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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 52915 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 91 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mrs. 3 Mr. 1 spanish 1 Wolf 1 Turner 1 Tarbox 1 Street 1 Smith 1 Skinner 1 Sharpley 1 Rufus 1 Rose 1 Perkins 1 Paris 1 Palmas 1 Olivia 1 Musgrave 1 Mossamedes 1 Miss 1 Martin 1 Manning 1 Macallister 1 Las 1 Kit 1 Katy 1 Jonathan 1 Jefferson 1 Jackson 1 Hunter 1 Humpy 1 Honey 1 Frank 1 Erminio 1 Dress 1 Don 1 Debit 1 Dearie 1 Credit 1 Craven 1 Colonel 1 Clifton 1 Cayman 1 CHAPTER 1 Betty 1 Ben 1 Austin Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 538 man 302 time 294 kit 273 thing 265 way 257 money 253 boy 238 dollar 236 business 217 room 209 something 200 day 198 board 196 boat 190 house 187 friend 174 nothing 165 office 161 hand 160 mother 157 morning 140 step 137 sir 134 water 132 captain 128 eye 127 one 123 moment 122 clothe 122 box 121 plan 119 people 111 father 108 girl 107 sea 104 head 103 hero 103 anything 100 street 100 fact 99 ship 99 face 97 wife 97 door 96 week 96 part 95 fellow 92 name 90 letter 89 place Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1375 _ 779 Kit 737 Mr. 554 Mrs. 527 Frank 456 Skinner 414 Craven 413 Rufus 401 Martin 324 Austin 274 Don 272 Jefferson 255 Sharpley 233 Betty 218 Olivia 211 Miss 199 Wolf 189 Honey 161 Manning 158 Rose 156 Macallister 145 Tarbox 142 McLaughlin 138 Erminio 137 Smith 133 Katy 112 Mossamedes 89 Jackson 87 Humpy 76 Street 74 Perkins 72 Cayman 71 Musgrave 71 CHAPTER 70 Palmas 70 Las 69 Dearie 69 Ben 67 Turner 65 Miguel 64 Arturo 57 ye 56 Colonel 53 Hunter 49 Ramon 48 Jacinta 46 Liverpool 46 Africa 43 Jonathan 43 Clifton Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5052 he 4712 i 3702 you 2631 it 1399 him 1366 she 912 me 796 they 675 we 444 her 270 himself 267 them 155 us 115 one 47 myself 43 herself 38 yourself 30 yours 26 mine 17 ye 15 his 14 ''em 12 ''s 10 hers 9 themselves 9 itself 8 ours 5 ourselves 3 em 2 d''you 1 yit 1 theirs 1 oneself 1 eat--"you Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9312 be 3494 have 2331 do 2047 say 1289 go 1049 get 920 think 875 know 864 see 600 look 562 come 492 take 473 make 388 ask 382 want 366 give 325 feel 316 tell 299 find 275 like 236 stop 232 let 226 begin 223 leave 219 mean 180 talk 178 pay 174 turn 171 put 164 keep 160 hear 157 try 155 carry 151 use 147 send 142 suppose 140 expect 139 run 138 meet 133 wait 130 bring 124 remark 122 seem 117 help 114 smile 111 hope 104 return 104 break 101 understand 101 sit Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3436 not 559 then 557 up 524 so 473 very 463 good 443 out 439 much 386 well 361 now 316 little 276 back 252 off 244 long 237 more 230 here 213 rather 213 only 204 as 203 perhaps 203 other 203 down 198 just 166 old 163 soon 163 all 160 too 159 young 151 sometimes 151 first 146 n''t 141 never 141 few 136 however 132 new 132 enough 129 again 126 great 125 on 122 there 121 right 117 in 115 same 111 small 111 poor 105 far 97 once 97 hard 96 yet 96 white Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 62 good 51 most 22 least 9 bad 4 short 4 old 4 little 4 late 4 j 3 near 3 low 3 hard 3 great 3 fine 2 warm 2 nice 2 high 2 easy 2 dear 2 Most 1 strong 1 steep 1 smart 1 simple 1 safe 1 pleasant 1 mean 1 manif 1 keen 1 fat 1 fast 1 dour 1 deadly 1 cussed 1 clever 1 black 1 big Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 45 most 10 well 3 least 1 sternpost 1 smartest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/6/0/8/26080/26080-h/26080-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/6/0/8/26080/26080-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19 kit did not 11 kit had not 9 kit was not 7 betty did not 6 austin did not 6 frank did not 6 martin did not 5 _ is _ 5 frank is alive 5 kit was young 5 kit went off 5 rufus did not 5 thing was ridiculous 4 _ did _ 4 _ was _ 4 austin was not 4 kit was satisfied 4 kit was very 4 skinner did n''t 4 skinner went on 4 wolf is not 3 _ did not 3 _ is not 3 _ know _ 3 kit was embarrassed 3 kit was rather 3 martin was not 3 olivia was not 3 skinner was not 3 wolf had not 2 _ do n''t 2 _ feel _ 2 _ get _ 2 _ had _ 2 _ look _ 2 _ was fast 2 austin looked thoughtful 2 austin was surprised 2 betty had qualities 2 betty knew kit 2 betty said nothing 2 betty was generally 2 betty was happy 2 betty was thin 2 boy is dead 2 business is not 2 craven did not 2 craven was not 2 jefferson is very 2 jefferson said nothing Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 kit was not altogether 2 austin was not surprised 1 _ is not classical 1 _ is not large 1 _ made no smoke 1 _ was not there 1 austin was not very 1 business are not laborers 1 frank is not