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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 4 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 66011 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 85 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 man 2 Eskimo 2 Captain 2 Arctic 1 Zachariah 1 Winslow 1 West 1 Vane 1 Toolooha 1 Tom 1 Skipper 1 Singleton 1 Saunders 1 Pole 1 Partner 1 Parr 1 Oolichuk 1 Oblooria 1 O''Riley 1 North 1 Mrs. 1 Mrs 1 Mr. 1 Mivins 1 Meetuck 1 Makitok 1 Leo 1 Labrador 1 Kablunets 1 Jimmy 1 Itigailit 1 Island 1 Hope 1 Harvey 1 Guy 1 Grim 1 Gregory 1 Grabantak 1 God 1 Fred 1 Flatland 1 Esquimaux 1 Eskimos 1 Ellice 1 Eemerk 1 Dolphin 1 Dicey 1 Davy 1 Davie 1 Chingatok Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 986 man 821 ice 554 time 433 sea 404 day 404 boat 363 water 298 snow 294 dog 281 captain 272 way 270 ship 270 boy 268 hand 247 thing 241 head 241 foot 235 bear 234 moment 233 eye 226 nothing 223 side 215 land 213 sledge 208 father 207 night 191 hour 186 life 180 seal 175 one 172 place 172 party 163 wind 161 part 153 winter 153 island 152 line 150 crew 148 year 147 lad 145 face 143 heart 142 cabin 140 sun 139 son 135 friend 132 point 130 minute 128 look 128 end Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1792 _ 610 Bobby 527 Captain 400 Jimmy 355 Abel 353 Skipper 352 Leo 344 Ed 315 Benjy 267 Fred 234 Chingatok 191 Eskimo 181 Alf 170 Buzzby 145 Eskimos 134 O''Riley 129 Pole 120 God 119 Arctic 111 Tom 110 Vane 108 Mrs. 107 Grabantak 105 Meetuck 95 Oblooria 95 Esquimaux 90 Ellice 89 Mr 81 ye 81 Grim 79 CHAPTER 79 Anders 77 Butterface 74 hut 74 exclaimed 67 Dolphin 64 North 61 walrus 61 Mivins 60 Singleton 60 Oolichuk 60 Amalatok 57 Guy 55 Saunders 54 Island 51 Bay 50 Gregory 48 Zachariah 47 Polar 44 West Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3548 it 3414 he 1945 i 1941 they 1315 you 1087 we 1048 them 977 him 383 me 311 us 275 she 267 himself 186 her 81 themselves 58 itself 32 myself 29 one 29 ''em 27 ''s 23 yourself 15 herself 13 ourselves 7 ye 5 yours 5 em 4 yerself 4 mine 3 ours 2 thyself 2 thee 2 hisself 2 his 2 d''you 1 you''ll 1 wonder-- 1 un 1 two--"you 1 three,--i 1 theirs 1 one-- 1 on''t 1 meself 1 hut,--igloes 1 himself:-- 1 cold--"they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10071 be 3455 have 1356 do 1142 say 827 go 757 come 647 make 605 see 488 get 463 take 415 know 395 look 348 give 329 think 299 find 260 seem 245 tell 240 leave 236 stand 227 begin 226 turn 224 keep 221 fall 215 let 212 run 210 become 203 rise 199 feel 196 pass 196 lie 190 hold 189 return 178 ask 171 cry 170 speak 168 set 168 follow 146 call 145 reach 143 hear 142 bring 138 sit 138 lose 136 try 136 carry 132 break 128 shout 126 draw 125 send 118 reply Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2133 not 865 so 820 up 559 then 540 now 499 out 462 long 455 little 446 down 442 more 432 well 414 much 383 great 379 very 369 good 349 as 341 other 334 only 334 first 306 too 305 away 292 again 278 last 278 here 277 there 276 off 268 never 261 few 249 old 245 far 235 just 221 soon 217 small 215 many 193 back 188 however 187 all 186 on 184 right 182 large 169 about 165 also 164 enough 162 even 160 ever 156 quite 152 white 151 own 150 still 149 once Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 65 good 57 least 49 most 20 great 17 high 16 large 13 bad 9 eld 8 strong 8 deep 7 near 6 low 5 fine 5 farth 4 Most 3 strange 3 slight 3 furth 3 cold 3 brave 3 bitter 2 young 2 wide 2 weak 2 thick 2 stout 2 small 2 pure 2 profound 2 long 2 late 2 jolly 2 j 2 heavy 2 healthy 2 fresh 2 fast 2 faint 1 wise 1 wild 1 warm 1 tough 1 sunny 1 sulky 1 smooth 1 simple 1 short 1 sharp 1 safe 1 rosy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 81 most 10 least 8 well 1 long 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 _ is _ 8 _ do _ 6 _ was _ 5 bobby did not 4 _ do n''t 4 bobby was not 4 leo did not 3 _ did not 3 _ felt _ 3 _ have _ 3 ed had so 3 ice was not 2 _ know _ 2 _ was not 2 boat had not 2 boats were now 2 bobby was as 2 bobby was very 2 bobby was well 2 captain did not 2 captain went below 2 chingatok did not 2 ed did not 2 ice became so 2 jimmy came over 2 jimmy had already 2 leo had not 2 man did not 2 man was not 2 men are very 2 men were much 2 ship was now 2 snow was so 2 things are not 2 things did not 1 _ are _ 1 _ be _ 1 _ be comparatively 1 _ be greenland 1 _ be worse 1 _ be wrong 1 _ come back 1 _ did _ 1 _ feels _ 1 _ found _ 1 _ going _ 1 _ gone off 1 _ got _ 1 _ had indeed 1 _ is as Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 bobby had no time 2 ice was not there 1 _ did not now 1 bear made no reply 1 bears are not timid 1 benjy is not far 1 benjy made no reply 1 benjy was not very 1 boat had not yet 