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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 53574 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 long 2 like 2 leg 2 illustration 1 world 1 work 1 wing 1 web 1 true 1 time 1 thread 1 place 1 note 1 monster 1 little 1 life 1 insect 1 fly 1 day 1 creature 1 beetle 1 band 1 Wille 1 Thomisus 1 Tarantula 1 Spite 1 Spider 1 Sophia 1 Sir 1 Silky 1 Sergeant 1 SPIDER 1 Rodney 1 Ram 1 Raft 1 Pixie 1 Pipe 1 Nurses 1 Note 1 Madam 1 Lycosa 1 Locust 1 Linn 1 Lieutenant 1 Lawe 1 Hide 1 Governor 1 Footnote 1 Faith 1 Fab Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 361 time 277 illustration 256 work 248 leg 244 way 243 thread 226 side 220 creature 214 spider 213 day 210 web 207 line 205 eye 204 insect 190 ground 183 life 183 hand 181 place 174 one 172 water 172 egg 161 moment 154 body 153 part 152 head 151 man 150 thing 149 point 149 end 148 silk 146 camp 140 nest 138 nothing 135 fly 134 grass 132 night 131 air 126 door 125 face 124 order 119 boat 117 wing 115 friend 115 foot 114 ship 114 mother 112 brownie 110 other 109 tent 108 prey Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 448 _ 347 Spider 255 Pixie 233 Epeira 211 Pixies 209 Brownies 189 Brownie 169 Spite 136 FIG 135 Lycosa 109 Captain 99 MacWhirlie 88 Sophia 88 Bruce 84 Madam 74 Rodney 69 Lawe 67 Wille 65 Sergeant 64 Governor 62 Lieutenant 62 Faith 60 Tarantula 60 Raft 58 Breeze 57 CHAPTER 56 Pipe 56 Blythe 55 Appendix 54 Footnote 48 . 46 Note 46 Hide 45 Ensign 43 Pp 43 E. 42 bee 42 True 42 Banded 40 Sir 38 Nurses 36 sp 36 Ram 36 PART 36 Locust 35 Tigrina 33 Scaly 33 Corporal 32 Silky 32 Natties Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2245 it 1564 i 1130 they 1107 he 916 she 818 you 776 we 623 them 375 us 337 her 325 him 279 me 111 herself 107 themselves 88 himself 82 one 67 itself 53 myself 16 ourselves 14 ''em 13 yourself 10 yours 6 hers 5 theirs 4 mine 3 ''s 2 ours 1 yourselves 1 wigwam 1 whereof 1 uv 1 on''t 1 insects.--translator 1 imperil 1 foliage.--translator 1 em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 7253 be 2225 have 869 do 541 see 495 make 468 come 443 say 362 go 354 take 332 know 282 find 233 look 233 give 226 leave 194 let 190 think 186 seem 182 run 181 keep 176 turn 166 follow 162 fall 157 get 150 stand 142 lay 141 call 139 begin 131 pass 126 cry 124 lie 122 hang 119 show 119 become 118 hold 115 tell 115 live 115 carry 114 wait 113 work 113 put 111 move 110 hear 109 form 108 catch 106 draw 106 bring 102 speak 101 reach 100 cover 96 cut Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1262 not 572 up 480 so 393 out 389 more 363 now 348 then 331 other 329 little 315 well 314 long 284 good 274 as 260 down 234 very 233 here 213 first 212 away 203 again 201 too 201 great 194 just 194 few 189 even 182 there 182 old 179 only 178 once 171 back 168 much 168 many 166 same 165 own 158 quite 155 last 153 soon 151 off 150 never 143 most 134 large 127 young 126 small 126 enough 125 still 124 whole 122 far 121 all 115 true 115 such 113 together Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 79 least 45 good 37 most 15 near 14 bad 12 high 10 great 9 large 8 slight 8 Most 5 small 5 old 4 bright 3 wise 3 topmost 3 swift 3 long 3 faint 3 early 2 young 2 wild 2 weird 2 tall 2 strong 2 strange 2 sharp 2 safe 2 noisy 2 low 2 keen 2 innermost 2 hot 2 hard 2 handsome 2 furth 2 fresh 2 dark 2 cool 2 common 2 big 1 z 1 sweet 1 stupid 1 steady 1 sore 1 soft 1 simple 1 shy 1 shrill 1 rich Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 106 most 7 well 7 least 1 surest 1 long 1 infest 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?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 epeira does not 4 spider does not 4 spider is not 3 spite was not 2 brownies had now 2 brownies were not 2 brownies were so 2 creature is very 2 creatures are not 2 eyes turned upward 2 one does not 2 ones are very 2 pixies are just 2 pixies were so 2 spider has not 2 spider is well 2 spite did not 2 threads are not 2 web is not 2 work are so 1 _ are here 1 _ go _ 1 _ was _ 1 brownie do n''t 1 brownie is armed 1 brownies did not 1 brownies had already 1 brownies looked on 1 brownies saw sixpoint 1 brownies took in 1 brownies was therefore 1 brownies was well 1 brownies were afloat 1 brownies were all 1 brownies were fond 1 brownies were indeed 1 brownies were interwoven 1 brownies