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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 60863 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 92 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mrs. 3 Mr. 2 illustration 2 York 2 Woozy 2 Unc 2 Shaggy 2 Scraps 2 Scarecrow 2 Patchwork 2 Ojo 2 Man 2 Magician 2 Joe 2 Girl 2 Dorothy 2 Christmas 2 Ben 1 reggie 1 line 1 heart 1 good 1 game 1 card 1 Wyck 1 Wilmot 1 Walton 1 Van 1 Terry 1 September 1 Sam 1 Rushton 1 Rose 1 Robert 1 Robbie 1 Pittsburgh 1 Philip 1 Pepper 1 Paul 1 Paine 1 Osgood 1 October 1 November 1 New 1 Nelson 1 Mount 1 Miss 1 Mercury 1 Matson 1 Mark Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 943 man 935 time 895 boy 712 thing 705 day 685 way 581 hand 498 eye 486 life 459 house 443 one 425 money 421 girl 414 head 381 friend 379 room 373 dollar 360 face 359 year 356 people 353 place 335 game 327 child 321 something 300 card 297 heart 285 door 283 nothing 274 home 257 anything 247 line 247 hero 245 person 244 name 243 business 242 mother 241 woman 239 side 236 night 233 work 231 letter 229 morning 222 father 221 world 218 uncle 214 lady 211 word 206 part 203 luck 202 trouble Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1796 _ 1145 Joe 799 Ojo 637 Hal 604 Granny 603 Mr. 550 Robert 511 Ben 461 Mrs. 436 Charlie 403 Scraps 396 Nelson 381 Dorothy 348 Scarecrow 326 Florence 276 Jim 267 Man 266 Shaggy 261 Oz 255 Woozy 253 Patchwork 246 Girl 228 Unc 227 Rose 220 Ozma 217 Gertrude 198 Miss 198 Magician 195 Pepper 195 Bulson 187 Giants 176 New 173 Halbert 163 York 152 Nunkie 145 Kit 143 Sam 143 Glass 142 Cat 141 Haley 140 Grafton 139 City 136 Captain 134 Rushton 132 Paul 129 Homer 127 exclaimed 122 Van 118 Dr. 117 Emerald Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8769 i 7439 you 7111 he 6426 it 2577 she 2545 they 2191 him 1896 me 1553 we 1258 them 944 her 436 us 393 himself 145 herself 130 yourself 118 myself 111 ''em 87 themselves 82 one 45 ''s 40 mine 30 itself 30 em 28 yours 27 ourselves 9 his 7 hers 6 theirs 5 ours 5 oneself 3 yourselves 3 thee 2 yer 2 i''m 1 yerself 1 ye 1 y'' 1 whispered,-- 1 terry''ll 1 presently,-- 1 meself 1 mean,--they 1 heiress 1 again,-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20654 be 7454 have 4223 do 3443 say 2004 go 1657 make 1498 come 1434 see 1296 know 1174 think 1150 get 1133 take 957 ask 898 find 833 look 828 give 689 tell 615 want 469 seem 456 leave 453 keep 435 let 394 answer 393 put 386 feel 382 live 380 begin 363 run 358 hear 347 call 347 bring 343 turn 329 mean 328 try 328 stand 324 like 313 reply 305 help 294 suppose 291 sit 271 use 266 wish 265 follow 260 cry 257 walk 253 return 245 laugh 233 work 232 show 227 pass Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5687 not 1746 so 1373 then 1302 good 1249 up 1061 very 1021 out 966 little 930 well 928 now 800 more 791 much 701 here 697 as 647 just 639 old 639 never 595 great 592 first 591 long 588 only 565 other 543 too 523 back 522 down 500 all 465 again 433 away 410 many 377 right 373 young 360 soon 357 over 342 in 340 last 333 ever 329 sure 328 there 323 own 313 poor 304 enough 296 most 293 still 291 once 285 next 283 off 280 on 263 quite 254 hard 251 bad Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 258 good 71 most 62 least 38 great 23 bad 17 Most 15 near 13 slight 13 dear 12 late 12 high 9 large 8 early 7 sweet 7 happy 6 full 5 old 5 long 5 gay 5 brave 4 tall 4 strong 4 short 4 rich 4 queer 4 mean 4 handsome 4 fine 4 easy 3 wise 3 strange 3 soft 3 odd 3 noble 3 narrow 3 keen 3 hard 3 bright 3 black 2 wide 2 topmost 2 plain 2 nice 2 lucky 2 lazy 2 l 2 kind 2 hot 2 heavy 2 fond Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 225 most 24 well 8 least 2 hard 1 lest 1 jest 1 highest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/52017/52017-h/52017-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/52017/52017-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43940/43940-h/43940-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43940/43940-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/boysfortuneorstr00alge 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 _ is _ 11 _ did _ 8 _ was _ 5 _ had _ 5 boy was so 5 joe came home 4 _ do _ 4 granny was so 4 hal was very 4 joe did not 4 nelson did not 4 ojo did not 4 ojo had never 4 ojo was so 4 one has ever 4 scraps has n''t 4 scraps was much 3 ben was not 3 boy was very 3 charlie was quite 3 hal was delighted 3 heads are better 3 joe put on 3 joe was not 3 joe was so 3 joe was up 3 life is almost 2 _ get along 2 _ has _ 2 _ were _ 2 ben did not 2 ben did so 2 ben had not 2 ben was about 2 boy had never 2 boy had not 2 boy took down 2 boy was glad 2 boy was moody 2 boy was tired 2 boy was utterly 2 