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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 43342 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 9 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 look 2 Peter 1 time 1 snow 1 man 1 illustration 1 chapter 1 boy 1 black 1 Toronto 1 Timson 1 Smoke 1 Ship 1 Sherwood 1 River 1 Moss 1 Mazaruni 1 Maurice 1 Macgregor 1 Mac 1 Lewis 1 Kitty 1 Kimberley 1 Kildare 1 Jimmy 1 Jim 1 Jack 1 JUNGLE 1 Indians 1 Horace 1 Hardman 1 Gideon 1 General 1 Fred 1 Fields 1 Diamond 1 Darrell 1 Charlie 1 Captain 1 Bill Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 667 man 489 diamond 386 time 349 day 269 boy 268 river 237 one 218 place 206 horse 189 night 178 way 178 something 176 camp 171 water 168 hand 162 money 154 thing 153 life 151 face 143 fire 129 nothing 128 mile 126 chance 123 canoe 121 friend 116 year 113 foot 111 game 110 snow 110 anything 109 luck 107 sort 104 house 104 hour 103 stone 102 work 101 race 100 home 99 mine 99 cabin 98 country 97 story 96 morning 93 head 92 deal 90 pound 90 ground 90 eye 90 claim 88 bit Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 355 Fred 292 _ 226 Mr 208 Jack 191 Horace 137 Maurice 127 Kimberley 126 Peter 123 Mac 106 Macgregor 93 Diamond 92 Fields 89 Charlie 77 Indians 72 Lewis 70 Darrell 66 Captain 59 Moss 58 Timson 56 Jim 56 Gideon 55 Bill 53 Hardman 52 Kitty 50 Kildare 49 River 49 General 44 Warton 44 Connie 43 Enderby 43 Bowker 42 South 42 Kate 41 Le 41 Africa 40 Mert 40 Hamilton 38 Smythe 38 Sherwood 37 Tom 37 Joe 34 Crotty 33 Muzada 33 England 33 Brereton 30 Kaffir 28 Kaffirs 27 Heap 26 Vaal 25 toboggan Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3904 he 2505 it 1972 i 1766 they 1123 you 1067 him 841 we 661 them 541 she 445 me 228 himself 226 her 184 us 63 themselves 59 one 55 myself 36 ''em 28 herself 22 itself 21 ''s 16 yourself 12 his 11 em 9 yours 9 ourselves 6 mine 3 ours 2 ye 1 theirs 1 oneself 1 on:-- 1 i''m 1 home''--for 1 hers 1 heiress 1 ay Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 6852 be 3439 have 1110 do 920 say 764 go 711 get 631 come 600 make 580 see 488 think 465 look 460 take 455 find 444 know 310 seem 265 give 223 feel 216 leave 215 tell 208 keep 201 hear 187 begin 163 try 157 put 155 turn 140 let 139 work 134 want 125 talk 123 ask 119 sit 116 stand 115 start 111 stop 110 show 110 run 106 believe 104 become 103 win 103 carry 101 live 99 bring 98 like 94 answer 88 cry 88 buy 86 hold 86 catch 84 use 84 call Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1606 not 735 up 568 out 478 then 475 good 414 so 399 more 352 much 342 very 332 down 326 little 292 back 287 well 279 other 271 now 253 old 238 as 227 only 226 long 220 away 213 again 210 just 208 there 202 off 194 enough 189 too 187 here 183 on 182 all 180 last 177 never 165 great 164 first 158 in 151 rather 142 bad 132 few 131 next 129 almost 125 big 124 once 122 most 118 however 118 far 118 about 115 still 114 many 109 over 107 right 105 ever Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 72 good 52 most 19 least 18 bad 12 large 10 big 8 great 7 fine 6 slight 5 near 5 Most 3 wild 3 late 2 strong 2 sorry 2 rough 2 l 2 high 2 happy 2 close 1 young 1 weak 1 warm 1 vague 1 unlucki 1 topmost 1 sure 1 simple 1 quick 1 queer 1 proud 1 pleasant 1 northw 1 mean 1 mangy 1 heavy 1 hard 1 grave 1 grand 1 fast 1 farth 1 fair 1 eld 1 dear 1 deadly 1 cruel 1 cool 1 clear 1 cheap 1 brave Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 70 most 7 well 4 least 1 warmest 1 soon 1 hard 1 blackest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43051/43051-h/43051-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43051/43051-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/upmazarunifordia00lavarich 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 fred did not 2 boys took off 2 boys went out 2 boys were not 2 boys were tired 2 fred felt utterly 2 fred had already 2 fred had not 2 fred had only 2 fred was more 2 horace came down 2 horace had really 2 jack did not 2 jack was mad 2 one had ever 2 place was first 2 river was so 2 river was very 2 water was icy 2 water was smooth 1 _ am _ 1 _ went several 1 _ were plainly 1 boy make blowpipes 1 boy was ready 1 boys came up 1 boys did not 1 boys felt utterly 1 boys found only 1 boys had already 1 boys had ever 1 boys had hard 1 boys said anything 1 boys thought again 1 boys took turns 1 boys went back 1 boys were fairly 1 boys were greatly 1 boys were up 1 boys were very 1 camp was far 1 camp was quiet 1 canoe does n''t 1 canoe is ready 1 canoe made better 1 day