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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 6849 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 6 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 man 3 crime 2 work 2 prison 2 person 2 criminal 2 case 2 Italy 2 CHAPTER 1 time 1 social 1 science 1 school 1 prisoner 1 place 1 offender 1 normal 1 murder 1 moral 1 italian 1 insane 1 individual 1 great 1 form 1 examination 1 epileptic 1 drink 1 criminology 1 condition 1 child 1 characteristic 1 bear 1 University 1 Turin 1 States 1 State 1 Secretary 1 Scotland 1 School 1 Professor 1 Police 1 Penal 1 Parliament 1 Modern 1 Glasgow 1 FIG 1 Court 1 Beccaria 1 America 1 Act Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 793 man 641 criminal 618 crime 599 case 496 prison 397 person 367 prisoner 337 time 328 life 307 condition 306 work 281 law 272 people 263 part 262 other 257 offender 239 child 220 way 218 thing 211 woman 200 fact 191 year 185 offence 174 result 173 place 171 number 161 character 155 form 148 individual 148 family 148 day 147 school 147 punishment 145 cause 142 hand 138 institution 132 order 130 girl 128 boy 124 police 124 conduct 122 criminality 118 action 113 one 111 idea 110 father 110 court 108 reason 108 power 108 disease Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 847 _ 62 State 49 Scotland 48 Secretary 46 Prison 44 Fig 39 Italy 39 Glasgow 38 FIG 38 CHAPTER 35 Criminal 34 X 31 School 30 Parliament 29 CRIMINAL 29 Act 28 America 26 Court 25 Professor 25 Modern 25 Courts 24 Turin 23 Dr. 22 ff 22 Penal 21 University 18 States 18 England 18 Beccaria 17 Commissioners 17 Army 16 Naples 15 Reformatory 15 Man 15 La 15 Crime 15 . 14 Prisoners 14 Lombroso 14 France 14 Crown 14 Cesare 13 United 13 Sheriff 13 New 13 Inebriate 13 Illustrated 13 Bocca 12 criminology 12 Translations Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2056 it 1965 he 1706 they 855 them 655 him 538 we 432 she 393 i 204 you 156 themselves 146 her 140 himself 109 us 81 me 62 itself 29 herself 21 one 20 ourselves 8 theirs 7 myself 3 his 2 yourself 2 ours 1 yours 1 oneself 1 mine 1 hers Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 9805 be 2656 have 1015 do 529 make 366 take 301 find 289 show 267 see 265 know 263 give 224 become 222 commit 214 say 199 get 169 live 164 go 154 bear 140 place 138 leave 133 come 125 keep 125 deal 116 cause 113 send 109 seem 108 obtain 105 work 105 bring 102 pay 101 call 98 prevent 98 consider 96 seek 96 follow 94 require 93 appear 90 use 87 try 87 help 86 suffer 86 set 86 lead 81 think 79 provide 77 receive 77 put 75 regard 74 look 72 treat 72 fail Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1859 not 561 more 424 so 401 other 365 only 348 well 346 many 329 great 262 criminal 258 very 243 most 237 as 224 even 223 such 220 social 219 good 214 much 203 bad 202 same 199 out 199 less 199 certain 175 own 173 first 154 up 150 common 150 always 144 also 143 far 140 few 137 sometimes 132 insane 129 public 127 there 127 physical 127 never 126 often 126 long 123 young 119 little 118 moral 118 mental 117 different 116 then 116 quite 114 small 114 normal 109 able 107 large 106 too Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 64 most 50 good 35 least 23 great 16 bad 14 Most 10 slight 10 high 8 low 8 early 5 strong 5 small 5 simple 5 grave 4 large 3 wise 3 strange 3 noble 3 near 3 faint 3 eld 3 common 2 old 2 mild 2 heavy 2 easy 2 dear 2 clever 2 clear 1 young 1 wild 1 wide 1 thin 1 temp 1 shrewd 1 sad 1 rude 1 rough 1 quiet 1 mere 1 manif 1 loud 1 long 1 less 1 late 1 l 1 keen 1 gross 1 free 1 fine Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 179 most 11 well 7 least 2 worst 1 infest 1 hard 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 prisoners are not 4 crime is not 4 man does not 4 people do not 4 prisoner is not 3 criminal is not 3 criminals do not 3 men are not 3 prison are not 3 prison is not 3 prisoners do not 2 _ born criminal 2 _ is generally 2 case is different 2 conditions are reasonable 2 crime does heredity 2 crime is about 2 crime is always 2 crime is due 2 crime is largely 2 criminals are not 2 life is more 2 life is not 2 man is more 2 man is not 2 man is responsible 2 men are criminals 2 men are more 2 men do not 2 people are not 2 people are quite 2 people do wrong 2 prisons are not 2 things are not 2 time are not 2 women are not 2 work is not 1 _ are frequently 1 _ are generally 1 _ is feeble 1 _ is not 1 _ is very 1 case are likely 1 case comes up 1 case has not 1 case is properly 1 case was thoroughly 1 cases are constables 1 cases are difficult 1 cases are few Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 cases has not again 1 children are not likely 1 condition gave no opportunity 1 