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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 3517 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 character 3 Mr. 2 sexual 2 Spencer 2 Darwin 1 time 1 sex 1 selection 1 race 1 parent 1 offspring 1 natural 1 mendelian 1 marriage 1 man 1 mammal 1 male 1 linkage 1 life 1 inheritance 1 ingredient 1 heredity 1 great 1 footnote 1 flat 1 fish 1 female 1 factor 1 effect 1 development 1 chromosome 1 child 1 cell 1 case 1 York 1 Yale 1 Weismann 1 Variation 1 VIII 1 USE 1 Tudor 1 TABLE 1 Sweet 1 States 1 State 1 Reformation 1 Professor 1 Plato 1 Plants 1 Plaice Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 857 character 782 male 587 female 539 case 443 man 420 sex 410 time 405 child 379 factor 366 chromosome 358 effect 321 life 317 part 312 cell 302 fact 290 vermilion 283 condition 283 body 270 side 267 selection 267 development 258 result 250 year 245 type 242 offspring 242 animal 240 eye 239 inheritance 232 use 232 individual 210 parent 196 mutation 196 family 194 mother 193 number 192 theory 192 organ 192 change 178 race 176 woman 176 way 174 bar 172 generation 171 heredity 167 relation 166 experiment 164 place 163 wing 163 nature 161 influence Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2979 _ 1763 | 219 Henry 173 Edwards 170 Mr. 129 Darwin 110 New 86 Morgan 76 Professor 75 et 73 Dr. 71 Spencer 70 Yale 69 York 69 F_1 69 Drosophila 66 � 64 C. 63 à 61 B 56 . 54 v 54 Jonathan 54 Elizabeth 51 Dwight 49 H. 49 F_2 47 lethal 47 Weismann 45 X 44 germ 43 Y 43 Mary 41 Burr 39 Bateson 38 TABLE 38 Jukes 38 College 37 Lethal 36 ova 33 s 33 Heredity 32 i. 32 White 32 B. 31 Plaice 31 Cross 30 Vermilion 30 State 29 Variation Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2044 it 1015 he 879 we 758 they 436 i 381 them 207 him 188 she 118 us 98 itself 82 me 79 you 79 himself 75 themselves 60 her 21 one 14 myself 13 herself 12 ourselves 3 his 2 theirs 2 ours 2 hers 1 yours 1 weapons.--organs 1 ii 1 environment.--this 1 bd Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10142 be 2560 have 602 do 480 give 369 show 327 make 313 find 303 say 270 develop 269 produce 258 take 236 see 225 become 212 know 194 appear 183 inherit 176 seem 169 occur 159 come 150 go 146 bear 145 call 140 use 137 cause 135 transmit 135 consider 135 affect 134 bring 132 suppose 128 form 126 acquire 123 live 121 arise 120 link 118 follow 109 think 109 believe 101 carry 100 grow 95 prove 94 explain 92 contain 90 cross 88 breed 86 remain 84 fuse 83 keep 82 leave 82 accord 79 obtain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1668 not 676 other 625 more 537 only 418 so 338 same 333 great 318 such 309 most 294 well 292 first 287 also 272 very 255 then 254 many 242 much 241 white 228 long 225 normal 221 sexual 219 as 212 good 205 wild 205 large 196 male 189 over 187 female 183 even 181 less 181 different 179 natural 177 certain 175 new 172 therefore 168 thus 168 however 164 out 161 now 152 up 151 high 148 sable 145 due 142 far 139 true 139 never 138 small 136 little 134 own 133 often 133 here Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 82 most 65 least 62 good 31 high 31 great 20 large 18 bad 12 fit 11 small 11 slight 11 old 10 eld 8 strong 7 noble 6 late 6 happy 5 young 5 early 5 Most 4 wide 4 tame 4 poor 4 low 4 lofty 4 fine 3 weak 3 rare 3 near 3 healthy 3 handsome 3 furth 3 acute 2 wise 2 wild 2 warm 2 tiny 2 simple 2 long 2 keen 2 grave 2 deep 2 close 2 bright 2 bitter 1 wicked 1 wealthy 1 tall 1 sure 1 strange 1 stealthy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 227 most 16 least 15 well 3 greatest 1 lest 1 highest 1 fittest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 characters are not 4 _ inherited _ 4 character is not 4 characters are due 4 characters do not 4 female is heterozygous 3 _ are _ 3 characters is therefore 3 development does not 3 eye is due 3 females gave wild 3 females were not 3 males do not 2 _ are about 2 _ does not 2 _ is more 2 _ see _ 2 cells do not 2 character does not 2 character is dependent 2 characters are diagnostic 2 characters are latent 2 characters are present 2 characters are usually 2 characters is due 2 characters were mainly 2 chromosomes takes place 2 condition was due 2 development takes place 2 factor is present 2 factors are not 2 female are similar 2 female is not 2 female is very 2 females are sterile 2 females were back 2 inheritance was not 2 male is always 2 man is merely 2 offspring are alike 2 result is due 2 sex is not 2 sexes are present 2 sexes is very 2 type does not 1 _ appears _ 1 _ are dominant 1 _ are not 1 _ are sexually 1 _ being substantially Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 characters are not transmissible 