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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 129174 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 91 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mrs. 4 Mr. 2 Miss 2 CHAPTER 1 good 1 come 1 Wickfield 1 Wenrich 1 Uriah 1 Turner 1 Trotwood 1 Traddles 1 Tarbox 1 Talbot 1 Strong 1 Street 1 Steerforth 1 Spenlow 1 Sophy 1 Smith 1 Sharpley 1 Rufus 1 Rose 1 Robert 1 Peggotty 1 Paris 1 Palmer 1 Omer 1 Murdstone 1 Mowcher 1 Mills 1 Micawber 1 Mell 1 Master 1 Martin 1 Marden 1 Manning 1 Maldon 1 London 1 Lavinia 1 Katy 1 Jonathan 1 Jip 1 James 1 Huskin 1 Hunter 1 Humpy 1 Heep 1 Heaven 1 Hammerditch Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1082 time 854 man 832 hand 798 aunt 740 day 707 way 673 mother 653 boy 610 room 593 house 572 head 552 face 545 sir 540 eye 487 night 445 friend 444 nothing 443 money 417 thing 406 door 405 life 392 place 376 mind 355 anything 354 word 352 something 338 morning 326 name 313 business 310 child 308 heart 307 letter 298 father 280 one 270 hour 265 dollar 264 home 261 year 261 moment 259 arm 245 street 240 manner 239 side 232 window 232 lady 231 woman 230 love 228 gentleman 226 voice 225 wife Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3350 Mr. 990 Mrs. 985 _ 873 Miss 826 Micawber 770 Peggotty 567 Robert 528 Frank 507 Dora 493 Copperfield 470 Traddles 414 Rufus 414 Craven 403 Martin 379 Steerforth 337 Agnes 316 Murdstone 288 Dick 272 Doctor 255 Sharpley 235 I. 233 Uriah 198 Em''ly 197 Talbot 195 Wickfield 182 Master 170 Davy 158 Rose 157 Manning 157 Barkis 151 Trotwood 149 Spenlow 145 Tarbox 136 Smith 136 CHAPTER 133 Katy 133 Ham 128 Palmer 126 Creakle 125 London 121 James 114 Gummidge 113 Omer 112 Heep 101 Jip 100 Mills 93 Street 92 Crupp 89 Betsey 87 Strong Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 17720 i 7285 it 7241 he 7045 you 4577 me 3376 she 2749 him 1885 we 1829 her 1174 they 831 them 659 us 617 myself 552 himself 228 herself 133 yourself 106 mine 68 themselves 65 ''em 56 itself 55 yours 38 ourselves 27 his 25 one 16 hers 10 ours 10 em 6 ''s 5 thowt 3 thee 2 ye 2 theirs 2 on''t 1 zat 1 za 1 your''n 1 you''re 1 you!--he''ll 1 yit 1 ya 1 ve 1 tan''t 1 pe 1 my_self 1 mistaken---- 1 i''m 1 hisself 1 bailey-- 1 432,--that Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 21371 be 8781 have 5546 say 4348 do 2351 go 1790 see 1752 know 1700 think 1691 come 1491 make 1377 take 1375 look 1098 get 797 tell 750 find 747 give 712 ask 650 feel 575 leave 529 sit 510 return 505 put 478 hear 471 want 468 seem 426 like 414 turn 410 call 385 speak 385 believe 374 let 368 keep 363 suppose 346 mean 342 walk 333 begin 328 stand 314 answer 309 cry 307 try 307 hope 300 bring 295 live 286 wish 273 write 263 shake 258 fall 253 reply 240 remember 233 pass Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5780 not 2194 so 1389 very 1348 little 1276 up 1029 out 1022 good 1011 well 997 more 990 then 980 now 926 much 808 never 782 old 720 down 709 here 634 as 623 again 595 great 562 long 557 too 546 ever 534 away 527 only 517 there 516 other 513 first 504 back 491 own 446 young 425 quite 416 dear 405 always 401 all 387 in 368 on 364 still 353 soon 337 once 332 off 327 such 322 same 315 sure 312 last 304 even 302 poor 301 just 292 right 291 most 272 many Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 188 good 134 least 57 most 28 eld 25 bad 24 dear 20 great 18 near 8 young 8 high 7 early 6 warm 6 short 6 pleasant 6 old 6 low 6 light 6 j 6 happy 6 deep 6 bright 5 small 4 wise 4 meek 4 Most 3 strong 3 slight 3 little 3 late 3 hard 3 gay 3 fine 3 common 3 close 3 busy 2 writhe 2 umbl 2 true 2 strange 2 stern 2 soft 2 remote 2 plain 2 nice 2 loving 2 loud 2 large 2 innermost 2 heavy 2 genteel Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 234 most 29 well 12 least 1 worst 1 soon 1 honestest 1 a''most Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://archive.org/details/personalhistoryo001850dick Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 _ is _ 10 _ was _ 9 _ do n''t 7 _ did _ 6 _ do _ 6 frank did not 5 _ are _ 5 frank is alive 4 _ does _ 4 _ know _ 3 _ am _ 3 _ am not 3 _ did not 3 eyes were full 3 micawber had not 3 peggotty was not 3 peggotty was so 3 robert did not 3 robert went down 2 _ be _ 2 _ done nothing 2 _ had _ 2 _ was not 2 _ were _ 2 aunt had not 2 aunt was not 2 aunt went on 2 boy is dead 2 boy was not 2 dora was not 2 dora was so 2 eye turned up 2 eyes were dry 2 eyes were wide 2 face looking upward 2 face turned up 2 man was not 2 micawber was just 2 micawber was quite 2 micawber was so 2 mother came home 2 mother did n''t 2 mother is not 2 mother was too 2 mother went on 2 nothing ''s truer 2 peggotty went on 2 robert did n''t 2 robert was not 2 time was past Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 robert had no difficulty 1 _ am not afraid 1 _ am not proud 1 _ had no pride 1 _ was not happy 1 aunt had no conception 1 aunt has no sleep 1 boy did not at 1 dora is not there 1 dora was not inclined 1 dora was not strong 1 face was not as 1 frank is not likely 