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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 75886 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 man 2 United 2 States 2 Mr. 2 Company 1 year 1 work 1 van 1 time 1 production 1 price 1 money 1 good 1 day 1 car 1 business 1 american 1 York 1 William 1 Washington 1 Union 1 Uncle 1 Thomson 1 Theophrastus 1 Street 1 Signor 1 Scott 1 Scotland 1 Sarah 1 Saint 1 Robert 1 Robbie 1 Rensselaer 1 Railroad 1 President 1 Police 1 Pittsburgh 1 Petito 1 Pennsylvania 1 Paris 1 Pacific 1 Ousebank 1 Nox 1 New 1 Naomi 1 Nancy 1 Mrs. 1 Mrs 1 Motor 1 Morley Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1757 man 796 day 745 time 669 business 556 work 483 year 465 way 445 thing 419 hand 392 money 381 car 380 father 370 one 358 people 350 life 331 nothing 324 friend 313 mill 292 mother 284 place 281 part 271 world 271 house 267 word 249 room 246 price 242 something 242 dollar 230 anything 223 night 214 fact 213 idea 210 matter 205 head 200 eye 196 boy 194 service 185 wage 185 hour 182 line 178 face 173 end 173 country 172 production 171 kind 169 story 164 mind 164 interest 163 question 161 home Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1211 _ 826 Sarah 816 Mr. 472 Horatia 461 Theophrastus 440 Clay 360 George 317 M. 299 Carnegie 295 Mr 229 Howroyd 194 Mrs 187 Pittsburgh 177 Naomi 176 New 173 Adolphe 169 York 164 Cartouche 148 Rensselaer 147 Miss 137 van 132 Longuet 129 Company 126 President 122 Petito 120 Ford 119 Marceline 118 de 116 Street 112 William 109 Mark 108 John 107 Signor 105 Scott 102 Dunfermline 101 Pennsylvania 99 Uncle 88 Robert 88 Railroad 84 Mrs. 80 America 76 Robbie 75 la 73 Scotland 72 United 72 States 71 Britain 68 Footnote 67 Paris 67 Blaine Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 6550 i 5184 it 4173 he 3023 you 2444 we 1867 they 1402 me 1388 she 1329 him 972 them 563 us 468 her 279 himself 188 myself 168 one 114 themselves 90 itself 83 herself 52 ourselves 51 yourself 23 mine 22 ''s 20 ''em 14 yours 11 his 5 em 4 thee 3 theirs 3 oo 3 oneself 3 isself 3 hers 2 yourselves 2 you''ll 2 ours 1 you.--this 1 you''d 1 ye 1 outgo 1 on''t 1 my 1 imself 1 i''m 1 here?--what 1 ha 1 e 1 69 Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 16912 be 6007 have 3086 do 2234 say 1348 go 1257 make 1031 come 1005 know 931 see 857 take 735 get 676 think 666 give 519 find 507 tell 427 look 389 ask 365 want 325 become 308 put 304 call 296 pay 289 begin 287 work 278 leave 271 hear 265 mean 264 cry 263 seem 261 turn 261 let 260 keep 244 use 226 feel 221 pass 206 live 205 run 204 like 204 bring 203 speak 203 believe 202 buy 195 try 182 stand 182 meet 181 reply 176 write 167 talk 167 need 164 build Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4266 not 1131 so 880 then 837 more 745 only 732 good 674 up 631 well 623 very 576 never 563 great 539 out 536 first 519 much 483 now 482 other 429 little 413 down 404 as 372 most 369 just 359 always 353 too 348 old 328 long 309 ever 305 own 305 many 299 even 293 new 288 here 287 back 280 all 277 there 262 young 251 on 251 again 243 same 239 high 238 enough 237 also 236 few 216 large 215 away 214 still 209 such 208 right 208 last 201 bad 195 quite Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 193 good 80 most 68 least 50 great 39 high 26 large 25 bad 19 slight 19 Most 11 fine 10 early 9 able 8 strong 8 low 7 full 7 close 6 rich 6 late 6 big 5 old 5 noble 5 lively 5 light 5 eld 5 dear 5 cheap 4 small 4 safe 4 keen 4 happy 4 broad 3 sure 3 simple 3 pure 3 manif 3 hard 3 fast 3 deep 2 wise 2 sweet 2 strict 2 sad 2 poor 2 near 2 long 2 kindly 2 heavy 2 grand 2 furth 2 foremost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 292 most 27 well 16 least 1 worst 1 sha''n''t 1 long 1 highest 1 hard 1 fast 