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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 41233 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 man 1 track 1 son 1 race 1 mile 1 good 1 footnote 1 dialogue 1 Zeus 1 Weston 1 WINNER 1 Thebes 1 Speaker 1 Rowell 1 Randall 1 Pytho 1 Putnam 1 Poseidon 1 Pindar 1 Pentathlon 1 O''Leary 1 New 1 Nemea 1 Nellie 1 Mrs. 1 Mr. 1 Miss 1 Laura 1 Kyrene 1 Kronos 1 Johnson 1 Jess 1 Hopevale 1 High 1 Hieron 1 Hester 1 Herakles 1 Hellas 1 Hebe 1 Grimes 1 Greek 1 God 1 Fenton 1 England 1 Ellis 1 Dick 1 Dave 1 DIME 1 Clinton 1 Chet Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 667 man 380 time 328 girl 290 game 244 thing 226 foot 220 boy 209 hand 201 mile 199 day 198 footnote 197 team 193 son 187 school 172 way 151 fellow 148 race 144 track 143 place 137 word 131 year 129 father 127 head 126 point 121 car 120 field 116 song 114 honour 112 friend 109 side 108 ball 107 victory 107 one 106 city 102 house 101 life 101 eye 100 name 99 match 98 mother 96 record 94 moment 91 mind 91 god 89 work 87 end 86 ode 84 course 84 competitor 83 something Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 430 _ 295 Dick 271 Hester 174 Laura 163 High 140 Mr. 134 Fenton 133 Ellis 132 Bobby 130 Zeus 126 Central 116 thou 108 Nellie 104 Mrs. 103 Allen 102 Footnote 99 hath 99 Dave 98 Grimes 95 Chet 78 Putnam 77 Hopevale 75 Randall 73 Miss 72 Clinton 71 Pindar 71 McDonald 65 Hebe 60 Johnson 56 Case 54 Pentathlon 54 Jess 51 Johnny 50 Lily 49 Eve 49 Agnew 47 Greek 46 Belding 44 Apollo 43 WINNER 43 Dime 42 Pocock 42 Herakles 41 God 40 god 40 O''Leary 39 Thebes 38 Gee 36 Keyport 36 East Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2098 he 1600 it 1579 i 1111 you 707 they 656 him 570 she 495 we 373 them 282 me 213 her 128 us 125 himself 46 herself 43 thee 29 myself 28 themselves 28 ''em 24 one 21 itself 16 ''s 15 yourself 7 em 6 mine 5 ourselves 5 his 4 theirs 3 ye 3 thyself 2 yours 2 ya 2 i''m 1 yourselves 1 whereof 1 ours 1 dwell[7 Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 5710 be 1848 have 1087 do 650 say 492 make 470 go 452 come 400 get 327 know 306 take 291 see 250 give 226 tell 206 think 200 win 185 look 170 run 155 keep 153 put 149 seem 142 find 139 cry 136 call 128 walk 127 let 118 turn 113 stand 108 try 108 begin 107 want 107 bring 100 answer 98 play 96 feel 93 start 92 show 92 hold 92 hear 91 throw 90 speak 90 ask 87 beat 84 guess 82 leave 79 pass 76 bear 75 set 72 mean 68 fall 67 follow Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1336 not 508 good 427 then 404 now 395 up 351 so 306 first 270 out 249 well 246 more 220 other 217 even 216 little 206 right 204 just 199 too 197 as 191 great 188 much 185 long 184 all 176 only 173 again 167 back 164 old 151 down 147 very 141 never 141 high 137 here 133 there 133 last 130 same 124 most 120 ever 119 fair 117 once 115 away 108 many 108 in 106 also 104 yet 99 such 98 own 97 second 97 far 94 on 93 still 91 young 90 enough Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 160 good 41 least 34 most 24 great 15 near 15 high 7 large 7 bad 6 strong 6 Most 5 long 5 late 5 fair 3 young 3 wise 3 small 3 hard 3 fine 3 eld 3 chief 2 weak 2 sitt 2 short 2 nice 2 light 2 keen 2 j 2 furth 2 few 2 fast 2 early 2 close 2 brave 2 bl 1 topmost 1 sure 1 subtle 1 slow 1 slight 1 slender 1 sham 1 sent 1 seek 1 se 1 rich 1 often 1 neat 1 mighty 1 manif 1 lucky Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 90 most 8 well 8 least 1 near 1 life[2 1 jest 1 heaviest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 books.google.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=kh5WAAAAYAAJ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 _ did _ 4 _ do _ 4 dick did not 3 _ have _ 2 _ do n''t 2 _ does _ 2 _ is _ 2 _ was _ 2 girls do n''t 2 hath done honourable 2 man turns out 2 men go up 1 _ are _ 1 _ be awfully 1 _ be good 1 _ be miss 1 _ did n''t 1 _ got _ 1 _ has _ 1 _ keeping proper 1 _ know _ 1 _ let poor 1 _ look funny 1 _ running high 1 _ running wide 1 _ says _ 1 _ standing high 1 _ standing wide 1 _ want _ 1 boy come back 1 boy was fair 1 boy was scared 1 boys ai n''t 1 boys cried out 1 boys get in 1 boys kept up 1 boys looked only 1 boys looking forward 1 boys stood well 1 boys were n''t 1 boys were ready 1 boys were still 1 day is ever 1 day is n''t 1 day made accomplishment 1 day was dark 1 day was george 1 day was not 1 day was warm 1 dick called back Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 day was not able 1 dick made no answer 1 girl