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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 70234 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 9 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mr. 4 Miss 3 Mrs. 2 look 2 Tom 2 Johnny 2 God 2 Edith 1 yee 1 think 1 savage 1 missionary 1 love 1 like 1 good 1 dear 1 Willie 1 Welsh 1 Waterloo 1 Wallace 1 Tony 1 Teddy 1 Street 1 Staff 1 Stacey 1 Sioux 1 Senior 1 Saulisbury 1 Rufe 1 Ross 1 Robert 1 Ridgeley 1 Richter 1 Red 1 Probationer 1 O''Brien 1 Nurse 1 Newbolt 1 Mister 1 Miner 1 Mercer 1 Medfield 1 Maurice 1 Maud 1 Mattie 1 Mary 1 Marian 1 Marcella 1 Mammy 1 Major Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1104 man 855 thing 771 time 755 eye 750 day 738 hand 605 girl 600 face 561 night 557 woman 549 way 421 life 420 room 406 something 397 house 396 mother 377 boy 376 door 375 child 374 head 324 voice 315 love 308 word 304 anything 290 arm 288 year 280 nothing 280 moment 278 heart 276 wife 271 one 267 people 253 morning 251 father 240 mind 239 bed 221 place 208 window 206 book 205 minute 205 foot 203 course 201 hair 196 friend 194 table 193 thought 193 hour 188 husband 186 fire 185 story Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2910 _ 1313 Maurice 1000 Eleanor 896 Edith 646 Mrs. 409 Mr. 367 Lily 339 Jacky 305 Miss 292 Houghton 285 Jane 248 Johnny 195 Teddy 155 God 152 Brown 134 Doctor 125 Newbolt 122 Mary 117 Eunice 112 Chief 111 Cousin 110 Rufe 104 Henry 102 Nurse 101 Curtis 101 Albert 96 Red 91 Bingo 90 Un 90 Probationer 88 Grant 85 Billy 84 ye 84 Jack 83 Tom 83 Harvey 82 Jean 79 Katherine 79 John 77 Mammy 75 Julius 74 Herman 70 Avenue 69 Hartley 68 Indian 67 Dale 67 Arthur 65 Sunday 65 Ann 64 Mercer Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8486 he 6929 i 6848 she 5552 it 4440 you 2911 him 2368 her 1642 they 1472 me 810 we 779 them 418 himself 271 herself 244 us 88 myself 87 ''em 70 itself 65 one 64 yourself 52 ''s 50 themselves 37 hers 31 his 28 mine 27 yours 23 em 16 ourselves 11 meself 7 ye 6 ours 5 yerself 5 thee 5 i''m 4 oneself 3 you''re 2 you''ll 2 theirs 2 huh 1 yourselves 1 you?--even 1 you"--lily 1 yo 1 yit 1 y 1 to--_come 1 thinkin''--they 1 talk!--to 1 t 1 she''ll 1 s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 16382 be 6312 have 3970 say 3698 do 2129 go 1476 come 1376 get 1341 know 1296 see 1193 look 1173 think 1146 make 1058 tell 870 take 608 give 588 want 540 sit 496 feel 458 ask 457 put 448 seem 413 stand 395 hear 391 call 388 find 387 keep 371 try 352 turn 352 let 332 leave 328 talk 328 love 302 like 298 speak 294 begin 280 mean 275 write 265 marry 262 bring 254 lie 254 hold 242 run 238 live 212 fall 209 stop 209 grow 208 read 206 rise 199 walk 197 smile Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5473 not 1524 so 1322 up 1116 then 1054 little 1032 out 753 very 714 down 708 now 683 good 665 just 641 never 640 old 631 back 612 only 594 again 581 more 534 too 506 well 480 young 460 much 453 long 453 here 447 away 434 other 434 as 416 there 399 in 395 on 390 all 383 even 381 first 363 still 355 right 343 own 338 off 328 last 311 over 302 always 300 great 277 ever 263 white 260 enough 242 once 224 home 222 rather 216 new 215 bad 212 next 209 most Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 112 good 72 most 51 least 23 bad 12 slight 12 late 12 dear 11 fine 10 Most 9 high 8 big 7 nice 7 great 6 old 5 sweet 5 happy 4 near 4 lovely 4 l 4 deep 3 small 3 long 2 young 2 wise 2 warm 2 true 2 tall 2 sunny 2 sad 2 pure 2 pleasant 2 mean 2 loud 2 large 2 j 2 grand 2 farth 2 faint 2 early 2 clever 2 brave 2 beaten 2 back 1 yours_--hon 1 wild 1 weak 1 washstand 1 thick 1 swell 1 strong Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 137 most 9 well 9 least 1 swellest 1 numb 1 near 1 might--_laugh 1 latest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 27 _ is _ 22 _ do n''t 17 _ was _ 12 _ are _ 12 _ do _ 11 _ know _ 10 _ did _ 10 _ have _ 8 _ does _ 7 _ want _ 7 eleanor did not 6 _ had _ 6 maurice did not 5 _ am _ 5 _ did n''t 5 eleanor had not 5 eleanor was silent 5 lily was not 5 maurice sat down 5 maurice was silent 4 _ ai n''t 4 _ be _ 4 _ got _ 4 _ knew _ 4 _ was n''t 4 days went by 4 eleanor had n''t 4 maurice had not 4 maurice was not 3 _ does n''t 3 _ is not 3 _ look _ 3 edith was silent 3 eyes were deep 3 eyes were full 3 eyes were not 3 face was as 3 maurice did n''t 3 voice was so 2 _ has _ 2 _ made _ 2 _ think _ 2 _ thought _ 2 _ told _ 2 _ tried _ 2 children came in 2 edith ''s not 2 edith came up 2 edith did not 2 edith had never Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 _ is not jealousy 2 edith had no chance 1 _ had no children 1 day was not mrs. 1 edith ''s not musical 1 edith asked no questions 1 edith had no idea 1 edith has no more 1 edith saw no cause 1 eleanor had no idea 1 eleanor had no intention 1 eleanor has no suspicions 1 eleanor was not happy 1 eyes were not strong 1 girl made no protest 1 jacky was not only 1 lily had no resentment 1 lily was not bad 1 man is not apt 1 maurice had not entirely 1 maurice is no eurydice 1 maurice was not generally 1 maurice was not sure 1 men are not half 1 rooms are not any 1 thing is not irrevocable 1 things were not so A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 15927 author = Deland, Margaret Wade Campbell title = The Vehement Flame date = keywords = Bennett; Bingo; Curtis; Dale; Edith; Eleanor; God; Green; Henry; Hill; Houghton; Jacky; Johnny; Lily; Mary; Maurice; Medfield; Mercer; Mr.; Mrs.; Newbolt; O''Brien; Street; look; think summary = "Edith," Mrs. Houghton said, "you won''t mind letting Maurice and Eleanor "Come, Eleanor," Maurice said; and Mrs. Newbolt, puffing and talking, "I think she was a little old for that sort of thing," Eleanor said, Eleanor was, Maurice said, like music heard far off, through mists and Hill," Edith said, "I''m going to tell all the girls _I know Eleanor_! "I wouldn''t put things into his head, Eleanor," Mrs. Houghton said "Maurice thinks Edith is a wonderful cook," Eleanor said; her voice "Of course!" Mrs. Houghton said; "don''t give it a thought, Maurice. "I remember that girl, too," Eleanor said; "Maurice told me about her." Edith said, "Oh, Eleanor, Maurice loves fishing!" If Edith said, "Oh, Maurice, you are a perfect _idiot_!" Eleanor home with me, Eleanor!" And Maurice always said, "I''ll look after the "Eleanor''s sort of forlorn, Maurice?" Edith said. "But how could I do anything else--if I loved Maurice?" Eleanor said. id = 11151 author = Ellis, Edward Sylvester title = The Lost Trail date = keywords = Cora; God; Harvey; Indian; Irishman; Miss; Mister; Richter; Sioux; Teddy; Tom; missionary; savage; yee summary = no white man or Indian would find the time or inclination for such "No," answered the man, "but we may; keep a bright look-out, Teddy, "I knows yees _prays_ for me, Misther Harvey and Miss Cora, ivery Indians, had he not secured a fair look at the man as he ran away. "Like Miss Harvey--good man''s squaw--t''ink she be good woman?" "Bad man--why not like Mr. Harvey?" said the savage, paying no "Who knows but Master Harvey has gone to the village, and Miss Cora "They say an Indian never will tell a lie to a friend," said Teddy, The line was soon stowed away, and Teddy made his way at a half-walk Indians and Teddy pursued the search for traces of the hunter''s "And so, Teddy, ye''re sayin'' it war a white man that took away the "And so, Teddy, ye''re sayin'' it war a white man that took away the id = 20247 author = Garland, Hamlin title = Wayside Courtships date = keywords = APPLETON; Albert; Allen; Arthur; Bert; Brann; Field; Hartley; Herman; Major; Mattie; Maud; Miner; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Ridgeley; Saulisbury; Stacey; Wallace; Welsh; good; like; look