conditions is not surprising 1 crime is not always 1 crime is not so 1 criminal is not dangerous 1 criminals are not entirely 1 criminals do not usually 1 criminals have no characteristic 1 criminals is no advantage 1 law is not only 1 life is not only 1 life showed no signs 1 man has not wit 1 men are not free 1 men are not wicked 1 men have not merely 1 number are not uncommon 1 number is not great 1 offence show no sense 1 offender is no more 1 others has no sanction 1 people have not much 1 people see no reason 1 person is not subject 1 persons are not equally 1 persons had no sense 1 prison are not readily 1 prison are not there 1 prison are not unknown 1 prison is not so 1 prisoner has no such 1 prisoner is not that 1 prisoners are no more 1 prisoners are not different 1 prisons are not self 1 result is not satisfactory 1 thing is not true 1 things are not suitable 1 time are not distinguishable 1 time are not first 1 time have not sufficient 1 women are not ignorant 1 women are not industrially 1 work is not worth A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 43986 author = Devon, James title = The Criminal & the Community date = keywords = Act; CHAPTER; Court; Glasgow; Parliament; Police; Scotland; Secretary; State; case; crime; drink; man; person; place; prison; prisoner; time; work summary = prison--Crime resulting from insanity--Case of theft--Of lived and worked among the masses of the people knows better. In Scotland there is no difficulty in freeing insane persons from prison. X 1.--A man is brought to prison for the first time charged with a series Mental powers that may be sufficient to enable a man to work and live in for a man cannot be at the same time working outside to support his family the offenders in many cases find themselves in prison for the first time His work is to do the prisoners good in a way they can understand; and he offences in prison, and the governor has power in minor cases to deal with as usually the short-time prisoner is not a person of means, his position The position of the man who has been in prison is not so bad as that of id = 10580 author = Ferri, Enrico title = The Positive School of Criminology Three Lectures Given at the University of Naples, Italy on April 22, 23 and 24, 1901 date = keywords = Beccaria; Italy; condition; crime; criminal; criminology; man; school; science; social summary = for the fundamental facts of a science of social defense against crime Was the person who committed this crime morally free to act or not? positive results of that modern science which has studied the criminal due to the unfavorable social conditions in which the criminal lives. the causes of crime he studied the anthropological condition of the criminal to commit a crime. people of the criminal world, while the classic school of criminology crime and criminals, _prison_. Crime is one of the conditions required for the study of the criminal. anthropological and social conditions of the various criminals. natural origin of criminality.--To sum up, crime is a social against criminality have not the social aim of improving human life, but even if the criminal code did not exist, he would not commit a crime, so the classic school admit it, for instance in the case of criminals under id = 29895 author = Lombroso, Gina title = Criminal Man, According to the Classification of Cesare Lombroso date = keywords = America; CHAPTER; FIG; Italy; Modern; Penal; Professor; School; States; Turin; University; bear; case; characteristic; child; crime; criminal; epileptic; examination; form; great; individual; insane; italian; man; moral; murder; normal; offender; person; prison; work summary = Identity of born criminals and the morally insane--Analogy of physical mentally deranged--Special forms of criminal insanity--Inebriate Atavistic origin of crime--Criminality in children--Pathological subject, _Modern Forms of Crime_, _Recent Research in Criminal _THE BORN CRIMINAL AND HIS RELATION TO MORAL INSANITY AND EPILEPSY_ _THE BORN CRIMINAL AND HIS RELATION TO MORAL INSANITY AND EPILEPSY_ criminal, because, like all morally insane persons, he was very these pathological cases, since the study of born criminals shows that EPILEPTICS, AND THEIR RELATION TO BORN CRIMINALS AND THE MORALLY INSANE characteristics of epileptics as of born criminals and the morally and physical peculiarities of born criminals and the morally insane may Epileptic born criminals and the morally insane may be classed as A FEW CASES SHOWING THE PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF CRIMINAL ANTHROPOLOGY_ A FEW CASES SHOWING THE PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF CRIMINAL ANTHROPOLOGY_ Epileptics, of whom born criminals and the morally insane are the most