1 _ are not _ 1 _ does not rapidly 1 _ seems not improbable 1 animals is no evidence 1 cell has no effect 1 cells do not necessarily 1 cells has not yet 1 cells were not entirely 1 character do not altogether 1 characters are not easy 1 characters are not gametogenic 1 characters are not usually 1 characters do not entirely 1 characters is not so 1 child is not only 1 children are not theirs 1 children have no time 1 chromosome does not merely 1 chromosomes has no sex 1 condition has no effect 1 development is not due 1 effects are not so 1 effects do not necessarily 1 fact is not only 1 factors are not indivisible 1 factors are not permanent 1 female is not only 1 inheritance are not as 1 inheritance has no part 1 inheritance is no more 1 inheritance was not necessary 1 male is not present 1 males has no function 1 males show no deficiency 1 males show no desire 1 men are not proud 1 men had not then 1 offspring are not identical 1 offspring were not idiots 1 results were not fully 1 selection is no proof 1 selection were not supreme 1 sex is not always 1 side is not so 1 side were not necessary 1 time is not far 1 time was not ripe 1 type does not necessarily A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 26438 author = Ball, W. P. (William Platt) title = Are the Effects of Use and Disuse Inherited? An Examination of the View Held by Spencer and Darwin date = keywords = Animals; Darwin; Domestication; Mr.; Plants; Spencer; USE; Variation; effect; inheritance; natural; selection summary = The question whether the effects of use and disuse are inherited, or, in eye-stalks_ appear to illustrate the effects of natural selection rather use-inheritance, surely we may believe that natural selection, inheritance of the effects of use and disuse in kind_. use-inheritance as it undoubtedly is to effect great changes in direct SIMILAR EFFECTS OF NATURAL SELECTION AND USE-INHERITANCE. SIMILAR EFFECTS OF NATURAL SELECTION AND USE-INHERITANCE. natural selection are inherited effects of use or disuse. necessarily by directly inherited effects of use or disuse of parts in use-inheritance by natural or artificial selection acting upon general the alleged inheritance of the similar effects of use and disuse, unless The alleged inheritance of the effects of use and disuse in our domestic selection has shown itself in cases where use-inheritance could have WOULD NATURAL SELECTION FAVOUR USE-INHERITANCE? WOULD NATURAL SELECTION FAVOUR USE-INHERITANCE? various evil results of use-inheritance, natural selection would be id = 52312 author = Bateson, William title = The Methods and Scope of Genetics An inaugural lecture delivered 23 October 1908 date = keywords = Genetics; Sweet; factor; ingredient summary = of the male and female gametes may in respect of any of the ingredients having received the ingredient from the male chest and from the female, eye is due to the absence of a factor which forms pigment on the front that the germ-cells formed by such individuals do either contain or not For example, if neither parent possesses a certain factor at all, then the descent of such a factor by the case of a family possessing a Our purple plant is thus cross-bred for four factors, containing only due to the absence of one of the simple factors or ingredients of which one type the fact means that the germ-cells of one or other parent must in proving that in them femaleness is a definite Mendelian factor element is no other than the femaleness-factor itself[3]. to the absence of a factor which produces normal colour-vision. id = 34368 author = Bridges, Calvin B. (Calvin Blackman) title = Sex-linked Inheritance in Drosophila date = keywords = Drosophila; F_1; TABLE; linkage summary = us say, two sex-linked factors, is mated to a wild female, his daughters female mated to a wild male produces vermilion sons and wild-type lethal-bearing female is crossed to a male of another stock with a yellow, white (eosin), bifid, club, vermilion, miniature, sable, forked, Both males and females give a cross-over value of 5 units for cherry bifid, Some of the F_1 females were back-crossed to yellow sable males and gave When cherry (gray) females were crossed to (red) sable males the daughters TABLE 17.--_P_1 vermilion sable bar_ [female] [female] � _wild_ [male] The reciprocal cross (dot female with vermilion eyes by wild male) was made TABLE 20.