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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 97149 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 83 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 Genoa 2 Doria 1 scene 1 italian 1 ZIBO 1 ZENTURIONE 1 Virgin 1 Vasari 1 VERRINA 1 Uffizi 1 Tuscany 1 St. 1 Rome 1 Pope 1 Pistoja 1 Pisano 1 Pisa 1 Piero 1 Piazza 1 Palazzo 1 Miniato 1 Michele 1 Michelangelo 1 Medici 1 Maria 1 Madonna 1 MOOR 1 Lucca 1 Lorenzo 1 Lord 1 LOMELLINO 1 LEONORA 1 John 1 JULIA 1 Italy 1 God 1 Giovanni 1 Giotto 1 GIANETTINO 1 Francis 1 Francesco 1 Florentine 1 Florence 1 Fiesole 1 FIESCO 1 Duomo 1 Donatello 1 Cosimo 1 Church 1 Christ Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 573 work 508 city 372 day 320 man 317 way 304 church 270 life 232 place 225 beauty 220 time 210 hand 208 picture 189 century 183 sea 174 year 174 world 172 thing 171 hill 165 art 161 house 148 people 148 heart 138 palace 125 friend 124 child 123 nothing 120 side 120 part 120 death 119 name 116 love 115 gate 114 sun 112 della 110 son 109 country 108 arm 105 foot 101 street 100 head 99 tower 99 statue 99 something 96 scene 95 flower 94 marble 92 road 89 sort 89 night 89 door Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 765 S. 601 _ 384 St. 367 Florence 347 FIESCO 336 Genoa 272 Pisa 193 Madonna 177 Italy 153 Fiesco 143 Duomo 136 Piazza 136 Lorenzo 134 thou 134 MOOR 126 VERRINA 124 Via 122 Cosimo 120 del 118 God 118 Doria 115 Lucca 114 Giovanni 110 GIANETTINO 101 da 100 BOURGOGNINO 97 Andrea 94 LEONORA 92 Medici 91 Francis 91 Donatello 90 Maria 89 John 87 Palazzo 86 Church 83 Piero 80 Tuscany 78 Rome 76 di 74 Arno 70 Genoese 69 JULIA 68 Christ 67 de 66 LOMELLINO 64 Michelangelo 64 Castruccio 63 Pope 63 Fra 60 Florentines Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2063 it 1381 he 1154 i 1126 you 692 they 675 him 613 we 464 them 419 she 373 me 290 us 254 her 201 himself 155 itself 76 thee 72 herself 64 themselves 55 one 23 yourself 22 ourselves 18 myself 12 yours 8 his 7 thyself 6 mine 4 thy 3 theirs 3 ours 3 hers 2 oneself 2 ''s 1 ye 1 whither 1 thou 1 o''erleap 1 italy?--and Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 6509 be 2054 have 614 come 528 see 377 do 368 find 361 seem 353 say 317 make 284 go 271 pass 237 give 230 take 218 stand 209 think 198 know 198 build 187 hear 177 call 162 look 160 leave 156 bear 153 paint 150 set 148 tell 148 fall 130 become 129 bring 124 follow 117 turn 117 return 117 lie 115 rise 115 enter 115 die 112 lose 109 live 109 let 108 hold 102 begin 99 speak 96 remain 89 lead 86 carve 84 forget 79 love 75 send 66 throw 66 meet 64 seek Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1049 not 615 so 535 great 440 here 408 then 359 old 350 little 327 more 323 there 322 too 318 beautiful 306 now 268 first 253 very 248 only 246 most 241 still 237 last 228 full 224 away 222 long 199 other 196 perhaps 193 much 187 far 182 out 182 even 176 up 176 almost 166 many 159 good 157 own 155 again 149 indeed 147 well 144 certainly 142 just 140 once 133 thus 132 such 131 lovely 128 down 126 ever 125 yet 124 however 117 really 113 certain 113 as 110 whole 108 splendid Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 79 good 71 great 48 least 39 most 22 lovely 17 early 15 fine 12 old 6 high 6 fair 5 happy 4 young 4 low 4 Most 3 noble 3 busy 3 bad 2 white 2 topmost 2 sweet 2 strong 2 short 2 say 2 pure 2 mean 2 manif 2 long 2 late 2 l 2 farth 2 brave 1 wr 1 wealthy 1 warm 1 true 1 tough 1 tiny 1 thick 1 sure 1 subtle 1 strange 1 slight 1 simple 1 silly 1 sane 1 rich 1 poor 1 pleasant 1 near 1 may Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 207 most 6 well 4 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 _ see _ 2 church is full 2 genoa be free 2 genoa is free 2 life was full 2 man has not 2 pisa was not 2 pisa was ready 2 work is beautiful 2 work is very 2 world is full 1 art are not 1 art is van 1 art was still 1 arts are not 1 beauty has here 1 beauty is ne''er 1 beauty is perhaps 1 beauty was such 1 century have certainly 1 church built later 1 church is beautiful 1 church is charming 1 church is dark 1 church is empty 1 church is not 1 church is now 1 church is really 1 church is so 1 church is solemn 1 church is spoiled 1 church is strange 1 church is work 1 church was finally 1 church was open 1 church was stupidly 1 churches are less 1 churches are small 1 churches is exactly 1 cities are fair 1 cities gave italy 1 city are so 1 city is now 1 city took montescudaio 1 city was conte 1 city was then 1 city was unwalled 1 day had already 1 day has ever 1 day has not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 art are not many 1 church is not very 1 florence had no power 1 genoa bore no part 1 genoa had no peace 1 man has not yet 1 men had no fear 1 pisa had no rest 1 pisa was not yet 1 sea was no longer 1 things were not fair A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 16477 author = Hutton, Edward title = Florence and Northern Tuscany with Genoa With Sixteen Illustrations in Colour by William Parkinson and Sixteen Other Illustrations, Second Edition date = keywords = Andrea; Arno; Castruccio; Christ; Church; Cosimo; Donatello; Doria; Duomo; Fiesole; Florence; Florentine; Francesco; Francis; Genoa; Giotto; Giovanni; God; Italy; John; Lord; Lorenzo; Lucca; Madonna; Maria; Medici; Michelangelo; Michele; Miniato; Palazzo; Piazza; Piero; Pisa; Pisano; Pistoja; Pope; Rome; St.; Tuscany; Uffizi; Vasari; Virgin; italian summary = things, the long ways of the great sea, the roads and the deserts and like to be lost in the maze of the city) on your way to the beautiful What then did Pisa look like in these the days of her great power and died in the city of Florence on St. Thomas''s Day in the year of Christ enemies built her splendid city, her beautiful Duomo, her Tower like the beautiful work of Biduino da Pisa, as it is said, sculptures in relief rang from the Duomo, I came into a beautiful city that, like some To pass through Florence for the most part by the old ways, from church us of that far-away flower-like beauty of fifteenth-century painting and and quiet of this great and beautiful church that has guarded Florence of old than to-day, when the work of the Greeks themselves has come into id = 6783 author = Schiller, Friedrich title = Fiesco; or, the Genoese Conspiracy: A Tragedy date = keywords = BERTHA; BOURGOGNINO; CALCAGNO; Doria; FIESCO; GIANETTINO; Genoa; JULIA; LEONORA; LOMELLINO; MOOR; VERRINA; ZENTURIONE; ZIBO; scene summary = ANDREAS DORIA, Duke of Genoa, a venerable old man, eighty years of age, LEONORA, the wife of Fiesco, eighteen years of age, of great sensibility; ''Tis Fiesco--let us hasten away--the sight of me of my soul; my heart shall fly half-way to meet thee on my tongue--I love Calcagno, thou must choose one or the other--either to give up thy heart Let Gianettino rule over Genoa; Fiesco shall devote Can death have robbed Verrina of a friend, and Fiesco FIESCO (turning round dexterously, and seizing the MOOR''S arm.) Stop, The liberty of Genoa is lost--Fiesco is lost--and thou Thou wilt sheathe thy sword in Doria''s heart? thee about them, say thou hast heard it rumored that thy master intends FIESCO, VERRINA, ROMANO, with a picture; SACCO, BOURGOGNINO, FIESCO, VERRINA, BOURGOGNINO, CALCAGNO, SACCO. FIESCO (armed, before the Doria Palace), and ANDREAS. Thy Fiesco is Duke of Genoa--and yet