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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 143314 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Pole 3 January 3 December 3 Barrier 2 Wilson 2 Scott 2 Point 2 P.M. 2 Oates 2 Meares 2 March 2 Hut 2 Glacier 2 Garrard 2 February 2 Evans 2 Cherry 2 Cape 2 Camp 2 Bowers 2 Atkinson 1 ship 1 page 1 boy 1 antarctic 1 Wisting 1 Whales 1 Wednesday 1 Washington 1 Tuesday 1 Tom 1 Thursday 1 Sunday 1 Stubberud 1 South 1 Sea 1 School 1 Saturday 1 Ross 1 Professor 1 Porpoise 1 Polar 1 Party 1 P.O. 1 November 1 Mr. 1 Mount 1 Monday 1 Mark 1 Lindström Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2014 day 1570 time 1364 ice 1194 dog 1052 sledge 1004 wind 975 mile 967 man 944 ship 914 way 904 snow 853 night 798 water 760 foot 746 work 741 surface 724 pony 700 hour 652 party 623 sea 616 morning 588 weather 583 thing 564 tent 548 course 541 side 520 ° 509 temperature 475 part 463 condition 461 one 458 journey 451 place 442 page 397 nothing 391 end 385 land 374 camp 355 case 340 hand 335 food 334 air 328 expedition 325 ski 319 afternoon 299 animal 297 sun 295 light 293 march 288 north Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2507 _ 805 Scott 493 Barrier 468 Evans 381 Wilson 313 Fram 311 Cape 302 S. 290 hut 268 Jack 258 South 243 Pole 234 Camp 227 Washington 215 Mark 201 Point 191 Mr. 190 January 190 Glacier 187 Henderson 186 Discovery 186 December 179 Bowers 178 Oates 176 Hut 172 Atkinson 163 Hanssen 155 E. 154 March 152 Island 150 Porpoise 149 February 147 Meares 141 Bay 140 Captain 139 R. 139 Andy 137 F. 134 Sunday 128 Lindström 123 Bjaaland 122 Ross 121 march 121 November 120 Cherry 119 ° 115 C. 114 Garrard 113 Framheim 112 Polar Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8075 we 7017 it 4207 i 3344 they 3204 he 1532 them 1442 us 762 him 662 you 508 one 431 me 324 she 225 himself 206 themselves 145 ourselves 144 her 143 itself 127 myself 26 oneself 20 ours 15 ''em 14 ''s 13 herself 11 yourself 9 mine 9 em 8 yours 6 theirs 5 his 2 ye 1 yo 1 ye''d 1 thee 1 i''m 1 ay Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 24690 be 9859 have 2242 go 2136 do 1804 get 1737 see 1637 make 1482 come 1311 take 1073 find 797 give 795 think 753 say 729 look 716 leave 675 seem 605 know 603 show 533 follow 510 begin 495 keep 493 start 486 reach 432 put 427 lie 421 turn 409 fall 393 bring 379 feel 359 work 358 run 357 stand 350 become 344 pass 338 try 328 remain 324 cover 303 set 281 tell 272 hold 272 appear 271 use 271 break 270 pull 263 continue 257 rise 253 write 252 stop 252 return 251 lead Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3394 not 1808 very 1698 up 1474 so 1350 good 1325 out 1280 more 1212 well 1153 now 1081 then 1009 only 991 great 979 first 937 little 891 long 848 again 839 as 815 much 770 last 684 on 650 down 637 most 609 other 562 here 544 far 535 bad 526 off 503 about 498 soon 483 back 482 same 479 small 473 still 470 few 434 many 424 away 421 such 411 enough 409 all 397 too 394 there 385 hard 381 just 381 even 377 however 370 also 359 next 359 in 355 old 352 quite Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 251 good 149 most 103 least 89 great 83 bad 32 near 31 high 28 fine 27 slight 23 small 20 hard 19 low 17 Most 15 strong 15 heavy 14 large 11 short 10 warm 10 long 10 farth 10 cold 9 easy 9 early 8 late 6 simple 6 deep 6 dark 6 close 5 young 5 wild 5 weak 5 old 5 keen 5 full 4 strange 4 steep 4 bright 4 bold 4 big 3 quiet 3 quick 3 nice 3 light 3 happy 3 grave 3 fierce 3 fast 2 wise 2 thin 2 staunch Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 488 most 27 least 20 well 2 worst 2 near 2 hard 1 warmest 1 quick 1 grimmest 1 greatest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 dogs were not 5 dogs came up 5 ponies are very 5 scott was able 5 surface was so 5 thing is certain 5 weather was so 4 _ did not 4 dogs did not 4 scott was not 4 ship was once 4 snow was so 4 surface was awful 4 weather did not 4 weather does n''t 4 weather is very 4 weather was not 4 wind got up 3 course was then 3 day was not 3 dogs do not 3 dogs had not 3 dogs were now 3 ice was very 3 men did not 3 party got away 3 party turned back 3 ponies are not 3 ponies did splendidly 3 ponies did well 3 ponies do n''t 3 scott did not 3 scott was also 3 scott was very 3 ship did not 3 ship was not 3 sledges were ready 3 surface was as 3 surface was bad 3 surface was much 3 surface was terrible 3 temperature was down 3 temperature was not 3 tent was up 3 things are not 3 weather was fine 3 weather was still 3 wind was still 3 wind was strong 2 _ go on Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 man has not only 2 things are not so 2 things get no worse 1 day was not altogether 1 day was not enough 1 dogs do not greatly 1 dogs have not yet 1 dogs was no child 1 dogs were not fastidious 1 dogs were not much 1 dogs were not yet 1 foot were not large 1 hours is not so 1 ice had not yet 1 ice have no enemies 1 ice is not far 1 night brought not only 1 night is no longer 1 party did not already 1 party found no difficulty 1 party is no light 1 party were not yet 1 ponies were not far 1 scott did not altogether 1 scott was no ordinary 1 scott was not able 1 scott was