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/2/0/0/6/20068/20068-h/20068-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/0/0/6/20068/20068-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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 sarah did not 7 business is not 7 theophrastus did not 5 _ are _ 5 _ is _ 5 _ see _ 5 clay did not 5 man did not 5 men are not 4 father did not 3 _ know _ 3 horatia did not 3 man does not 3 man is not 3 money is not 3 money is only 3 mother does not 3 mother was always 3 nothing is more 3 sarah was just 3 sarah was surprised 2 _ make _ 2 business is always 2 business is business 2 business was not 2 clay had not 2 clay looked anxiously 2 clay looked up 2 clay said no 2 father had never 2 father is not 2 father was not 2 george came in 2 george did not 2 george looked very 2 horatia was not 2 horatia was rather 2 life is not 2 life was more 2 man has too 2 man is ever 2 man was not 2 men are always 2 men were not 2 mills are all 2 mother was not 2 nothing is impossible 2 nothing was too 2 one does n''t 2 one does not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 clay said no more 2 george made no reply 2 men are not equal 2 sarah said no more 1 business has no stability 1 business is not yet 1 clay had no faith 1 clay had no voice 1 clay took no notice 1 father is not popular 1 father is not there 1 father was not entirely 1 father was not long 1 friends has no reason 1 george made no comment 1 horatia said no more 1 horatia was not only 1 man has no rock 1 man is not right 1 man was not utterly 1 men are not always 1 men had not yet 1 men have no reason 1 men were not necessary 1 money has no more 1 money is no good 1 money is not ease 1 money is not wealth 1 money is not worth 1 one did not soon 1 one was not impressed 1 sarah had no idea 1 sarah had no such 1 sarah was not able 1 theophrastus did not so 1 theophrastus had no intention 1 theophrastus had not quite 1 thing is not only 1 time is not apt 1 way have not only 1 way was not easy 1 work has not yet 1 work is not always 1 work is not only 1 works was not ready A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 20068 author = Baldwin, May title = Sarah''s School Friend date = keywords = Clay; Cunningham; George; Horatia; Howroyd; Mark; Miss; Mrs; Nancy; Naomi; Ousebank; Sarah; Uncle summary = study; we can talk better alone,'' said her uncle before Sarah''s father minutes looking very grave, and said, ''Please, Miss Sarah, the master said, "Try and make Miss Sarah come down, for master he gets into such a ''Sarah is right in one way, mother,'' said George before Mrs Clay could her young charge.--''Sarah, I said the minute you saw us come out of a an'' I''m sure Sarah''ll only learn good from ''er,'' said Mrs Clay. ''She''s not good-lookin'','' said Mrs Clay, who alluded to Horatia and was Mr Howroyd said quickly, ''I shall begin to think you are ill, Sarah, or Sarah did not make any reply, but said, ''Good-night, Horatia,'' and turned ''You look anything but dying,'' said Sarah, with a glance at Horatia''s ''Oh, come, father, I''m not going to have a word said against Miss Sarah. ''George says he''s going to see his father,'' said Mrs Clay. id = 17976 author = Carnegie, Andrew title = Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie date = keywords = America; Andrew; Blaine; Britain; Carnegie; Company; Dunfermline; Footnote; Gladstone; John; London; Lord; Morley; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Pacific; Pennsylvania; Pittsburgh; President; Railroad; Scotland; Scott; States; Thomson; Union; United; Washington; William; York; man summary = It was said of a contemporary who passed away a few months before Mr. Carnegie that "he never could have borne the burden of old age." upon me, to shake hands with "the grandson of Thomas Morrison." Mr. Farmer, president of the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad Company, [Footnote 4: _An American Four-in-Hand in Great Britain._ New York, The great event of the day in Pittsburgh at that time was the arrival the great War Secretary ("Lincoln''s right-hand man") were all well dollars your company will work day and night and I will get my For some time the Pittsburgh friends who came to New York were our "Come into my room and talk it over," said the great sleeping-car man. The men said they were from the works at Pittsburgh and Many friends, great and good men and women, Mrs. Carnegie and I are _Memorial Addresses on the Life and Work of Andrew Carnegie._ New id = 7213 author = Crowther, Samuel title = My Life and Work date = keywords = Company; Detroit; England; Ford; Model; Motor; States; United; american; business; car; day; good; man; money; price; production; time; work; year summary = without too big and heavy a power plant required that the engine work will waste a great deal of time in makeshifts as the work goes on and whether the man who works always, who never leaves his business, who is work out the design and some of the methods of manufacture of a new car. operations--those men do the work that three times their number formerly else, gets through five times as much work in a day as those twelve men We do not want any hard, man-killing work about the place, and there is work, well managed, ought to result in high wages and low living costs. units of energy a man uses in a productive day''s work? A business is men and machines united in the production of a The time for a business man to borrow money, if ever, is when he does id = 46343 author = Leroux, Gaston title = The Man with the Black Feather date = keywords = Adolphe; Cartouche; Catacombs; Conciergerie; Houdry; Lecamus; Longuet; Louis; Marceline; Mifroid; Mme; Nox; Paris; Petito; Police; Saint; Signor; Street; Theophrastus; man summary = Theophrastus Longuet, called me ''Adolphe,''" he said in History," said Theophrastus sententiously; and he stopped short to look "You know all papers," said Theophrastus. Theophrastus said nothing: he suddenly found these good people too From that day the conversations of Theophrastus, Marceline, and Adolphe What do you mean?" said Marceline and Theophrastus "As a matter of fact it was rather horrible," said Theophrastus. Adolphe?" said Theophrastus, after they had greeted one another. Adolphe said nothing; and when he was baiting his hook, Theophrastus "Poor little Louis-Dominique: he deserves our pity," said Theophrastus On the way Theophrastus said: "Tell me, Adolphe: what was I like? "You see, my dear Signor Petito, I am calm," said Theophrastus. "Your name is _not_ Cartouche; it is Theophrastus Longuet," said M. to give Adolphe the little finger of my left hand; for I had only said "''I don''t know quite what has happened,'' said Theophrastus. we took together," said Theophrastus. id = 39516 author = Sinclair, Upton title = A Captain of Industry: Being the Story of a Civilized Man date = keywords = Hungerville; Mr.; Rensselaer; Robbie; Robert; man; van summary = "About a year, sir," said Robbie, gazing at the floor. "Now, Robbie," said van Rensselaer senior, "I haven''t objected to your "You know," said van Rensselaer _père_, "the life of man isn''t all play. Mr. Robert van Rensselaer had set to work to learn the rules of this new and that they''re going to be run the way Robert van Rensselaer chooses When van Rensselaer ceased pacing the room, he went to the table and So they bore out the gasping form; and Mr. Robert van Rensselaer went "The way that Robert van Rensselaer defended the stock on a certain stocks, in the view of Robert van Rensselaer, was a man who studied the No one knew that van Rensselaer was the man who was causing the trouble "Well," said van Rensselaer, "what do you think of The man turned and vanished, and van Rensselaer sat in the chair,