1 frank said no more 1 friends were not very 1 house was not far 1 man has no business 1 micawber had not yet 1 micawber was not wholly 1 mother had no more 1 mother made no answer 1 night was not so 1 nights were not short 1 peggotty made no such 1 peggotty was no less 1 peggotty was not ham 1 peggotty was not slow 1 robert had no way 1 robert is not lazy 1 robert made no further 1 robert was not especially 1 robert was not favorably 1 room was not equal 1 things are not much 1 things were not so 1 traddles is not at 1 traddles is not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 25967 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = Rufus and Rose; Or, The Fortunes of Rough and Ready date = keywords = Clifton; Humpy; Manning; Martin; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Rose; Rufus; Smith; Street; Turner summary = "So this is to be your first day in Wall Street, Rufus," said Miss "I think I shall like it," said Miss Manning, with satisfaction. "Well, how do you like the room, Miss Manning?" said Mrs. Colman, when "Perhaps Mr. Martin will come and board with us," said Rufus, jestingly; the morning," said Rufus, turning to Miss Manning. "Yes; she is a very good little girl," said Rufus, better pleased with a "I think she is a very good little girl," said Rufus; "but then I am "This is my friend, Miss Manning," said Rufus, "and my little sister "Thank you, Rufus," said Miss Manning, smiling, "but I suppose it won''t "Thank you, Rufus," said Miss Manning; "I shall like very much to go. "Yes; it was very good," said Rufus; "I don''t know but I like it almost "Yes," said Martin; "I like smoking; but I''m a poor man, and I can''t id = 56602 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = Frank Hunter''s Peril date = keywords = Ben; CHAPTER; Colonel; Craven; Frank; Hunter; Jonathan; Katy; Mr.; Mrs.; Paris; Sharpley; Tarbox summary = "Seems to me he has a good deal of business with mother," Frank said "I am afraid Frank won''t like the idea of my marrying again," said Mrs. Hunter, anxiously. "He takes it very well," thought Frank, as Mr. Craven said good-night. "Good morning, sir," said Frank, for the first time noticing the "I thought perhaps I ought to save up the surplus for Frank," said Mrs. Craven, hesitating. "You--you don''t think he is likely to be taken away?" said Mrs. Craven, "Do you want Mr. Craven to be guardian with you, mother?" asked Frank, "Frank," said Mr. Craven, "this is my friend, Colonel Sharpley. "He seems a little so," said Frank; "but I hope, Mr. Tarbox, you won''t "I care very little what Mr. Craven would like," said Frank. "I think we''ll go now, Frank," said Sharpley. "Then," said Mrs. Craven, "Frank may be alive." id = 43111 author = Dickens, Charles title = The Personal History of David Copperfield date = keywords = Agnes; Annie; Barkis; Betsey; CHAPTER; Chillip; Commons; Copperfield; Creakle; Crupp; Dartle; David; Davy; Dick; Doctor; Dora; Gummidge; Ham; Heaven; Heep; Jip; Lavinia; London; Maldon; Master; Mell; Micawber; Mills; Miss; Mowcher; Mr.; Mrs.; Murdstone; Omer; Peggotty; Sophy; Spenlow; Steerforth; Strong; Traddles; Trotwood; Uriah; Wickfield; come; good summary = "Mrs. David Copperfield, I _think_," said Miss Betsey; the emphasis "How''s Mrs. Fibbitson to-day?" said the Master, looking at another old "Young Copperfield," said Steerforth, coming forward up the room, "stop "You look very well, Mr. Barkis," I said, thinking he would like to know "You are too young to know how the world changes every day," said Mrs. Creakle, "and how the people in it pass away. "On such an occasion I will give you, Master Copperfield," said Mrs. Micawber, "in a little more flip," for we had been having some already, "That little man of a doctor, with his head on one side," said my aunt, "I will not conceal from you, my dear Mr. Copperfield," said Mrs. Micawber, "that _I_ have long felt the Brewing business to be "When you know that the other day, when you said you would like a little id = 54737 author = Stratemeyer, Edward title = Out for Business; or, Robert Frost''s Strange Career date = keywords = Chicago; Cross; Hammerditch; Huskin; James; Marden; Mr.; Mrs.; Palmer; Robert; Talbot; Wenrich summary = the man at her side, said, "This is my son Robert, James." "I wish Robert were here," said Mrs. Talbot plaintively. "I don''t think so, Mr. Talbot," said Robert manfully, not exhibiting "I--I thought I should be safer here," he said, Robert wanted to laugh, "I think, Mr. Talbot," said Robert, after a pause, "that you will have "Mother," said Robert, "do you wish me to take Mr. Webber''s place at "Good morning, Mr. Talbot," said Robert, with much politeness. "What a sweet step-father you''ve got, Robert," said Sam. "I think we''ll be comfortable here, Robert," said his new friend. "You surely wouldn''t think of marrying her," said Robert. "What do you think of that, Robert?" asked Palmer, handing the boy the "I''ll lend you the money, Mr. Palmer," said Robert. "I hope you got good news from Robert," said the postmaster, after she "Yes, my step-father was here," said Robert.