--_P_1 vermilion dot [female] � wild [male]._ Vermilion forked males were crossed to wild females and gave females were crossed to cherry vermilion males. vermilion males and the wild-type daughters were back-crossed to cherry C. F__{1} _wild-type_ [female] � _cherry club vermilion_ [male] id = 8517 author = Cunningham, J. T. (Joseph Thomas) title = Hormones and Heredity A Discussion of the Evolution of Adaptations and the Evolution of Species date = keywords = Bateson; Morgan; Plaice; case; cell; character; chromosome; development; female; fish; flat; footnote; male; mammal; mendelian; sex; sexual summary = male sexual characters did not take place in castrated animals, but the origin of organs or characters confined to one sex, or secondary sexual developed usually an individual of one sex or the other, male or female, divisions the two sex-characters, maleness and femaleness, were segregated Influence Of Hormones On Development Of Somatic Sex-Characters different cases present a sex-limited development. It has long been known that the development of male sex-characters is development of the male characters, and suggest that such birds are really ovaries may lead to the development of male characters in the female, that characters, that the female sex-factor is wanting in the male. character in this case is linked to the female sex chromosome, or, cases the moth when developed showed the original characters of the sex to different sex-chromosomes occur in the female, not in the male as in other id = 34299 author = Holbrook, M. L. (Martin Luther) title = Homo-Culture; Or, The Improvement of Offspring Through Wiser Generation date = keywords = Darwin; Dr.; Mr.; Page; Plato; Professor; Spencer; State; Weismann; character; child; great; heredity; life; marriage; offspring; parent; race; sexual summary = Life''s Experiences Affecting Child; Germ-plasm; Congenital the Mother-cell Necessary to Produce True Germ-plasm; What Statistics as to Ages of Parents of Finest Children; Effects of Alcohol on Offspring; Food and the Germ-plasm; Effect Darwin''s Opinions; Race Modifications by Natural Selection; children, the congenial offspring of excellent parents." The principles mothers nursing their own children; nature, by providing them with two unions between first cousins are advisable depends, as appears from Mr. Huth''s remarks, on considerations which affect the question generally. communicate the highest physical and mental characters to her offspring. AN ILLUSTRATIVE CASE.--How great is the influence on unborn offspring LIFE''S EXPERIENCES AFFECTING CHILD.--Unless characteristics acquired by effects on offspring, causing deterioration of the organic disposition natural question arises in the mind: Are the children of those who live human children have no time to know or learn her ways. Parental life, influence of, over offspring, 95 id = 36993 author = Jordan, Furneaux title = Body, Parentage and Character in History: Notes on the Tudor Period date = keywords = Elizabeth; Europe; Henry; King; Mary; NOTE; Reformation; Tudor; VIII; character; man; time summary = NOTE I.--THE VARIOUS VIEWS OF HENRY VIII.''S CHARACTER. NOTE VI.--THE MORE CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF HENRY''S CHARACTER. NOTE VI.--THE MORE CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF HENRY''S CHARACTER. NOTE VIII.--HENRY AND HIS PEOPLE AND PARLIAMENT. capable men of Henry''s reign to meet half a dozen of Victoria''s, the jury Henry''s death, in all time of trouble the people longed for Henry''s good carried out long before our Henry''s time. Henry come near to the truth, Nero was the better character of the two. In order to read Henry''s character more correctly, if that be possible, cannot but see how unlike Henry was to the impassioned men of history. of the great names of Henry''s time. of Henry''s character, favour the view that he thought and willed and acted All the elements of character which Henry possessed were found also in Henry (and his time) said, you may think id = 15623 author = Winship, Albert E. (Albert Edward) title = Jukes-Edwards: A Study in Education and Heredity date = keywords = Burr; Dwight; Edwards; Hamilton; Jonathan; Jukes; Mr.; New; States; Yale; York summary = R.A. Dugdale, of New York State, began the study of "The Jukes" family Prison Commission he made a statement of the results.[Footnote: G.P. Putnam''s Sons, New York, reprinted this study in "The Jukes."] This his family, and when it came to light that one of Jonathan Edwards'' Jonathan Edwards was twenty-eight years of age, had been the pastor Jonathan, Timothy Edwards, was an only son in a family of seven. the children and the children-in-law of Jonathan Edwards and of Max. The two men were born in rural communities, they both lived on the Among the 285 college graduates of the Edwards family there are thirteen At twelve years of age Aaron Burr went to college, and after this time Edwards, was one of the eminently successful men of New The ten children of Colonel Edwards lived to great age, and each of the