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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 103439 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 7 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 New 3 work 3 time 3 life 3 York 2 nature 2 human 2 great 2 good 2 day 2 United 2 States 2 London 2 Industrial 2 God 2 Europe 2 English 2 England 2 America 1 writing 1 world 1 woman 1 western 1 web 1 true 1 today 1 thought 1 soul 1 society 1 self 1 scale 1 result 1 religion 1 process 1 pragmatic 1 practical 1 people 1 need 1 money 1 mind 1 mean 1 man 1 love 1 literacy 1 like 1 language 1 know 1 japanese 1 internet 1 individual Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1892 experience 1846 language 1360 literacy 1049 time 964 man 944 life 884 work 834 people 791 world 679 year 667 woman 625 self 578 form 546 book 523 way 518 nature 489 country 483 change 471 education 455 word 449 day 433 part 432 writing 424 place 422 child 416 system 413 family 409 relation 396 society 389 mean 386 process 384 constitution 371 religion 371 efficiency 368 market 361 scale 356 image 352 expectation 347 civilization 346 need 345 mind 344 framework 344 being 343 sign 341 other 341 art 330 activity 326 condition 325 power 323 context Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1067 _ 510 New 379 Army 377 York 190 England 184 Woman 173 Industrial 168 States 167 Press 166 America 151 Sunday 149 God 148 London 126 United 125 Man 121 University 105 Europe 104 Home 93 American 91 Boston 90 South 87 World 85 Paris 84 Germany 82 Union 82 State 80 France 79 S. 76 John 74 May 72 Mr. 71 North 71 July 71 Congress 69 Salvation 68 English 67 Chicago 65 A. 64 Colony 60 de 60 USA 60 Napoleon 60 Italy 60 City 58 Spencer 56 pp 56 June 56 Cambridge 55 Revolution 55 April Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3754 it 2043 we 1915 they 1569 i 1538 he 1000 she 957 them 601 you 508 him 435 us 421 her 371 me 310 themselves 303 itself 163 one 126 himself 82 ourselves 75 herself 55 myself 27 thee 23 oneself 21 yourself 14 ours 8 theirs 8 mine 8 ''s 6 hers 5 yours 5 thyself 4 his 2 ye 1 yourselves 1 whence 1 tactile 1 elf 1 conversation-"it 1 commodity-"satisfaction 1 bookshelf Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 18619 be 4577 have 1722 do 1356 make 811 become 789 take 729 see 722 know 706 give 573 say 520 write 500 come 495 use 438 find 430 work 426 go 397 look 383 base 379 think 375 seem 345 understand 333 call 328 need 324 bear 322 constitute 313 change 305 read 300 lead 292 live 291 bring 288 keep 288 express 277 involve 270 mean 262 show 262 require 253 result 244 affect 234 follow 234 establish 229 define 226 reflect 220 speak 218 leave 217 increase 213 embody 209 feel 198 acknowledge 190 get 179 help Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3741 not 1607 more 1239 human 1197 new 1077 many 1054 other 1043 so 984 only 951 well 902 practical 866 as 830 such 736 even 720 much 622 also 615 own 608 good 558 different 521 most 518 very 500 pragmatic 500 high 476 great 459 still 456 political 456 never 444 long 438 same 433 less 423 up 394 first 376 old 367 - 363 social 352 now 346 out 333 literate 313 too 312 here 307 possible 307 no 305 little 295 religious 289 natural 279 far 262 then 256 thus 252 free 251 probably 239 almost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 195 good 145 least 139 most 64 high 30 great 25 bad 24 low 22 Most 17 early 15 large 14 noble 12 late 11 fine 10 rich 9 fair 8 fit 8 deep 7 manif 6 small 5 strong 5 near 4 wise 4 simple 4 poor 4 farth 4 deadly 4 close 4 bright 4 big 4 able 3 young 3 true 3 sweet 3 rude 3 pure 3 long 3 light 3 fast 3 eld 3 broad 2 wealthy 2 sad 2 old 2 new 2 mean 2 lofty 2 j 2 holy 2 heavy 2 happy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 382 most 33 well 21 least 1 wall,--most 1 goethe 1 feelest 1 early 1 coldest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.nanothinc.com 2 www.foresight.org 1 www.well.com 1 www.nadin.ws 1 www.columbia.edu 1 www.bs.unicatt.it 1 www.ariadne.knee.kioto-u.ac.jp Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://www.nanothinc.com/webmaster 1 http://www.well.com 1 http://www.nadin.ws/publications/books 1 http://www.foresight.org/webmaster@foresight.org 1 http://www.foresight.org 1 http://www.columbia.edu/~rh120/ch106 1 http://www.bs.unicatt.it/bibliotecavirtuale.html 1 