came pleasant 1 day went on 1 days gets much 1 days were over 1 diamond are worth Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 boys had no means 1 boys did not even 1 boys had no trouble 1 boys made no objection 1 boys were not anxious 1 boys were not at 1 diamond do no one 1 diamonds were not there 1 face is not very 1 fred found no trace 1 horse is not much 1 jack was not quite 1 men are not brutes 1 men had no reason 1 men had no wish 1 night was not cold 1 places are not so 1 water was no more 1 water was not deep A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 37619 author = Belgrave, Dalrymple J. title = Luck at the Diamond Fields date = keywords = Bill; Charlie; Darrell; Diamond; Fields; General; Gideon; Hardman; Jack; Jim; Kildare; Kimberley; Kitty; Moss; Timson; look summary = these fine days; he is going that way pretty quick," another man said; not, I am going to work with him?" Jack said as he turned to leave the with Jack in the Diamond Field Horse took to frequenting the bar. "Look here, my man, you don''t think I''m going to let you take away what to think that; but let''s have a look at it," Mr Moss said, as he got a finishing himself, I saw it in his face, I have seen men look like that a fool," Jack said as he took the diamond, and then gave his old one can do her much good, poor little lass," the old digger said, with hurry away from this place; remember we''re partners, old man; come, look money, and won''t lose it if they can help," said a rough-looking man old days?" Jack said, after they had talked together for some time. id = 43051 author = La Varre, William title = Up the Mazaruni for Diamonds date = keywords = Captain; Indians; JUNGLE; Jimmy; Lewis; Mazaruni; Peter; black; chapter; illustration; man summary = soon learned that to journey up a great river for hundreds of miles scouted around amongst them, found a good canoe, took three black men I stared at the black bank of the river whence came the weird sounds, "You acted like a veteran explorer," said old Captain Peter to me. call all blacks "boys"--thought that it was the white man''s natural [Illustration: THE FIRST JUNGLE INDIANS WE SAW] The Indians sleep without clothes, other than the mesh-like flaps of man''s country and not butt into the wild jungles of the Indians. On this trip one of our men had heard that Simon believed Lewis had "Ha-ha," laughed Lewis, "you''ve got some fine little wait coming." He While the Indians like the white men, they do not like the blacks. "Black night monkey," said Jimmy. Our Indians paddled into a small inlet of the river one day where id = 32323 author = Pollock, Frank Lillie title = Northern Diamonds date = keywords = Fred; Horace; Mac; Macgregor; Maurice; Peter; River; Smoke; Toronto; boy; look; snow; time summary = "A hundred and fifty miles in two days?" said Fred. "The last time I heard from Horace he was at Red Lake," said Fred, "but "Well, it looks as if the storm would last all day," said Fred, gazing Five miles from camp, Maurice and Peter had come upon the fresh trail This time Fred and Maurice stayed in the cabin to keep warm, boys were all standing outside the cabin door, when Fred suddenly "Why, you don''t expect to live like this long?" cried Fred, looking "We thought you might be dead!" Fred cried, and Peter and Maurice cut They started for the camp in the snow, and on the way Fred gave his the water as the canoe came in sight; and when the boys stopped to make "If we had left the foxes in the canoe," said Fred, "they''d have been None of the boys said anything, but Horace gave Fred a reproachful id = 61333 author = Simak, Clifford D. title = The Shipshape Miracle date = keywords = Sherwood; Ship summary = distance from Sherwood''s crippled ship and his patched-together shack. "I told you," said the Ship. "I told you," said the Ship. "Consider," said the Ship, "a certain human who had worked for years to "No ship," insisted Sherwood, "can get off a planet...." "You''re thinking, Mr. Sherwood, of the ships built by human hands. "The man you spoke of," Sherwood said. "I don''t get it," Sherwood told the Ship, feeling the panic coming "No," said Sherwood, in revulsion, knowing what was coming. "It was a kindness," said the ship. Sherwood stood and thought about it--the endless voyaging through space Yes, he thought, it would be a nice kind of ship to have. He could buy another ship, of course; with the diamonds in the sacking The bunk dropped down flat against the wall and his sack of diamonds "Something wrong, Mr. Sherwood?" asked the Ship. "No, not a thing," said Sherwood.