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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 48586 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 69 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 Mr. 2 John 2 Dr. 2 Asylum 1 year 1 workhouse 1 patient 1 medical 1 man 1 lunatic 1 institution 1 insane 1 York 1 University 1 Union 1 Troy 1 Shaftesbury 1 Scott 1 Roland 1 Report 1 Poor 1 Oliver 1 Nicholas 1 New 1 Nancy 1 Mrs. 1 Lunacy 1 Lord 1 Licensed 1 Law 1 Kenyon 1 January 1 Isabel 1 Houses 1 God 1 Frank 1 Fox 1 Ferris 1 Denton 1 County 1 Conrad 1 Committee 1 Commissioners 1 Bundy 1 Bond 1 Board 1 Anderson 1 Alfred 1 Act Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 899 asylum 616 patient 395 time 385 man 382 case 351 lunatic 310 year 292 workhouse 272 room 267 person 266 day 260 officer 244 treatment 241 number 240 house 227 insane 219 pauper 203 inmate 197 institution 195 place 184 hand 168 attendant 167 mind 166 father 163 friend 163 condition 156 care 147 law 145 one 141 class 139 duty 133 way 133 ward 133 other 129 home 127 plan 127 p. 126 insanity 124 cost 122 door 121 matter 120 fact 120 boy 119 question 117 letter 116 part 115 state 115 order 113 night 111 country Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 637 _ 610 Oliver 378 Mr. 355 Kenyon 241 Commissioners 223 Roland 211 Lunacy 193 Mrs. 147 Dr. 128 Bundy 115 Asylum 108 John 101 Denton 92 Nancy 91 Board 83 Report 78 Asylums 76 workhouse 73 County 71 Nicholas 68 Fox 63 Lord 61 Frank 60 Commission 56 Cleopatra 51 York 51 Conrad 51 Committee 50 New 49 Poor 46 Law 44 January 44 Anderson 43 Lunatic 42 Union 41 State 41 Act 36 Licensed 35 CHAPTER 33 Graham 33 God 32 Houses 32 Florette 31 University 30 Troy 30 Shaftesbury 30 Dudley 30 Carrie 29 J. 27 Chicago Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2722 i 1904 it 1594 he 1407 you 726 we 708 me 600 they 583 him 452 them 389 she 148 her 109 himself 99 us 90 themselves 75 myself 34 itself 32 yourself 22 herself 15 ourselves 13 yours 13 mine 8 ''em 7 one 4 his 3 thyself 1 ye 1 thy 1 them?--they 1 thee 1 ours 1 made,--and 1 ho!--you 1 hisself 1 hers 1 em 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 7691 be 2170 have 929 do 919 say 451 make 331 take 331 go 326 see 298 know 287 think 271 come 248 find 233 ask 219 give 202 get 185 leave 169 look 157 tell 143 require 142 call 139 place 130 receive 128 send 128 become 124 keep 122 bring 115 feel 113 provide 112 hear 105 show 103 put 103 live 102 want 99 seem 98 visit 93 answer 92 believe 89 suppose 89 meet 89 like 88 treat 85 need 84 pay 83 propose 82 write 82 render 82 remove 82 consider 81 enter 81 add Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1665 not 511 so 464 more 379 medical 329 other 321 such 319 well 306 very 286 only 258 much 249 many 230 out 223 then 222 now 219 up 217 same 217 as 216 lunatic 211 good 202 great 196 insane 194 most 182 little 177 here 176 large 174 old 169 own 161 first 159 poor 143 too 137 long 132 chronic 127 even 126 less 125 general 122 present 122 however 121 often 119 mental 117 never 115 again 114 far 110 last 107 proper 107 once 107 also 104 necessary 103 public 101 soon 101 recent Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 59 least 56 most 52 good 6 large 6 bad 5 low 5 great 5 Most 4 manif 4 high 3 slight 3 deep 3 cheap 2 wide 2 late 2 dear 1 sublime 1 strong 1 strange 1 small 1 short 1 remote 1 pray 1 plain 1 old 1 noble 1 near 1 narrow 1 l 1 fine 1 easy 1 bitter 1 MOST Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 138 most 12 well 7 least 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 oliver did not 4 kenyon did not 2 asylums are not 2 asylums is not 2 kenyon was not 2 oliver does n''t 2 oliver is dead 2 oliver was glad 2 oliver went out 2 person taking charge 2 roland was not 2 workhouse do not 1 _ are _ 1 _ become rational 1 _ do _ 1 _ is hopeless 1 _ see further 1 asylum are so 1 asylum becomes more 1 asylum being frequently 1 asylum is considerable 1 asylum is contingent 1 asylum is not 1 asylums are asylums 1 asylums are gradually 1 asylums are graduates 1 asylums are open 1 asylums are rightly 1 asylums are so 1 asylums being thus 1 asylums have not 1 asylums is due 1 asylums is entirely 1 asylums is often 1 asylums were again 1 asylums were not 1 case coming directly 1 case does not 1 case is different 1 case is therefore 1 case was such 1 cases are insufficient 1 cases are not 1 cases are wilfully 1 cases becomes so 1 cases is annually 1 cases is further 1 cases is likely 1 cases is too 1 cases requiring treatment Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 asylums are not sufficient 1 cases are not mixed 1 father has no money 1 kenyon was not through 1 officer is not always 1 oliver had no such 