http://www.ariadne.knee.kioto-u.ac.jp Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 2 nadin@utdallas.edu 1 webmaster@foresight.org Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 21 language is not 10 literacy is not 7 literacy does not 5 experiences take place 4 experience takes place 4 language does not 4 people do not 4 writing does not 3 change does not 3 experiences are not 3 experiences become more 3 literacy was necessary 3 woman is not 3 work is not 3 world is already 3 world is not 3 writing is not 2 _ do _ 2 _ is _ 2 book became machine 2 book is not 2 change brought about 2 changes brought about 2 changes take place 2 children are not 2 education is not 2 experience constituted in 2 experience is not 2 experiences are no 2 experiences is not 2 language are not 2 language did not 2 language is also 2 language is different 2 language is ill 2 language makes possible 2 language takes place 2 language was still 2 life is also 2 literacy are no 2 literacy became possible 2 literacy is ill 2 literacy is more 2 literacy is no 2 literacy is subject 2 literacy lead politics 2 literacy made possible 2 man has first 2 man is not 2 men are not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 literacy is no longer 2 experiences are no longer 2 language is not only 2 literacy are no longer 1 _ do not _ 1 _ was not afraid 1 book is no longer 1 child did not really 1 children are not yet 1 children were no longer 1 children were not literate 1 education has not only 1 education is no longer 1 education is not appropriate 1 experience are not anonymous 1 experienced is not reducible 1 experiences are not adequate 1 experiences are not even 1 family is no guarantee 1 forms are not only 1 language are no longer 1 language are not easy 1 language are not identical 1 language does not necessarily 1 language is no longer 1 language is not at 1 language is not directly 1 language is not enough 1 language is not equal 1 language is not equivalent 1 language is not independent 1 language is not obscure 1 language is not politically 1 language is not reducible 1 language is not simultaneously 1 language is not well 1 language was no longer 1 language was not prepared 1 language were not distinguishable 1 life is no manifestation 1 life looked not clear 1 literacy are not identical 1 literacy do not automatically 1 literacy does not automatically 1 literacy is not adequate 1 literacy is not appropriate 1 literacy is not concerned 1 literacy is not necessarily 1 literacy is not only 1 literacy is not really A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 8642 author = Fuller, Margaret title = Woman in the Nineteenth Century and Kindred Papers Relating to the Sphere, Condition and Duties, of Woman. date = keywords = Aglauron; Consuelo; Emily; English; God; Heaven; Iphigenia; L----; Laurie; Madame; Man; Margaret; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Rome; Sand; V----; Woman; child; day; footnote; french; good; great; heart; life; like; love; mind; nature; soul; thought; time; true summary = of "The Great Lawsuit.--Man _versus_ Men; Woman _versus_ Women." the life of man, for hearts crave, if minds do not know how to ask it. there exists in the minds of men a tone of feeling toward women as of God. Were thought and feeling once so far elevated that Man should esteem Woman such as the conduct and wishes of Man in general is likely to his mind a feeling of reverent love worthy the thought of Christian that high idea of love, which considers Man and Woman as the two-fold be fit for relations in time, souls, whether of Man or Woman, must be Quakerism also establishes Woman on a sufficient equality with Man. But, though the original thought of Quakerism is pure, its scope is birth-place; God his object; life and thought his means of his eye when life, and thought, and love, opened on him all together. id = 38373 author = Holland, Frederic May title = Liberty in the Nineteenth Century date = keywords = America; April; Boston; Congress; England; House; July; March; Massachusetts; Napoleon; New; North; October; Parliament; President; South; Spencer; States; Sunday; Union; United; Whigs; York summary = If any nation can maintain a free press, just laws, and elections of Need of a strong government in time of war had given a power almost Parliament passed laws that same year which made public meetings nothing for public opinion