were just 1 brownies were no 1 brownies were satisfied 1 brownies were true 1 creature ''s back 1 creature been as 1 creature has more 1 creature has not 1 creature having only 1 creature is able 1 creature is dead 1 creature is still 1 creature was thoroughly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 spite was not long 1 brownies were no wiser 1 brownies were not always 1 brownies were not pleased 1 creatures are not very 1 epeira does no mending 1 epeira does not either 1 epeira had no aim 1 insects are not always 1 insects were not alive 1 legs find no footing 1 legs take no part 1 life has not yet 1 one is not surprised 1 pixies are not true 1 spider be not already 1 spider has not yet 1 spider is no less 1 spider takes no account 1 threads are not even 1 threads are not sticky 1 works are not so A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 1887 author = Fabre, Jean-Henri title = The Life of the Spider date = keywords = Angular; Banded; Bee; Bumble; Clotho; Epeira; Locust; Lycosa; Silky; Spider; Tarantula; Thomisus; band; day; leg; like; little; long; note; place; thread; time; web; work summary = effects upon the insect entangled in the fatal web, the Spider''s poison not to leave the animal time for reflexion; and the Spider suddenly, Spider comes up; and the meeting takes place in the perpendicular When the Epeira, or Garden Spider, sees an insect entangled The silk bag, the nest, in which the Banded Epeira houses her eggs, is a Spider who weaves no web, lies in wait for her prey and walks sideways, The work of the Cross Spider is a pill of white silk, wrought into a pans, the Cross Spider, on the support supplied by a few threads The Epeira with the three white crosses, the Spider who has supplied us Hanging to her thread, the Spider lets herself drop straight down, to a moment, we will note that the Epeira works it up with her legs after the spinnerets has given a starting-point for a thread, which the Spider id = 40035 author = Fairchild, Marian title = Book of Monsters Portraits and Biographies of a Few of the Inhabitants of Woodland and Meadow date = keywords = Fab; Linn; SPIDER; beetle; creature; fly; illustration; insect; leg; life; like; long; monster; wing; world summary = The spider world is the world of eight-legged creatures just as the insect It is a strange, spider creature having only two eyes which look to right thread-legged bug has the temerity to pick off insects from a spider''s the emerald-green June beetle which wings its way like an aerodrome across bee whose eggs form the only food of the blister beetle larva. beetles'' eggs hatch out strong-jawed, six-legged spiny larvæ called well-named, these creatures, "the crane flies," for their legs are as long of the other winged insects for, like the hawk among the birds, she The flat white wings of this long-legged creature, vibrating rapidly in ball-like mass made up of the fly''s wings, legs and crushed body skeleton. Most insects'' legs are made to walk with, but those of the dragon-fly are not taught the winged females to lay their eggs on the ends of long, id = 33994 author = McCook, Henry C. (Henry Christopher) title = Old Farm Fairies: A Summer Campaign In Brownieland Against King Cobweaver''s Pixies date = keywords = Blythe; Breeze; Brownies; Bruce; CHAPTER; Captain; Ensign; FIG; Faith; Footnote; Governor; Hide; Lawe; Lieutenant; Madam; Note; Nurses; Pipe; Pixie; Raft; Ram; Rodney; Sergeant; Sir; Sophia; Spite; Wille; illustration; true summary = see the nearing end of my studies, and portions of the Brownie-Pixie Sergeant True''s report caused great uneasiness in the Brownie camp as to crowd of Brownies followed a little way behind their officers. I have little fear for my good, brave Brownie friends. The Brownies had now reached a point well to the east of the Pixie camp Pixie camp, houses and fort, and leave the enemy themselves to us." All this time, the conflict was raging between the Brownies and Pixies Hide and his company of Pixies came up to the fort soon after Madam battle with Brownies the Pixies try to come to close quarters. Brownies and Pixies are weary with the day''s battling and sleep well. Spite and Hide saw that Faith''s cry had aroused the Brownies, and pushed Several times the Pixie chiefs turned toward Fort Spinder, hoping to The ground for some distance between the Pixie and Brownie camps