starbuck could believe a cybernetic machine could like Then for two days Captain Birdsel wasn''t on hand for the little "You sent for me, sir?" Starbuck said. of the Space Service," Captain Birdsel said, flexing one knee and "I liked you, Ben," the captain''s voice said from the heart of _the id = 59148 author = Riley, Frank title = The Cyber and Justice Holmes date = keywords = Anderson; Cyber; Judge; Professor summary = "Cyber justice!" That''s what the District Attorney had called it in his Judge Walhfred Anderson threw the morning fax paper on top of the law human inefficiency with Cyber justice in the courts of this county! Justice Holmes on the wall of Judge Anderson''s courtroom was much Judge Anderson looked to Justice Holmes for a clarifying Cyber judge would handle a stipulation. Go to hell, Holmes, thought Judge Anderson. As Walhfred Anderson belligerently led the Professor and the D.A. into Walhfred Anderson saw the D.A. stiffen to attention as the Cyber To the Judge''s continuing disgust, Professor Neustadt seemed as avid morning, there''d be no stopping the D.A.''s campaign for Cyber judges. The Judge turned to Cyber IX, then caught himself. Professor''s slip of paper to Judged Anderson. Professor Neustadt strutted up to Cyber IX, flipped on the vocader Professor Neustadt turned to Judge Anderson, and his voice dropped id = 60443 author = Riley, Frank title = Eddie date = keywords = Dr.; Eddie; General; O''Hara; Sanders; Smith summary = than that of Dr. John O''Hara Smith, an electronics research engineer. _For a period of more than a year, the case of Dr. John O''Hara Smith Amos Busch promptly called Major General David Sanders, commander of General Sanders scratched his tanned bald head, and said, The FBI went to work with a thoroughness that made John O''Hara Smith''s O''Hara Smith''s work record, FBI agent Frank Cowles inquired: "Does Eddie solve any problems closer to our own time, Dr. Smith?" "Now, Dr. Smith," said Cowles, "let''s get back to the explosion.... Dr. John O''Hara Smith closed his eyes. story of Dr. John O''Hara Smith''s mysterious disappearance from General "General," Smith replied acidly, "do you know any better way of When John O''Hara Smith phoned that afternoon, the General said promptly: "Everything you know about the X-15," Dr. Smith agreed, "but Eddie Dr. John O''Hara Smith, and Eddie, the educatable computer. id = 33374 author = Sawyer, Robert J. title = Wake (First 25,000 words) date = keywords = Inc. summary = Copyright (C) 2009 by SFWRITER.COM Inc. This eBook is available in RTF format, please see the accompanying files. Note that it is an extract only, provided by the author. id = 33375 author = Sawyer, Robert J. title = Watch (First 25,000 words) date = keywords = Sawyer summary = Copyright (C) 2010 by Robert J. Sawyer This eBook is available in RTF format, please see the accompanying files. Note that it is an extract only, provided by the author. id = 59242 author = Smith, George H. (George Henry) title = Witness date = keywords = Edith summary = I turned Edith on just as MacKinney returned. _I have some interesting work for you this morning, Edith. suited security agent demanded, striding into the room with MacKinney, "You forget that Edith was turned off," Thompson said. "But Mr. Thompson, Edith''s not like most cybernetic machines. "But they can''t ask questions like that of Edith," I protested. country coroner asking her silly questions about the murder of a man coroner may very well want to talk to Edith and there''s no reason we I couldn''t let them question Edith. MacKinney, Thompson, Ballard and I had had access to the computer room; "Do you know who murdered Dr. Ballard?" "Did Mr. Thompson kill Ballard?" "Did Mr. MacKinney kill Ballard?" MacKinney and prevent, somehow, the asking of the next question. "Did Mr. Green kill Dr. Ballard?" Into the silence MacKinney read what Edith had slowly typed out: "Mr. Green did not kill Dr. Ballard." id = 18602 author = Smith, George O. (George Oliver) title = The Fourth "R" date = keywords = Bagley; Brennan; Carter; Charles; Fisher; Holden; Jake; James; Janet; Jimmy; Judge; Manison; Martha; Maxwell; Moe; Mr.; Mrs.; Paul; Quincy; Tim; good