or the people''s rights; but he was too good publishers in New York City than by all those in Great Britain. declared that the people of the United States would look upon attempts The money was given by a generous New Yorker; but Garrison''s work in the the New England Anti-Slavery Society at Boston early in 1832. Free State men were then supplied with rifles; and an anti-slavery business, public opinion, and social life in the cotton States; where the State District Court, told the convention that "the Sunday law, first laws against Sunday amusement were passed by men who thought all New England Anti-Slavery Society founded in Boston, January id = 36489 author = Howe, Julia Ward title = Modern Society date = keywords = Europe; american; day; good; great; human; life; man; money; society; time; woman; work; world summary = The opposite extremes of human nature embrace, between them, a wonderful Let us look at modern society in Cairo, Shepherd''s hotel, and to-day than in any preceding age of the world''s history. American women with money are at a premium in fashionable Europe. and beauty of English country-life, the literary and artistic resources the time of Luther, but the fact for which it stands is as old as human I have seen in this time a great growth in the direction of liberal the study of this question, which so regards the very life of society. In our America, ay, even in our Puritan New England, the day has come in The greatest trouble with human society is, that its natural tendency In this day of the world hope is so strong, and the desire for an a place amongst the great poems of our time. id = 30295 author = Lamb, Edwin Gifford title = The Social Work of the Salvation Army date = keywords = Army; Colony; England; Home; Industrial; London; New; Salvation; States; United; York; work summary = Salvation Army Industrial Homes Company, incorporated in New Jersey, has publication of "In Darkest England" in 1890, the social work of the Army by means of the city industrial work without the aid of the colony. men wish to make a success of their new work; they wish to see the Army people aided by the Army industrial work would be hard to ascertain or for in the United States industrial homes of the Army. Examples of Men in the Army Industrial Homes. the Industrial Home two weeks and hoped to work his way back to England Industrial Home some time, and said they made him work too hard. The growth of the Hotel Department of the Army''s work, like that of the Was still working and had a room at the Army Hotel. SOME MINOR FEATURES OF THE SALVATION ARMY SOCIAL WORK. SOME MINOR FEATURES OF THE SALVATION ARMY SOCIAL WORK. id = 2481 author = Nadin, Mihai title = The Civilization of Illiteracy date = keywords = Age; America; BCE; Book; China; East; English; Europe; God; Greek; Industrial; Japan; John; Latin; London; New; Press; Revolution; Science; Soviet; USA; University; War; World; York; art; change; chinese; design; different; education; european; experience; form; history; human; individual; internet; japanese; know; language; life; literacy; mean; nature; need; people; practical; pragmatic; process; religion; result; scale; self; time; today; web; western; work; writing summary = practical experiences of human self-constitution in domains where Literacy and the means of human self-constitution based on it literacy affect cognitive processes, forms of human interaction, embodied in new human practical experiences. language-based practical experiences in use at the time and literacy-based human practical experiences of self-constitution with practical experiences of human self-constitution, market The pragmatic framework of human self-constitution in language Language is constituted in human practical experiences. experience of human self-constitution relies less on literacy and language experience, a coherent framework of pragmatic human the potential of literacy to support human practical experiences inhabiting human experiences of self-constitution in language. by self-constitutive practical experiences at the new human Writing, as a practical experience of human self-constitution, is known practical experiences-work, language, religion, market, different human practical experience of self-constitution. human practical experiences to the language of design, and from practical human experience related to literacy-and the