made no audible 1 hand had no more 1 laura had no such 1 man is not far 1 school is not so 1 team was not as 1 thing ''s no more A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 38471 author = Clark, Ellery H. (Ellery Harding) title = Dick Randall, the Young Athlete date = keywords = Allen; Clinton; Dave; Dick; Ellis; Fenton; Hopevale; Johnson; Mr.; Pentathlon; Putnam; Randall summary = "Come on," he said; "let''s walk down and watch Dave Ellis. Pentathlon man over at Clinton--a fellow named Johnson--he won it last won my ''F'', and that makes a fellow feel good, you know. like lightning, his right arm shot forward, and the big iron ball went Dick looked a little vengefully after Ellis'' retreating figure. Dave Ellis is the fellow Mr. Fenton would honestly like to see elected wouldn''t want even as good a man as Mr. Fenton to rule us like a king. Dave all sorts of mean little chances to try to make the fellows think know about Johnson, but I don''t think Dave''s going to improve a great "Fetch ''em out, old man," Dick cried, and like a shot, the lake, Dick Randall and Jim Putnam, on their way across the yard, came "Think we''ve struck the right place, Dick?" he asked. "Well, old man," Dick said to id = 37912 author = Morrison, Gertrude W. title = The Girls of Central High at Basketball; Or, The Great Gymnasium Mystery date = keywords = Bobby; Case; Central; Chet; Grimes; Hebe; Hester; High; Jess; Laura; Miss; Mrs.; Nellie summary = The rules under which the girls of Central High played the game were Hester Grimes turned and gave Nellie Agnew an angry look and then went The girls of Central High had something of more moment than Hester that Hester had declared her hatred of the girls of Central High team," thought Hester Grimes, walking down toward the athletic field term--a game between Central High girls and the representative team of girls of Central High that Hester Grimes knew more than she should The game with the crack team of the East High girls was to be played nobody would tell Hester just what each girl said, or who signed know there is good stuff in that girl Hester?" put Hester Grimes off the basketball team as any girl. "We really _must_ beat these girls," said Laura, Mrs. Case being out "That''s when Hester was on the team," said Laura, quietly. id = 10717 author = Pindar title = The Extant Odes of Pindar Translated with Introduction and Short Notes by Ernest Myers date = keywords = Aiakos; Aigina; Apollo; B.C.; God; Greek; Hellas; Herakles; Hieron; Kronos; Kyrene; Nemea; Pindar; Poseidon; Pytho; Thebes; WINNER; Zeus; footnote; man; race; son summary = Pherenikos[2] at Pisa hath swayed thy soul unto glad thoughts, when by Father Zeus exceedingly, and her son, the ivy-bearing god. for a hundred years no city hath brought forth a man of mind more folk, hath honoured six twin altars in great feasts of the gods with [Footnote 10: The course in the chariot-race was twelve times round your gift come unto men all pleasant things and sweet, and the wisdom Now unto various kings pay various men sweet song, their valour''s quickly came three sons of Zeus, men unwearied in battle, whose hath brought this majestic honour to thy soul, and again thou art now [Footnote 4: Probably a horse with which Hippokleas'' father won a race And that man also hath won longed-for glory in the strife of games, Our first, O Zeus, was unto thee, when at Nemea we[1] won thy id = 47254 author = nan title = Handbook of Summer Athletic Sports Comprising: Walking, Running, Jumping, Hare and Hounds, Bicycling, Archery, Etc. date = keywords = DIME; England; New; O''Leary; Rowell; Speaker; Weston; dialogue; good; man; mile; track summary = Giving the Rules for Training and Practice in Walking, Running, young man of good health and strength can learn to walk five miles in an hour, but the number of men who can walk twenty-five miles in The success of Weston and O''Leary in their long-distance walks in race was twenty miles short of the champion''s best walking record. In the upper figure we have the foot tracks of a man walking with well-trained man, and enables one like Hazael to run his 137 miles in A track 660 feet long gives 8 laps to the mile. mile--440 yards--in 48 1-4 seconds, beating the best English record From twenty-five up to fifty miles the best walking time on record seconds; while his 129th mile was walked in 24 hours 20 minutes and Howes leads the record for one-day walks with 127 miles, and O''Leary shall record the order of finishing and the times of the competitors