likely 1 frank said no more 1 jefferson was not fastidious 1 kit did not altogether 1 kit saw no palms 1 kit was not much 1 man has no business 1 man was not about 1 man was not as 1 martin was no doubt 1 martin was no longer 1 martin was not very 1 men were not numerous 1 olivia was not about 1 rufus has not yet 1 sharpley was not very 1 skinner sees no difference 1 skinner was no snob 1 skinner was not afraid 1 thing ''s not honest 1 thing ''s not just 1 thing was not important 1 thing was not so 1 things are not regular 1 wolf is not here A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 25967 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = Rufus and Rose; Or, The Fortunes of Rough and Ready date = keywords = Clifton; Humpy; Manning; Martin; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Rose; Rufus; Smith; Street; Turner summary = "So this is to be your first day in Wall Street, Rufus," said Miss "I think I shall like it," said Miss Manning, with satisfaction. "Well, how do you like the room, Miss Manning?" said Mrs. Colman, when "Perhaps Mr. Martin will come and board with us," said Rufus, jestingly; the morning," said Rufus, turning to Miss Manning. "Yes; she is a very good little girl," said Rufus, better pleased with a "I think she is a very good little girl," said Rufus; "but then I am "This is my friend, Miss Manning," said Rufus, "and my little sister "Thank you, Rufus," said Miss Manning, smiling, "but I suppose it won''t "Thank you, Rufus," said Miss Manning; "I shall like very much to go. "Yes; it was very good," said Rufus; "I don''t know but I like it almost "Yes," said Martin; "I like smoking; but I''m a poor man, and I can''t id = 56602 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = Frank Hunter''s Peril date = keywords = Ben; CHAPTER; Colonel; Craven; Frank; Hunter; Jonathan; Katy; Mr.; Mrs.; Paris; Sharpley; Tarbox summary = "Seems to me he has a good deal of business with mother," Frank said "I am afraid Frank won''t like the idea of my marrying again," said Mrs. Hunter, anxiously. "He takes it very well," thought Frank, as Mr. Craven said good-night. "Good morning, sir," said Frank, for the first time noticing the "I thought perhaps I ought to save up the surplus for Frank," said Mrs. Craven, hesitating. "You--you don''t think he is likely to be taken away?" said Mrs. Craven, "Do you want Mr. Craven to be guardian with you, mother?" asked Frank, "Frank," said Mr. Craven, "this is my friend, Colonel Sharpley. "He seems a little so," said Frank; "but I hope, Mr. Tarbox, you won''t "I care very little what Mr. Craven would like," said Frank. "I think we''ll go now, Frank," said Sharpley. "Then," said Mrs. Craven, "Frank may be alive." id = 39453 author = Bindloss, Harold title = Kit Musgrave''s Luck date = keywords = Austin; Betty; Cayman; Don; Erminio; Jefferson; Kit; Las; Macallister; Mossamedes; Mrs.; Musgrave; Olivia; Palmas; Wolf; spanish summary = man looks honest," said Mrs. Austin, and turning to the captain, added: "To the mole; African steamer''s boat," said Kit; Considine occupied the "It looks like that," said Kit. "I reckon you _know_," said Jefferson, who looked at Mrs. Austin. Wolf looked at Don Erminio, and Kit thought he slightly lifted his "In a way," said Kit "I like my job, but the pay is small." "I have not," said Kit; "do I look like a passenger?" Olivia went into the house and Mrs. Austin said to Jefferson: "If Harry Betty said nothing, but rather thought Kit another man. Betty thought Mrs. Austin''s object was plain, but wondered much what Kit You see, Betty refused Kit," Mrs. Jefferson remarked in a thoughtful voice. "Mrs. Austin has helped me," Kit agreed and looked at Betty. Kit did not want to talk; he was satisfied to be near Betty and Mrs. Jefferson. id = 26080 author = Dodge, Henry Irving title = Skinner''s Dress Suit date = keywords = Credit; Dearie; Debit; Dress; Honey; Jackson; Mr.; Mrs.; Perkins; Skinner summary = Several times Honey had hinted to Skinner that the firm was slow to show "If I ''d hung out, I might have got ten dollars more," said Skinner "Well," said Skinner presently, "what''s going on in that little bean of "What the deuce are you talking about?" said Skinner, staring at Honey, "Honey," said Skinner solemnly, "we''ve invested in this dress-suit "This dress suit is going to get all it wants to eat," said Skinner A few days later Skinner said to Honey, as he stretched his long legs affair Skinner had schemed to keep Mrs. McLaughlin and Honey apart. Skinner thought with a humorous chuckle how Honey had said, "Dearie, I "Now, Dearie!" Honey began to cry and Skinner got up from the table and "I''ll bet you a new dress Skinner''ll be after me to-day," said Jackson, "Mr. Jackson," said Skinner, "you''re a frank man.