1 bobby had no thought 1 bobby was no exception 1 bobby was not afraid 1 bobby was not as 1 captain did not at 1 captain was not so 1 chingatok did not quite 1 chingatok is not sure 1 dogs were not too 1 ed did not altogether 1 ice is no joke 1 ice is not land 1 ice was not so 1 leo had not yet 1 leo made no sign 1 man is no match 1 man was no coward 1 men have no time 1 men have not wings 1 moment was not at 1 sea were not high 1 things do not always A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 21711 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = The World of Ice date = keywords = Arctic; Bolton; Buzzby; Captain; Davie; Dolphin; Ellice; Esquimaux; Fred; Grim; Guy; Meetuck; Mivins; Mrs; O''Riley; Parr; Saunders; Singleton; Tom; West; man summary = "Send the men aft, Mr Thompson," said the captain, as he paced the deck Let the men look sharp; we''ve no time to lose, and hot work is Captain Ellice made no reply, but ordered four of his men on deck to "Look alive now, lads," said Grim, as the men pulled towards the whale; "Keep her away two points," said Captain Guy to the man at the wheel; after day passed, and the ice round the ship still remained immovable, ice, and the whole crew--captain, mates, and all--worked and heaved like of men to cut a canal through the young ice from the ship to the island. men fell upon to pass the long dark hours of an Arctic winter, we may, "Look here, Mivins," said O''Riley, as the captain went below, "can ye "Try a bit of the bear," said Fred to Tom Singleton; "it''s better than When Captain Ellice and Fred looked in, the old id = 21733 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = The Giant of the North: Pokings Round the Pole date = keywords = Alf; Amalatok; Anders; Arctic; Benjy; Blackbeard; Butterface; CHAPTER; Captain; Chingatok; Eemerk; Eskimos; Flatland; Grabantak; Kablunets; Leo; Makitok; North; Oblooria; Oolichuk; Pole; Toolooha; Vane; man summary = "I go to the ice-cliff to look upon the sea," said Chingatok one "Tell them," said Captain Vane to Anders, the Eskimo interpreter, "that "Hush, lad," said the Captain with a little smile, "of course I shall "Good-bye to the North Pole!" said Benjy, with a look of despondency so "But you know," said Leo, "Chingatok told us that the old ice drifts A few hours later, and the Captain, Leo, Alf, Benjy, Chingatok, and the "There!" said the Captain, turning to Leo with a look of triumph, "he The Captain headed one party, Chingatok another, and Leo with Benjy a "Ask him what he thinks of it," said Leo to Anders, a little surprised "Now, Benjy, hand me the rifle and cartridges," said Leo, after the boat "Come, Alf," said the Captain, that same morning, after Leo and "No doubt," said Captain Vane, who, with Benjy, Alf, and Butterface, was id = 23492 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = Fast in the Ice: Adventures in the Polar Regions date = keywords = Baker; Butts; Davy; Dicey; Eskimo; Gregory; Harvey; Hope summary = or force its way through the ice to a certain latitude north, open water "I don''t like the look of the sky to-day, Tom," said the captain, Ice was to be seen all round as far as the eye could reach. them, and little water can be seen, it is called "pack" ice. noticed it, too, but he wouldn''t call the captain ''cause the ice came so water-line, as high as the ordinary floe-ice would be likely to reach. board the ice had separated, and long canals of water were seen opening press close to ice-bergs of great size, and more than once a lump as "You don''t seem to like our position, captain," said young Gregory, who crouch down behind a lump of ice and hope that the bear would go away, I have already said that ice-bergs are sometimes miles in extent--like id = 14882 author = Wallace, Dillon title = Bobby of the Labrador date = keywords = Abel; Bobby; Eskimo; God; Island; Itigailit; Jimmy; Labrador; Mr.; Mrs.; Partner; Skipper; Winslow; Zachariah summary = Skipper Ed lived with his little partner, as he called him--Jimmy Abel and Mrs. Abel with Bobby, Skipper Ed and Jimmy walked over to "The lad has come from rich people," said Skipper Ed, as he and Jimmy and Jimmy stopped for a week in Abel''s cabin, with Mrs. Abel and Bobby, "Never waste time," said Skipper Ed, one stormy winter''s day when Bobby Skipper Ed worked at their heavy sculling oars, and Bobby and Jimmy and And when Jimmy came running up a moment later Bobby with great Bobby laughed, and when Skipper Ed and Jimmy, failing to discover the every-day existence Abel Zachariah and Skipper Ed and Bobby and Jimmy morning and watched Abel Zachariah and Skipper Ed and Jimmy sail away Skipper Ed''s cabin, or Bobby wished Jimmy to come to Abel Zachariah''s "You know how the water treated us the other day, Jimmy," said Bobby