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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 43452 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 91 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 illustration 1 good 1 boy 1 York 1 Tony 1 Tom 1 Sydney 1 Story 1 Spencer 1 Sam 1 Rugg 1 Rudolph 1 Quaker 1 Polly 1 Oliver 1 New 1 Nashola 1 Mrs. 1 Mr. 1 Middleton 1 Martin 1 Mars 1 Jasper 1 Janet 1 James 1 Hallowell 1 Fisher 1 Felix 1 Dudley 1 Crawford 1 Cousin 1 CHAPTER 1 Brighton 1 Ben 1 Beeman 1 Anthony 1 Abner Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 450 man 416 boy 240 time 175 day 169 way 166 story 164 house 153 tramp 147 place 142 hand 123 night 122 cloth 117 thing 114 door 112 money 111 eye 110 life 110 father 108 one 107 room 97 face 93 horse 91 something 84 year 83 nothing 83 friend 80 word 79 road 75 tree 75 child 73 girl 72 adventure 70 water 70 price 70 head 69 end 69 cent 68 hour 67 window 66 voice 64 lady 64 home 64 hero 64 book 61 sea 60 work 60 moment 60 hill 59 mind 59 gold Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 637 Tony 316 Rudolph 285 _ 228 Oliver 190 Mr. 145 Jasper 144 Cousin 139 Mrs. 115 Sam 113 Ben 105 Middleton 105 Janet 99 Abner 80 Anthony 67 Felix 64 Rugg 63 Dudley 63 Crawford 57 Spencer 56 Tom 49 James 48 New 48 Hallowell 44 John 43 Nashola 43 Martin 43 Beeman 39 Illustrated 38 York 38 Brighton 37 Polly 35 Story 35 CHAPTER 35 A. 34 Quaker 33 England 32 Sydney 32 Barbara 30 Massey 29 Peyton 29 Huntress 29 Harry 28 G. 28 Cicely 27 TONY 27 Secotan 27 Roger 27 Indians 27 Fisher 26 Warrigal Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2827 he 2411 i 2079 you 1596 it 833 him 547 me 544 she 499 they 380 we 320 them 196 himself 185 her 113 us 55 myself 27 yourself 21 thee 21 one 17 themselves 14 mine 14 herself 13 yours 11 itself 8 his 6 ourselves 5 ''s 4 hers 3 theirs 2 ours 2 ''em 1 ye 1 sho Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 5337 be 1973 have 1141 do 1072 say 659 go 494 come 402 think 378 know 362 see 349 get 345 make 313 look 283 take 255 ask 244 tell 203 find 183 give 181 want 167 seem 157 leave 142 hear 129 stand 129 feel 115 let 115 begin 114 answer 109 turn 109 bring 101 sit 96 like 90 keep 89 put 86 mean 86 live 80 pass 78 price 77 wait 75 call 74 believe 73 try 72 run 69 walk 69 lie 67 suppose 66 show 66 fall 65 help 63 return 62 stop 62 pay Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1547 not 394 so 368 up 314 out 258 very 249 then 246 old 243 only 239 little 237 well 223 more 218 now 218 back 217 down 207 good 196 away 194 here 189 just 184 much 178 long 162 never 159 as 155 too 139 young 137 last 134 there 130 again 123 other 121 great 120 even 117 first 116 all 103 12mo 102 still 102 off 99 enough 97 once 93 on 91 in 90 own 80 right 80 far 75 soon 75 full 73 poor 73 always 72 over 70 sure 69 ever 67 quite Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 35 good 16 least 11 most 8 great 7 near 5 bad 4 low 4 high 4 Most 3 large 2 slight 2 rich 2 clever 2 brave 1 wise 1 wild 1 weak 1 strong 1 southw 1 short 1 rare 1 mean 1 lucky 1 long 1 late 1 handsome 1 green 1 goddamned 1 foremost 1 fair 1 eld 1 easy 1 dreary 1 dear 1 brief 1 blind 1 big 1 able 1 Least Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 40 most 4 well 2 least 1 tempest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/59904/59904-h/59904-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/59904/59904-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/tonyheroorbraveb00alge 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 tony did not 5 rudolph did not 5 tony was not 4 rudolph was not 3 oliver did not 2 boy is alive 2 boy is dead 2 boy was dead 2 jasper did not 2 man went on 2 oliver got up 2 oliver looked back 2 room was quite 2 sam was not 2 tony came up 2 tony was about 2 tony was mistaken 1 _ are _ 1 _ do n''t 1 _ think so 1 _ was _ 1 _ was n''t 1 ben had more 1 ben had not 1 ben looked relieved 1 boy came out 1 boy comes back 1 boy do n''t 1 boy