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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 93179 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 91 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 man 2 good 2 Jerry 2 George 2 Captain 2 Bill 1 yes 1 time 1 sure 1 money 1 love 1 look 1 boy 1 answer 1 Zertho 1 Tom 1 Tolliver 1 Texas 1 Stratfield 1 St. 1 Smith 1 Sheep 1 Sam 1 Ruth 1 Royal 1 Rouletta 1 Ronicky 1 Rock 1 River 1 Quirk 1 Promenade 1 Prince 1 Poleon 1 Pierce 1 Phillips 1 Orleans 1 Nice 1 New 1 Nelly 1 Mr. 1 Mortimer 1 Monte 1 Mark 1 Mariette 1 London 1 Linton 1 Liane 1 Laure 1 Kirby 1 Kid Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1667 man 881 time 794 money 697 hand 508 eye 486 face 470 girl 456 day 454 game 454 fellow 428 woman 399 way 396 head 391 card 362 friend 357 room 350 night 331 boat 321 thing 321 boy 316 one 309 moment 294 life 264 door 261 word 258 partner 255 nothing 241 house 239 table 232 something 229 voice 224 place 222 father 211 dollar 197 hour 194 anything 193 year 188 name 183 fact 162 sucker 159 foot 158 gambler 154 gentleman 151 side 147 business 145 town 144 chance 143 lady 139 course 135 world Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 560 _ 550 Ronicky 416 Bill 318 Liane 297 Pierce 277 Doone 260 Rouletta 246 Phillips 245 Jerry 240 George 224 Poleon 212 Zertho 212 New 197 John 195 Gregg 177 Mark 167 Countess 166 Captain 160 Orleans 146 Caroline 135 Mr. 133 Tom 130 Kirby 123 Smith 123 Courteau 118 Ruth 113 Doret 100 Brooker 99 Joe 95 Linton 89 McCaskey 78 Laure 77 Sam 75 Stratfield 75 Jack 73 Dawson 70 Judge 66 dat 66 Rock 65 Broad 64 Fernand 63 St. 61 Prince 57 Mariette 56 Nice 56 Jim 53 Jew 50 Quirk 50 Hilda 49 Tolliver Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9623 i 7799 he 5086 you 4242 it 3045 him 2919 she 2201 me 1802 they 1554 we 1201 her 974 them 375 himself 352 us 173 myself 143 herself 99 ''em 84 themselves 69 yourself 53 one 44 his 42 ''s 41 itself 33 yours 32 mine 16 ourselves 16 hers 14 d''you 13 em 6 theirs 5 i''m 3 you''re 3 jus 2 you''ll 2 ours 1 yourselves 1 yer 1 thinkin 1 myse''f-- 1 meself 1 mccaskey''d 1 l 1 i''most 1 bookshelf Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 13725 be 6117 have 2583 do 2136 say 1647 go 1497 get 1198 see 1167 come 1129 know 1003 tell 992 make 972 take 653 think 602 look 593 give 580 turn 550 want 471 put 463 find 423 play 411 ask 398 lose 373 leave 359 win 339 bet 333 let 305 begin 302 answer 294 run 294 hear 293 stand 291 keep 272 feel 269 call 268 love 262 try 259 speak 248 hold 239 meet 238 sit 228 open 222 start 210 cry 208 show 206 seem 203 break 200 pay 195 become 189 walk 189 laugh Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3596 not 1726 up 1326 then 1069 so 1042 out 719 good 678 old 633 down 607 more 598 back 595 now 535 never 500 well 485 very 469 just 460 long 460 again 448 other 399 too 399 here 389 only 385 as 383 little 381 first 364 much 321 off 321 in 320 big 316 away 301 on 295 last 294 right 285 ever 281 there 280 all 278 still 278 even 272 once 261 enough 235 soon 230 great 228 own 225 few 222 same 212 over 205 young 204 many 201 sure 196 about 191 most Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 127 good 77 least 70 most 29 bad 20 slight 16 fine 13 big 12 near 12 large 11 Most 9 faint 9 dear 8 deep 7 great 5 wealthy 5 old 5 nice 5 happy 4 small 4 rich 4 frank 4 early 4 bitter 3 young 3 true 3 pure 3 lucky 3 fast 2 tough 2 sweet 2 straight 2 smooth 2 smart 2 sincere 2 simple 2 new 2 late 2 j 2 hard 2 green 2 full 2 fresh 2 fair 2 brave 2 black 1 wr 1 wise 1 wild 1 white 1 vague Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 121 most 22 well 4 least 3 hard 2 worst 1 loudest 1 long 1 biggest 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 boat was full 5 man came up 4 bill was not 3 eyes were still 3 eyes were wide 3 face was wet 3 friend was very 3 game went on 3 hand is worth 2 bill came up 2 boat left new 2 boat was about 2 card turned up 2 eyes are open 2 eyes were bright 2 eyes were closed 2 eyes were dark 2 eyes were misty 2 eyes were quick 2 eyes were very 2 face was ashen 2 face was colorless 2 face was purple 2 face was strained 2 face went white 2 fellow put up 2 fellows are bad 2 game going on 2 girl was indeed 2 girl was not 2 hands were shaky 2 head was clear 2 liane did not 2 liane had always 2 man came in 2 man did not 2 man put up 2 man was crazy 2 men ai n''t 2 men do n''t 2 money did not 2 money was plenty 2 night going up 2 room was full 2 thing ''s too 1 _ coming up 1 _ do n''t 1 _ was loud 1 bill came back 1 bill came over Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 bill was no sucker 1 bill was not slow 1 bill was