not at 1 ship was no racer 1 ship was not unfounded 1 sides were not many 1 sledge made no difference 1 sledge showed no signs 1 sledge shows no signs 1 snow is not sticky 1 snow was not good 1 snow was not rapid 1 surface did not really 1 temperature was no lower 1 temperature was no worse 1 temperature was not especially 1 temperature was not particularly 1 temperature was not so 1 tent was not encouraging 1 tent was not only 1 thing was not impossible 1 things are not yet 1 waters had no terrors 1 waters had not previously 1 way was not entirely 1 weather is not kind A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 4229 author = Amundsen, Roald title = The South Pole; an account of the Norwegian Antarctic expedition in the "Fram," 1910-12 — Volume 1 and Volume 2 date = keywords = Aires; Atlantic; Barrier; Bay; Bjaaland; Buenos; Captain; December; February; Fram; Framheim; Hanssen; Hassel; January; Land; Lindström; March; Mount; November; Polar; Pole; Ross; Scott; Sea; South; Stubberud; Whales; Wisting; antarctic summary = New Year''s Day came and went without any change in the ice. but these men succeeded in working their way on foot over sea-ice place came the south-west wind with rain, fog, and foul weather in carry dogs, too, aboard this ship," he would say, every time he came on days, and before the month was half over we had come a good way into long sea voyage, and probably many on board the Fram looked forward dogs themselves saw to its covering with ice, and for the time being a mass of dogs it took some little time before they came across each this way for the first time going south, Hanssen''s dogs had fallen That day we crossed the last crevasse for a long time to come, and reached our good little house again, with two sledges and eleven dogs; was the best day''s work the Fram had done up to that time. id = 19731 author = Rockwood, Roy title = Under the Ocean to the South Pole; Or, the Strange Cruise of the Submarine Wonder date = keywords = Andy; Bill; Henderson; Jack; Johnson; Mark; Mr.; Porpoise; Professor; Tom; Washington; boy; ship summary = "Hand me that wrench, Mark," called Professor Amos Henderson to a boy "Do you think the ship will work, Professor?" he asked. "Now boys, we''ll see if she works so far," said the professor. "We are only going down a little way," the professor said, "and only At the sound of the voice the professor started and Mark and Jack "I think I''ll go a little nearer the surface," said the professor to "What is it?" asked Mark, as, followed by Jack, he came forward. "I think you and Mark will have to make a trip to town," he said to Jack "It''s Washington!" cried Mark, as he saw Professor Henderson''s colored The manhole cover was opened and Andy, with Jack and Mark, went out on water had come to the surface, the professor, came up on deck to take a "Reverse the ship!" cried Professor Henderson. id = 11579 author = Scott, Robert Falcon title = Scott''s Last Expedition, Volume I Being the journals of Captain R. F. Scott date = keywords = A.M.; Atkinson; Barrier; Bowers; Camp; Cape; Cherry; Crozier; December; Evans; February; Friday; Garrard; Glacier; Hut; Island; January; March; Meares; Monday; Oates; P.M.; Party; Point; Pole; Saturday; School; Sunday; Thursday; Tuesday; Wednesday; Wilson summary = Well--A Head Wind--Bad Conditions Continue--At One Ton Camp--Winter We have run 190 miles to-day: a good start, but inconvenient in one Crozier on New Year''s Day. 8 P.M.--Our calm soon came to an end, the breeze at 3 P.M. coming ice for water, snow for the animals, good slopes for ski-ing, vast ponies to come out, and we commenced a good day''s work. 1/4 mile off Hut Point got a clear run to Glacier Tongue. and 2 from Hut Point--a cold east wind; to-night the temperature 19°. Last night the temperature fell to -6° after the wind dropped--to-day Started on a bad surface--ponies plunging a good deal for 2 miles or blowing from 30 to 40 miles an hour all day; drift bad, and to-night Have exercised the ponies to-day and got my first good look at them. Light snow has fallen during the day--to-night the wind id = 6721 author = Turley, Charles title = The Voyages of Captain Scott : Retold from the Voyage of the Discovery and Scott''s Last Expedition date = keywords = Atkinson; Barrier; Bowers; Camp; Cape; Cherry; December; Discovery; Evans; Garrard; Glacier; Hut; January; Lashly; Meares; Oates; P.M.; P.O.; Point; Pole; Scott; Wilson; page summary = days the ship had really to fight her way, and Scott gave high As the days of March went by Scott began really to wonder whether miles off, but hope it is not so much; nine hours'' work to-day work that when the second long Polar night ended, Scott was able to With ponies, motor sledges, dogs, and men parties working hard, following day Scott drove his team to the ship, and when the men For the depôt laying journey Scott''s party consisted of 12 men on Scott saw their sledge track leading round on the sea-ice. Armitage, Scott and his party soon started back to Safety Camp, Gran at Corner Camp, and on the following day Scott, Crean and Two days later another depôt party started to Corner Camp, E. every day, Scott hoped to march longer hours and to make the requisite