find out 1 boy had first 1 boy is dressed 1 boy is right 1 boy looked weary 1 boy thought desperately 1 boy turned quickly 1 boy was accidentally 1 boy was alive 1 boy was ill 1 boy was originally 1 boy was proprietor 1 boy was silent 1 boy went on 1 boys did n''t 1 boys is apparent 1 boys knew much 1 boys leave erie 1 boys said promptly 1 boys sat down 1 boys went out 1 boys were fleet Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 ben had not yet 1 hands did not even 1 house was not far 1 oliver had no difficulty 1 one does not often 1 rudolph did not long 1 rudolph knew no more 1 rudolph was not idle 1 rudolph was not only 1 sam was not only 1 stories are not only 1 tony felt no interest 1 tony was no exception 1 tony was not only 1 tony was not particular 1 tony was not slow 1 tony was not startled 1 tramp had no use A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 59904 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = Tony, the Hero; Or, A Brave Boy''s Adventures with a Tramp date = keywords = Abner; Ben; CHAPTER; James; Middleton; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Quaker; Rudolph; Rugg; Sam; Spencer; Story; Sydney; Tony; York; boy; good; illustration summary = "I don''t want to help you in this, Rudolph," said Tony. "Come, Tony," said Rudolph, motioning to take the boy''s hand, but Tony "I''d like to see it," said Abner, regarding Tony with new respect. "Come and walk a piece with me, Tony," said Rudolph. "I hope you don''t think I wanted to rob the house," said Tony. if you want to, Tony," he said, looking up to where the boy''s hat was "Yes, I suppose so," said Tony, although he did not like the title "It looks good," said the other, with what Tony thought to be a longing "You hear what he says?" said Tony, turning to old Ben. "But," said the old man, startled at the boy''s question, "suppose "I expect you will cost me a good deal, Tony," said the young man. "I am not afraid of anything you can do to me, Rudolph," said Tony, id = 40961 author = Fyfe, H. B. (Horace Bowne) title = Luna Escapade date = keywords = Dudley; Fisher; Mars summary = landing on Luna, Pete Dudley sat at the controls of the rocket freighter Slim and about five-feet-four, she looked like a nice little girl making _And her hair isn''t naturally ash-blonde_, Dudley thought. "Yeah, sure," said Dudley. "I sober fast," said Dudley. Dudley thanked him and went off to contact Fisher. Dudley smiled at Mrs. Fisher and was introduced to the red-haired girl who were to be his crew, Dudley spent a lot of time with Eileen. "May I have a word with you, Dudley?" Kathi asked, coming across the "Take an eclipse on that," said Dudley with a flat sweep of his hand. said Dudley disgustedly. hand over her mouth, for when Dudley looked back, they were rounding a "Fine!" said Dudley. "She didn''t look to me like a typist," objected Dudley. "Blood-suckers!" said Dudley. "All right," said Fisher. "I found a good place," said Dudley. id = 26537 author = Meigs, Cornelia title = The Windy Hill date = keywords = Anthony; Beeman; Brighton; Cousin; Crawford; Felix; Hallowell; Janet; Jasper; Martin; Nashola; Oliver; Polly; Tom summary = Janet thought the great rooms were very beautiful, but Oliver did not "I can hardly remember how Cousin Jasper looks, but I think I will Janet, or perhaps even Cousin Jasper himself, would come to look for "You have come just in time," said the man, "if you are willing to "But do oak trees grow to be so old?" Oliver inquired at last, looking Good night," said Cousin Jasper as he "I knew Janet would like Polly," Oliver was thinking. "He must be about Cousin Jasper''s age," Oliver thought as he sat "Shall we tell Cousin Jasper?" Janet suggested, but Oliver declared "Cousin Jasper," he said, "didn''t I tell you that the gardener wanted "It looks like home already," Barbara said as they came up to the Janet and Oliver stood looking at him miserably, knowing that there "Get in," said Oliver curtly to Anthony Crawford, while Janet opened