1 oliver was no exception 1 patient is not so 1 patients requiring not constant 1 person are not unfrequently 1 persons are not satisfactorily 1 roland made no further 1 roland was not present 1 years known no other A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 33241 author = Adler, G. J. (George J.) title = Letters of a Lunatic A Brief Exposition of My University Life, During the Years 1853-54 date = keywords = Dr.; Ferris; New; University; York; institution; man; year summary = PROFESSOR OF GERMAN LITERATURE IN THE UNIVERSITY OF THE CITY OF page or two from my life in connection with a public institution of the University at the time of my instruction to the students, such an idea 3d, During the horrid disorders within the Institution the past winter, Dear Sir,--I deem it my duty as a citizen of New-York, and a member of a apprize you of a fact of my personal history during the past winter, connected with the University of the city of New-York, first as a number of years past in preparing works for publication, and this winter As the above letter was handed to my personal friends for the purpose of the year of my matriculation at the institution, to the present hour I attempts of certain parties in connection with the institution and _ab institution, where such scenes of scandal only _date from the time his id = 56973 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = Adrift in the City; or, Oliver Conrad''s Plucky Fight date = keywords = Bond; Bundy; Conrad; Denton; Dr.; Fox; Frank; John; Kenyon; Mr.; Mrs.; Nancy; Nicholas; Oliver; Roland summary = "Oliver, bring me that ball!" said Roland Kenyon, in a tone of command. "You''d better come home," he said, turning to Oliver. "I know when to come home," said Oliver briefly. "I believe Roland thinks so," said Oliver, glancing at his "Look here, Oliver," said Frank, "I begin to think you have "I am glad you selected a good article, Oliver," said Mr. Kenyon "I heard you had a letter for me, Mr. Kenyon," said Oliver abruptly. "I should like a room alone," said Mrs. Kenyon, glancing at Cleopatra, "Oliver," said Mr. Kenyon one evening, "I have to go to New York on "Hope you''ll have a good time, Oliver," said Roland, with a chuckle, "New York is rather a lively place, Oliver," said Mr. Kenyon, who read "This is the place, Oliver," said Mr. Kenyon. "So Oliver is going to Chicago," said Frank Dudley to Roland Kenyon, on id = 44320 author = Arlidge, J. T. (John Thomas) title = On the State of Lunacy and the Legal Provision for the Insane With Observations on the Construction and Organization of Asylums date = keywords = Act; Asylum; Board; Commissioners; Committee; County; Houses; January; Law; Licensed; Lunacy; Poor; Report; Shaftesbury; Union; insane; lunatic; medical; patient; workhouse summary = 126.--Visiting Justices of Asylums to supervise workhouse lunatic advanced by the Lunacy Commissioners to large lunatic asylums, cases in workhouses for asylum treatment to the Union medical officer, reported by the Poor-Law Board, as detained in County and Borough Asylums Pauper lunatics in workhouses are stated (10th Annual Report of the Poor only one-half of the lunatic inmates of workhouses require asylum many insane persons in workhouses: for, on one side, asylums are found to Officer to any Pauper Lunatic _not being_ in a Workhouse, Asylum, Medical Superintendents of Insane Asylums that not more than 250 patients the asylums make a return to the Lunacy Commissioners that such a patient lunatics and ''nervous'' patients not in asylums, but placed, or proposed to the pauper insane not in workhouses or asylums, but boarded with for a quarterly visit to all county patients in lunatic asylums, and to id = 48455 author = Swan, Moses title = Ten Years and Ten Months in Lunatic Asylums in Different States date = keywords = Alfred; Anderson; Asylum; God; Isabel; John; Lord; Mr.; Scott; Troy summary = back halls of the Marshall Infirmary or Lunatic Asylum, Ida Hill, Troy, Long before I went to Brattleborough I was thought by Dr. Hall to have the consumption, who said my left lung was gone. lion-like men through the day-time, though in fear of my dear life. like to be in that room to-day and be treated as one poor man was in said I, a lunatic asylum for my home, a cell for my dining room, a cell main-house William Anderson told me Chris and his wife were patients, DOCTORS, ATTENDANTS AND PATIENTS IN THE INCURABLE HOUSE. First saw Bacon in Ida Hill Lunatic Asylum, March 29, 1860, bound to a After Anderson came to the incurable house as attendant, Bacon roomed The first year I entered the Troy Asylum, I found in the attendant''s TROY LUNATIC ASYLUM INCURABLE HOUSE. TROY LUNATIC ASYLUM INCURABLE HOUSE. SINCE I LEFT TROY LUNATIC ASYLUM AS A PATIENT.