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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 57762 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 General 1 time 1 shell 1 officer 1 line 1 german 1 french 1 come 1 canadian 1 british 1 Y.M.C.A. 1 Vimy 1 Tommy 1 Society 1 Ridge 1 Red 1 Paris 1 Officer 1 Mrs. 1 Mr. 1 Medical 1 M.O. 1 Lieutenant 1 Kelly 1 Hospital 1 Heliopolis 1 H.Q. 1 Government 1 France 1 England 1 Egypt 1 Cross 1 Convention 1 Colonel 1 Cairo 1 British 1 Australian 1 Article 1 Alexandria Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 466 man 354 officer 348 hospital 275 time 269 case 190 day 189 line 182 work 173 war 160 â 159 soldier 150 shell 137 trench 132 number 128 patient 119 disease 108 way 106 service 101 enemy 92 front 92 battalion 88 ambulance 85 staff 85 order 84 ship 81 duty 79 fact 77 good 76 part 72 one 70 troop 69 life 69 hour 69 field 67 month 66 place 66 night 66 difficulty 63 people 63 camp 63 air 62 foot 61 position 61 authority 59 unit 59 eye 59 army 58 woman 57 mile 57 hand Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 741 _ 245 Cross 239 Red 191 General 175 Hospital 164 Egypt 155 Australian 106 Australia 105 Mrs. 82 British 73 Article 68 | 68 Medical 68 Cairo 67 Mr. 65 Government 62 Colonel 61 Heliopolis 58 Society 53 Convention 51 Officer 51 Alexandria 48 Paris 48 France 47 Â 47 HELIOPOLIS 46 Germans 43 First 43 April 41 Major 41 Army 40 May 39 June 38 Surgeon 38 Sir 38 Branch 37 Vimy 36 Y.M.C.A. 34 Williams 34 Park 34 Kelly 34 Helouan 32 Luna 31 O.D. 31 Convalescent 30 AUSTRALIAN 29 New 29 French 29 Corps 29 Captain Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 996 it 635 he 592 i 540 they 371 we 289 them 284 you 197 him 174 me 163 us 78 she 39 one 27 himself 25 themselves 21 myself 17 her 15 itself 10 mine 9 ourselves 8 yours 7 yourself 5 ye 4 ours 3 herself 2 his 1 whereof 1 w''ere''d 1 theirs 1 na Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 4887 be 1247 have 384 do 300 make 268 take 210 give 193 go 174 say 172 come 159 see 149 get 145 wound 139 know 130 send 121 become 119 find 98 follow 94 provide 93 show 86 look 85 leave 84 use 82 keep 78 carry 76 put 74 tell 73 pass 71 receive 64 think 62 place 62 obtain 61 ask 60 require 55 supply 55 call 53 meet 51 return 50 arrive 49 seem 49 face 48 hear 46 prevent 46 hold 46 feel 44 serve 44 reach 43 stand 41 remain 41 employ 41 decide Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 602 not 247 so 215 other 212 medical 201 only 188 well 170 more 166 many 162 out 147 up 146 very 144 good 135 as 125 ¦ 125 great 121 first 120 then 120 few 118 military 116 sick 113 large 112 most 110 much 103 same 93 back 92 such 87 australian 84 however 84 here 83 little 82 just 81 even 79 necessary 77 there 76 now 74 long 74 also 71 on 71 often 71 far 69 own 67 german 67 always 66 small 65 down 61 over 61 last 61 again 59 still 58 venereal Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 38 good 29 most 19 least 16 great 9 fine 8 near 6 easy 5 late 5 large 3 short 3 high 3 bad 3 Most 2 ¦ 2 slight 2 old 2 long 2 common 1 wild 1 sure 1 safe 1 sad 1 quick 1 palmy 1 noble 1 manif 1 light 1 hot 1 hard 1 funny 1 flimsy 1 fair 1 faint 1 cross 1 close 1 cheap 1 busy 1 brave 1 O.C.s Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 83 most 5 least 3 ¦ 1 well 1 near 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 _ see also 4 _ see _ 2 cases were not 2 men are not 2 men were quite 2 work was excessive 1 _ came no 1 _ did _ 1 _ left melbourne 1 australia are due 1 australia has lately 1 australia has never 1 australia was true 1 australian is essentially 1 battalion was severely 1 cases are due 1 cases are not 1 cases are pitiable 1 cases did excellently 1 cases did not 1 cases were dysenteric 1 cases were full 1 cases were seldom 1 cross has definitely 1 cross has never 1 cross has now 1 cross is already 1 cross is simply 1 cross is sound 1 cross provided shelter 1 cross takes part 1 day is very 1 day was necessarily 1 days were things 1 disease is not 1 disease is practically 1 disease is severely 1 disease is still 1 disease is unusual 1 disease took place 1 disease was more 1 disease was not 1 disease was still 1 disease was too 1 disease was very 1 diseases are very 1 diseases did not 1 diseases were inordinately 1 egypt does not 1 egypt is better Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ came no more 1 cases are not so 1 disease is not high 1 disease was not so 1 egypt have no rank 1 egypt is not especially 1 men are not so 1 officer is not merely 1 soldier was not very 1 time was not particularly A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 41911 author = Barrett, James W. (James William), Sir title = The Australian Army Medical Corps in Egypt An Illustrated and Detailed Account of the Early Organisation and Work of the Australian Medical Units in Egypt in 1914-1915 date = keywords = Alexandria; Article; Australian; British; Cairo; Convention; Cross; Egypt; General; Government; Heliopolis; Hospital; Medical; Mr.; Mrs.; Officer; Red; Society; Y.M.C.A. summary = QUARTERMASTER FIRST AUSTRALIAN GENERAL HOSPITAL, EGYPT Executive Officer in Egypt--Red Cross Policy--Defects of Civil the case of the First Australian General Hospital--an exception British Red Cross Society set aside for the use of the hospital one the Red Cross goods belonging to the First Australian General Hospital. The First Australian General Hospital was to be placed in the Heliopolis Sick and wounded received at the First Australian General Hospital at dependent on the Australian Force for hospitals, medical officers, In the case of our own unit, the First Australian General Hospital, with the G.O.C.-in-Chief, General Sir John Maxwell, and with the D.M.S. Egypt, General Ford, the Australian Red Cross Society determined to When the Hospitals left Australia neither officers nor men received AUSTRALIA--REPORT OF EXECUTIVE OFFICER IN EGYPT--RED CROSS Officer, Australian Branch British Red Cross Society_ The First Australian General Hospital arrived in Egypt in January 1915. Cross goods available at No. 1 Australian General Hospital for some id = 58233 author = Manion, R. J. (Robert James) title = A Surgeon in Arms date = keywords = Colonel; England; France; General; H.Q.; Kelly; Lieutenant; M.O.; Paris; Ridge; Tommy; Vimy; british; canadian; come; french; german; line; officer; shell; time summary = Heavy shelling by the enemy is taking place enemy lines, push a million men through the gap, leading his men across No Man''s Land like the pass our time in caves or cellars, dugouts or relief days, officers and men passing daily the Canadians on our right to send any shells this way. explosive shells sent from their new line of men, though at all times the air in it had a is a heavy shelling put on the enemy lines in duty like the other men of his battalion, and officers and men do their hard, dangerous, officer or man gets tired of the mud, rain, lice, men for four days in an open, muddy trench, wounded two officers severely, and six men a French road within shell fire of the Germans. coolly in fields into which at times enemy shells day or night the chance of a shell coming