boy went on 2 charlie ran wild 2 charlie was delighted 2 charlie was not 2 charlie was very 2 dorothy asked anxiously 2 dorothy asked permission 2 dorothy had not 2 dorothy is flesh Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 boy had no chance 2 friends are not dignified 2 nelson made no reply 1 ben asked no questions 1 ben made no sign 1 ben was not easily 1 ben was not satisfied 1 boys were not sure 1 charlie did not exactly 1 charlie was not communicative 1 charlie was not much 1 days were not common 1 eyes were not blind 1 friends were not here 1 granny was not so 1 hal made no reply 1 house was not very 1 joe had no other 1 joe had no trouble 1 joe was not long 1 joe was not there 1 life was no longer 1 life were not distasteful 1 man has no show 1 money was not now 1 nelson is no rascal 1 nelson is no thief 1 robert had no false 1 robert made no motion 1 time has not yet 1 time is not as 1 time is not precious A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 52017 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = A Boy''s Fortune; Or, The Strange Adventures of Ben Baker date = keywords = Beaufort; Ben; Clarence; Francois; Grafton; Major; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Philip; Rose; Walton; Wilmot summary = "I think I can sleep till then," said Ben, "for I am as tired as I "By the way," said Ben, with a sudden thought, "how was it that you "I see you want a boy," said Ben, plunging at once into business. Coming out into the street, Ben saw quite a crowd of boys and young "I am not sure whether I shall suit," said Ben, "but the gentleman As Ben walked away Richard Grafton said to himself, in a tone of "I think I never knew a boy as lucky as Ben," said he. "It seems an age since Ben left home," said Mrs. Baker, with a "Ben appears to be a smart, attractive boy," said Walton to "I shall bear in mind what you say, sir," said Ben. "Miss Wilmot," said Rose, gratefully, "you came to us like a good "I am not sure that I shall look for another place," said Ben. id = 9990 author = Alger, Horatio, Jr. title = Brave and Bold; Or, The Fortunes of Robert Rushton date = keywords = Bates; Ben; Captain; Davis; Halbert; Haley; Hester; Mr.; Mrs.; Paine; Paul; Robert; Rushton summary = "Thank you, Halbert," said Robert, who was standing by, "I won''t trouble "Miss Hester," said Robert, "I will resign in favor of Halbert, if you "I''ve got a pretty good digestion, mother," said Robert, laughing. "Keep your advice to yourself, Halbert Davis," said Robert, hotly, for "Don''t think of such a thing, mother," said Robert, hastily, his brown "I don''t see what your son can find to like in Robert Rushton," said "What can you mean, Robert?" said his mother, looking up in surprise. "Mother," said Robert, "did you know anything of this money father "Robert," said the captain, one day, "how is it that you and Mr. Haley "I don''t think he likes me, Captain Evans," said Robert. "Well, Robert," said Captain Haley, "how do you like the island?" "Captain Haley," said Robert, "in all that I have done I have tried to met Captain Rushton and Robert, and said: id = 55082 author = Anonymous title = Everybody''s Book of Luck date = keywords = April; August; Christmas; Dates; Day; December; February; Friday; Head; January; July; June; Jupiter; March; Mercury; Mount; November; October; September; card; good; heart; illustration; line summary = a good marriage partner; he will be practical--a man of method and When the Life line rises high in the hand, great ambition is shown. _AFFECTIONATE PERSON._--A clear Heart line and a very plump Mount of _CHARITABLE PERSON._--A good Heart line with well-developed Mounts of _CLEVER PERSON._--The Life line shows a cross at one of its ends and _DARING PERSON._--The Heart line curves round to the back of the hand, _FAULT-FINDING PERSON._--A long, narrow hand, with an ill-defined Heart _FORTUNATE PERSON._--The Heart and Head lines almost touch below the _HAPPY PERSON._--On the third finger there is a deep line running the _PASSIONATE PERSON._--The Heart line is long and the Mount of Mercury _SUCCESSFUL PERSON._--The Life line starts from the Mount of Jupiter _NEST._--A good omen: fortunate love: happy family life. _EIGHT._--This is not a good card for those desiring marriage. 25.