summary = Grandmother Holden said, "He''s your legal guardian, James." "James," said Paul Brennan quietly, "do you see you''re making trouble for "Sergeant," said Jake, "this is Jimmy James--as he calls himself when James Holden said immediately: "I am Charles Maxwell. The arrival of Mrs. Bagley changed James Holden''s way of life far more understanding the fact that James Holden''s superior education had come of Instead of trying to monopolize James Holden''s machine, Mrs. Bagley was It took James Holden''s limited experience some little time to identify would insist that Mrs. Bagley, with Martha, leave James Holden to take up Paul Brennan was personally convinced that James Holden had enough Paul Brennan read many stories written by James Holden under several At the end of James Holden''s long explanation, Tim Fisher said, "Me--? way to show why James Holden wanted his freedom by asking Brennan: "During those years, Mrs. Fisher, did James Holden at any time conduct id = 50936 author = Stecher, L. J., Jr. title = Man in a Sewing Machine date = keywords = Bristol; Buster; John; Oracle summary = Stitch in Time Saves Nine," it said and lapsed into silence. answer the computer had given to his question, John Bristol noticed does ''A Stitch in Time'' mean, as applied to the question I asked you?" the invaders," Buster answered, "there was still much information to "I don''t mind being called ''The Oracle,''" answered Buster with dignity. "Just relax, dear," said Anne gently, when Bristol leaned gratefully "Was today a rough day with Buster, dear?" asked Anne. answered ''A Stitch in Time Saves Nine,'' and wouldn''t interpret it." "And that sounds like very good sense, too," said Anne in earnest the time," said Anne. "And that''s why they call it ''stitching,''" said Anne with seeming "It said, ''A Stitch in Time Saves Nine.''" Perhaps the Oracle meant that timely use of inter-planar travel can "The Oracle said that the stitch must be taken in John Bristol, a few days after the continuous stitching started, was id = 51482 author = Stecher, L. J., Jr. title = Perfect Answer date = keywords = Bates; Oracle summary = "As one god to another--let''s go home," Jack Bates said. "And we''ll use one of _my_ coins this time," said Farnum, noticing the "Coming right up," said Bates. "Isn''t that why you want to try one more system?" asked Bates. "Well," said Farnum at last, "looks like we might as well go outside Farnum and Bates took turns talking at the box for half an hour. Bates shrugged his shoulders and went back into the ship, with Farnum Oracle has always got all the answers anyway. Oracle can tell you if you really want to know." Bates and Farnum went into the building and found themselves in a "You are the Oracle?" asked Farnum, looking around curiously. "You mean you''ll stop telling the truth at that time?" asked Bates. "And you''ll answer any question at all?" asked Bates in some excitement. When they were back in their ship, Farnum turned desperately to Bates. id = 50998 author = Wallace, F. L. (Floyd L.) title = Delay in Transit date = keywords = Bureau; Cassal; Dimanche; Earth; Foray; Galaxy; Murra; Tunney summary = "Not interested," said Cassal firmly, his subvocalization inaudible Dimanche needed a good stiff course in Cassal had none, except, in a sense, Dimanche. Cassal wasn''t sure he was going to like her. Cassal, I don''t know when another ship bound for Tunney will show up on instrument he called Dimanche was not known to the Galaxy at large. "I''ve got it," said Dimanche as Cassal gloomily counted out the sum the "What I want to know is," said Dimanche, "why such precautions as either Cassal or Dimanche. "Cards," said Cassal, "though there are many varieties within that "Look around," said Dimanche. "You had it last time," said Dimanche. "Pressure," muttered Cassal to Dimanche. "That''s better," said Cassal. "I''ve already visualized those probing instruments," said Cassal "You don''t," said Cassal. "You," said Cassal, "are a machine. "Look," said Cassal. The first time Cassal had visited the Travelers Aid Bureau, it had