summary = A tall young man, with a timid look in his eyes, near a young woman who looked like a teacher, and he had full sweep of Mrs. Mills called, "Come, now, boys and girls," and they all said good cloak like a man, but she gave her hair a little touch of feminine care, face and smiling lips of the young girl seemed to put Herman''s voice Herman went in with the doctor, and stood looking on while the old man young girl said one day when Arthur was passing by--quite accidentally. "I''m very glad, too, dearie," she said simply, looking at the young man As Mrs. Field looked up the second time she saw the dark, strange face man looked at her husband, and his eyes fell often upon his own hands, The woman looked into his eyes a moment, and said in a low voice: id = 47385 author = Reed, Myrtle title = The White Shield date = keywords = Atherton; Dorothy; Elmiry; Emperor; Hayward; Helen; Jack; Katherine; Kitty; Marian; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Robert; Ross; Tom; Tony; dear; love summary = "Jennings," he said, "do I look like a man who would make good company "Katherine dear," she said, "there are some more names in the little On their way home Mrs. Boyce said: "Bob, why don''t you go into business At the end of the street stood the little white house which Jack Ward "''The time has come, the walrus said, to talk of many things,''" quoted came a great longing to "touch life at first hand." The caressing way in which he said "little girl" filled her soul you, but I don''t want you hurt like that--dear little girl." "Come, Marian," said Edith, "you know we were going to make a call." A little later a pretty girl with a mandolin, said: "Do you know I feel "Dear little girl," he said tenderly, "do you love me?" "Si," said Mrs. Safford, "didn''t Elmiry Ann Rogers come in here to-day id = 15473 author = Rinehart, Mary Roberts title = Love Stories date = keywords = Avenue; Billy; Brown; Chief; Doctor; Dummy; Edith; Girl; Grant; Interne; Jane; Johnny; Mabel; Nurse; Probationer; Red; Senior; Staff; Willie summary = "If," said Jane Brown, with suspicious quiet, "if you think you know Before she went to bed that night, Jane Brown, by devious ways, well, but all his girls looked like Jane Brown. looking extremely white, relieved Jane Brown of the care of H ward Jane Brown went up the ward and looked down at Johnny Fraser. "Look here," said Jane, "I don''t know who you are "I won''t make any toast," said Jane, looking at the bread with "You looked better the other way," said the red-haired person, "Fine!" said Jane with her eyes gleaming, although the day before "Good girl," said the red-headed person and patted her on the "The thing for you to do," said the red-haired person severely, "is When she came back the Avenue Girl had a new look in her eyes; and Liz went away and sat by the girl''s bed, and said a little prayer to id = 40202 author = Sharber, Kate Trimble title = The Annals of Ann date = keywords = Ann; Bertha; Cousin; Eunice; Gordon; Jean; Julius; Lou; Mammy; Marcella; Miss; Mr.; Rufe; Waterloo summary = Maybe my grandchildren would like to know a few little things about saying, like mother and Mammy Lou, "You''re a mighty big girl to be another somebody as good-looking as Cousin Eunice, which mother said write in my book I saw that Mammy Lou was having the time of her life better he loves you," Mammy Lou told Cousin Eunice to-night, as she said one day when she looked around at the things I had in my room life is going to be like, though Rufe says most of them haven''t got Toward evening we got to a fine place in the branch to wade and Mrs. Young said, oh, let''s do it; it would remind us of our childhood days. all of them looking at me and tell Miss Wilburn how Mammy Lou said "Oh, Rufe, isn''t it lovely?" Cousin Eunice said, looking away toward