--As long as the partner does not wish to rule this person, marriage id = 32094 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = The Patchwork Girl of Oz date = keywords = Dorothy; Girl; Magician; Man; Ojo; Patchwork; Scarecrow; Scraps; Shaggy; Unc; Woozy; illustration summary = "Ah," said Ojo; "you must be Dame Margolotte, the good wife of Dr. Pipt." "Dear me!" she said, looking at the man, "you must be Unc Nunkie, known Ojo and Unc Nunkie slept that night in the Magician''s house, and the boy Ojo pushed the Patchwork Girl away and ran to Unc Nunkie, filled with a "Dear me, Ojo," said the cat; "don''t you think the creature is a little "Then let''s take it and go," replied Ojo. They said good-bye to the Wise Donkey and the Foolish Owl and at once "I wonder," said Ojo, looking up and down the road, "which way to go." "That is what I thought," replied Ojo; "but the Crooked Magician said it place--Ojo said to the Shaggy Man: "Ozma knows many things," said the Shaggy Man. of the Emerald City, the Shaggy Man said to Scraps: id = 955 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = The Patchwork Girl of Oz date = keywords = Dorothy; Girl; Magician; Man; Ojo; Patchwork; Scarecrow; Scraps; Shaggy; Unc; Woozy summary = "Ah," said Ojo; "you must be Dame Margolotte, the good wife of Dr. Pipt." "Dear me!" she said, looking at the man, "you must be Unc Nunkie, known Ojo pushed the Patchwork Girl away and ran to Unc Nunkie, filled with a "Dear me, Ojo," said the cat; "don''t you think the creature is a little "Then let''s take it and go," replied Ojo. They said good-bye to the Wise Donkey and the Foolish Owl and at once "I wonder," said Ojo, looking up and down the road, "which way to go." the top of the Patchwork Girl''s head, who was a little taller than Ojo. The plants formed rows on both sides of the road and from each plant "That is what I thought," replied Ojo; "but the Crooked Magician said place--Ojo said to the Shaggy Man: "Ozma knows many things," said the Shaggy Man. of the Emerald City, the Shaggy Man said to Scraps: id = 43940 author = Chadwick, Lester title = Baseball Joe, Home Run King; or, The Greatest Pitcher and Batter on Record date = keywords = Baseball; Braxton; Clara; Giants; Jim; Joe; Larry; League; Mabel; Matson; New; Pittsburgh; Robbie; York; game; reggie summary = Jim looked sheepish, and Joe, who was his chum and best friend, laughed catcher of the Giant team, as he took Joe''s place. "That''s sure the way we feel," answered Joe, and Jim murmured "What''s the big idea?" Jim asked Joe, as he looked in surprise at the minutes later, when Mabel came into the room looking more lovely, Joe McRae was anxious to win the opening game, and had selected Joe to "Win your own game now, Joe," said Jim, as his chum left the bench for When Joe came to the bat for the second time, there was a short With two men on bases, Joe came to the bat, while the great throng gave Joe, old boy, I''ve seen lots of ball games, but your "Good boy, Jim!" cried Joe, as his chum came in to the bench. "Will the Giants win to-day?" Now it became: "Will Baseball Joe knock id = 43659 author = Douglas, Amanda M. title = The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe; Or, There''s No Place Like Home date = keywords = CHAPTER; Charlie; Christmas; Darol; Dot; Florence; Flossy; God; Granny; Hal; Howard; Joe; Kenneth; Kit; Madison; Mr.; Mrs.; Osgood; Terry; Van; Wyck; York summary = "Joe, you might take Dot a little while, I think," said Hal "You do know every thing, Hal!" And granny laughed. "Granny," said Hal, preparing a bowl of bread and milk for his little Then Granny, Florence, Joe, and Hal sat in profound thought until the "I think I''ll go into business," said Hal one evening, as he and Granny "Is it yours for good, Joe?" and Charlie''s head was thrust over Hal''s "It is nice to have Joe settled and in good hands," Hal said after he about enough for one day," he said to Granny and Dot. Charlie and Kit were lolling under the trees, resting from their "I do not believe Charlie means to come home to-night," Hal said when "DEAR HAL AND GRANNY,--I''m like Joe, happy as a big "This is Joe," she said, "and Kit, and Dot. O Charlie! id = 54389 author = Stratemeyer, Edward title = Nelson the Newsboy; Or, Afloat in New York date = keywords = Bulson; Darnley; Gertrude; Homer; Horton; Mark; Mrs.; Nelson; Pepper; Sam summary = "Who, miss; the big boy who stole my money?" questioned Nelson quickly. "Well, how have you done to-day?" asked Sam Pepper, when Nelson entered "A high hat don''t make an honest man, Nelson; you ought to know that by Homer Bulson watched Nelson curiously, and then looked across the street "Well, Uncle Mark, how goes it to-day?" asked Homer Bulson, on walking "Gertrude, you are making a great mistake," said Homer Bulson, after a "To be sure I''ll take the lady in, Nelson," said Mrs. Kennedy, when the Sam Pepper got no chance to talk to Nelson further that day. "I''ve got good news, Miss Gertrude," he said, on entering. Homer Bulson went no further, for Nelson came closer and clenched his "Don''t stop!" said Nelson, and caught Gertrude by the hand. "I think I know where to look for them," said Nelson. "Yes, I know Homer Bulson is a rascal," said Nelson.