not well 1 doone made no answer 1 doone was no better 1 eyes are not so 1 face was no longer 1 friend had no pistol 1 friend was no kicker 1 game was not fair 1 girl took no offense 1 girl was not as 1 hands were not quite 1 life is not pleasing 1 life was not so 1 man is no fitting 1 man was not safe 1 men had no business 1 moments had not even 1 money is no good 1 money was no good 1 one did not greatly 1 pierce had no intention 1 woman was no fitting 1 women are not heartless A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 5062 author = Beach, Rex title = The Winds of Chance date = keywords = Bridges; Broad; Countess; Courteau; Danny; Dawson; Doret; Dyea; Hilda; Jerry; Jim; Joe; Kid; Kirby; Laure; Linton; Mr.; Phillips; Pierce; Poleon; Quirk; Rock; Rouletta; Royal; Sam; Sheep; Tom; good; look; man; sure summary = Phillips'' hand and forced the young man closer to the table. had caused Pierce Phillips to open his eyes in genuine astonishment, She flashed a smile at Pierce Phillips, then said, so that all McCaskey got no further, for with a cry of rage Pierce Phillips set his To a boy like Pierce Phillips, in whom the spirit of youth was a "Looks like old times, doesn''t it, Letty?" Then he stepped out of sight. hand, but Pierce Phillips and Lucky Broad stepped close to him. turning her head the woman told Phillips, "Knock him down if he opens When Pierce shook his head the speaker turned back and led the way out To Pierce he said, in a low voice: "Plenty feller mak'' he said, "It looks to me like you boys had a drink coming." From his ''Poleon paused; the old men watched his working face. id = 11880 author = Brand, Max title = Ronicky Doone date = keywords = Bill; Caroline; Doone; Fernand; Gregg; Jerry; John; Mark; Ronicky; Ruth; Smith; Tolliver; yes summary = "Matter of fact," said Ronicky Doone, "that bay means a pile to me. "Look here," said Ronicky, "you talk like a straight sort of a gent to Ronicky Doone happened to be passing along that way and saw Bill Gregg "Gregg," said Ronicky, "d''you know what you''re going to do now?" door, the sneering man and Caroline Smith, were to the house like the "It''s what it means," said Ronicky Doone, "life-long misery for you. "Once we''re outside of the house, Mark," said Ronicky Doone, "I don''t "This," said John Mark, "is Ronicky Doone." "If I could talk like him," said Ronicky Doone gravely, "I sure "So I thought I''d come," said Ronicky Doone, "and tell you the insides "A minute ago," said Ronicky, "it looked to me like the lady didn''t know "Ronicky Doone," said Mark, his face turning gray, "is a talented man. "Look," said Ronicky Doone, "if anyone comes into the hall before you''ve id = 23587 author = Devol, George H. title = Forty Years a Gambler on the Mississippi date = keywords = Bill; Bush; Captain; Devol; George; Jack; Jew; Judge; New; Orleans; River; St.; Texas; boy; good; man; money; time summary = got our money." "All right," said the party, and they broke for "Enough," says I, and up went the money in the "hungry" man''s hands. night playing the bank--when a good looking old fellow walked in told the old gentleman it was a kind of lottery I saw a man play, After I got the watch the Jew came to me and said: "Look poker going at one time, so I opened up the good old game of monte I don''t want to win a black man''s money anyway." That got his fun." Then I said to the cow-boy, "Will you bet money on the game I then said, "I will bet you $1,000 that I can turn up the old man The old gent got out his money and wanted to bet $100, but the Then he wanted me to bet money on the game, and I said: id = 41002 author = Le Queux, William title = If Sinners Entice Thee date = keywords = Bridson; Brooker; Captain; Carlo; Coroner; George; Liane; London; Mariette; Monte; Mortimer; Nelly; Nice; Prince; Promenade; Stratfield; Zertho; answer; love; man summary = saying: "Then come along Nelly," shook hands with Liane and her father, "Yes, George, I feel that you love me," she said, with a sweet smile George raised his eyes and met the curious gaze of the woman he loved. Liane looked at the Captain, long and steadily, with eyes full of "Yes, even you must not know, Liane," he answered. "Was she like me?" Liane asked softly, still holding her father''s hand "You know my wish, Liane," her father answered rather coldly. Zertho!" cried the unhappy man, turning white to the lips, An hour later, when Liane had gone to her room, the Captain, at Zertho''s "How did you know that Zertho loves me?" she suddenly inquired, turning Then turning to Liane, the man, evidently an honest, happy-hearted "But you love Liane," she answered in a low tone. "Yes. She said she knew you, and that you loved Liane.