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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 2 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 14262 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 room 1 man 1 foot 1 close 1 child 1 Street 1 Price 1 High 1 Edinburgh Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 73 room 49 foot 49 child 39 man 36 water 35 house 32 close 31 woman 31 day 28 family 25 stair 25 night 25 floor 24 light 22 city 21 year 21 people 18 mother 18 bed 17 window 17 passage 16 wall 16 land 16 den 15 work 15 nothing 15 life 14 partition 14 air 13 wife 13 week 13 side 13 rent 13 place 13 door 13 circumstance 12 street 12 straw 12 population 12 gutter 11 vice 11 hole 11 girl 11 face 11 class 10 way 10 time 10 thing 10 person 10 part Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 87 _ 33 Edinburgh 16 6d 15 Street 13 High 12 Close 10 Price 10 God 8 Town 8 Old 7 Foolscap 7 EDINBURGH 7 Cowgate 6 Subsecivæ 6 Sewed 6 New 6 Horæ 6 Dr. 5 Wynd 5 West 5 St. 5 Grassmarket 5 Edition 4 heaven 4 W. 4 Sabbath 4 Rev. 4 Rab 4 Port 4 London 4 John 4 JOHN 4 Father 4 DR 4 Cloth 4 Canongate 4 CHAPTER 4 . 3 thou 3 Wayside 3 Vol 3 Thoughts 3 THOMPSON 3 Sir 3 Poor 3 Philosophy 3 J. 3 I. 3 Hume 3 Hallam Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 135 it 86 they 58 we 58 them 33 i 33 he 32 she 14 us 14 themselves 10 you 10 him 9 me 4 her 3 itself 3 herself 2 himself 1 ourselves 1 myself Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 587 be 163 have 42 do 33 come 26 go 24 say 20 give 18 see 17 make 17 look 15 sit 15 know 14 take 14 find 13 lie 12 get 11 visit 11 live 11 break 10 pay 10 leave 9 seem 9 let 9 learn 9 keep 9 follow 9 contain 9 compel 8 wash 8 sleep 8 hear 8 cover 8 carry 8 bring 8 bear 7 suppose 7 stand 7 run 7 rent 7 put 7 fall 7 die 6 wait 6 mend 6 lock 6 lapse 6 exist 6 enter 6 consider 6 call Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 93 not 34 well 34 more 32 only 31 very 29 so 29 old 27 poor 27 dark 26 up 25 many 23 most 22 here 21 bad 20 such 20 other 20 much 19 good 19 as 18 even 17 long 17 large 15 too 15 small 15 out 15 nearly 14 in 14 down 13 next 12 young 12 wretched 12 there 12 almost 11 scarcely 11 little 11 decent 11 close 10 often 10 now 10 human 10 great 10 filthy 9 then 9 same 9 never 9 first 9 drunk 9 clean 8 several 8 respectable Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 most 7 bad 5 least 4 good 2 poor 2 high 2 eld 1 weak 1 topmost 1 sad 1 old 1 hard 1 fine 1 dark Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 14 most 2 well 1 worst 1 least 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are very 1 _ said _ 1 bed took up 1 child had not 1 children have never 1 children were still 1 close was intolerable 1 close was little 1 edinburgh are not 1 edinburgh is impossible 1 families visited in 1 feet were almost 1 floor was almost 1 houses are generally 1 houses leave only 1 life goes on 1 light came in 1 men had formerly 1 mother was merciful 1 mother were rheumatic 1 night goes on 1 passage was _ 1 passage was poisonous 1 passage were dimly 1 people are now 1 people had brooms 1 people have contentedly 1 people were civil 1 room had direct 1 room was almost 1 room was clean 1 room was miserable 1 room was poisonous 1 room was scrupulously 1 stair was as 1 stair was much 1 walls are mainly 1 walls were black 1 walls were rough 1 walls were skeleton 1 window had originally 1 windows were nearly 1 woman had not 1 women did not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 36014 author = Bird, Isabella L. (Isabella Lucy) title = Notes on Old Edinburgh date = keywords = Edinburgh; High; Price; Street; child; close; foot; man; room summary = High Street, Cowgate, and West Port, going by "house-row." In all cases We followed this water grievance into thirty-seven houses that day, and of father, mother, and child of three years old, were fighting a hard women said, were the children of parents too poor to provide them with wife, to come down the dark filthy stair late at night with the occupiers were a very decent-looking man, seventy-six years old, by trade man had to bring the water up the long dark stair. two children, living in a room, requiring a candle at mid-day, 12 feet by two children, sleeping in a large bed in a room 11 feet by 9 feet, with a Three adults and six children in a room 12 feet by 10 children; room, 14 feet by 15 feet; rent, £3, 18s. closes and the street, and that there was no sign that the night had come,