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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 37706 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mr. 3 Mrs. 2 thing 2 house 2 Roger 2 Miss 2 Cousin 1 uncle 1 penny 1 man 1 like 1 eye 1 York 1 Winters 1 Vere 1 Van 1 Uncle 1 Terrace 1 Street 1 S---- 1 Rosanna 1 Ronald 1 Rivers 1 Rhoby 1 Reamer 1 Providence 1 Professor 1 Prim 1 Pieter 1 Phillida 1 Paulina 1 Nisbet 1 Nichols 1 New 1 Nell 1 Ned 1 Moore 1 Molly 1 Millet 1 Michell 1 Meter 1 Mercy 1 Max 1 March 1 Lord 1 London 1 Locke 1 Leeds 1 Laponi 1 Langton Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 983 room 921 house 667 time 595 door 507 night 465 penny 444 man 442 thing 388 girl 355 way 336 nothing 334 day 330 place 329 hand 292 one 266 woman 263 eye 255 sound 252 bed 238 noise 227 something 222 light 221 morning 217 wife 217 mother 211 year 204 window 200 name 199 face 196 ghost 190 letter 189 part 187 hour 177 lady 176 uncle 174 voice 169 moment 167 anything 166 wall 163 life 160 family 156 sir 155 matter 154 friend 152 mind 151 floor 139 question 138 head 137 person 137 minute Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 931 _ 802 Mr. 644 Jannet 575 Miss 492 | 436 Mrs. 381 Rosanna 277 Bob 250 Janet 230 Nell 198 Roger 182 Paulina 172 Leeds 169 Nisbet 159 Vere 155 B---- 149 Penny 148 Phillida 142 Jan 137 Laponi 131 Pieter 129 Ronald 129 Freer 120 Langton 117 Desire 117 Cousin 115 Uncle 107 Winters 106 Caleb 105 Barbara 104 Cooper 103 Dr. 100 Moore 98 S---- 95 Van 95 Hilliard 90 Meter 89 Michell 87 London 80 Colonel 77 March 72 H---- 69 Rivers 69 Max 69 Lamb 67 Jacob 66 Lord 65 Beatrice 60 New 57 Bute Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7748 i 4155 it 3479 you 3098 she 2325 he 1773 me 1700 we 974 they 940 her 776 him 517 them 485 us 189 myself 140 herself 127 himself 68 itself 62 yourself 58 themselves 56 one 48 mine 45 ''s 40 ourselves 21 yours 20 ''em 9 his 7 hers 6 ours 2 you''re 2 theirs 1 yourselves 1 you,--i 1 you,-- 1 unnoticed--"quite 1 thyself 1 there---- 1 married,--you 1 huh 1 erself 1 em 1 ah 1 about,''--it Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 12330 be 5258 have 2274 do 1360 say 1071 go 1009 see 866 come 820 know 736 hear 691 make 648 think 634 take 571 find 528 tell 524 look 448 get 409 leave 395 give 381 ask 369 seem 301 feel 266 keep 265 speak 257 put 250 want 229 sleep 227 let 223 turn 220 stand 219 call 196 open 194 believe 191 sit 187 live 186 follow 183 bring 182 write 175 like 170 move 168 try 164 begin 154 hold 153 suppose 151 wait 144 return 144 enter 143 walk 143 answer 142 mean 138 appear Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3525 not 822 so 731 up 563 out 559 then 537 more 527 now 497 little 486 here 474 very 453 old 446 only 420 there 388 well 353 never 351 other 344 good 337 again 335 first 329 too 328 down 326 as 317 long 309 just 305 back 293 much 277 away 252 last 238 in 237 perhaps 228 own 227 even 223 all 209 few 201 still 186 on 175 off 173 once 172 same 169 young 167 such 162 quite 162 most 157 great 153 far 144 right 144 also 142 ever 142 enough 141 next Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 86 least 54 good 38 most 19 bad 15 near 12 Most 11 slight 10 great 8 strong 8 early 6 eld 5 late 4 high 3 mere 3 manif 3 low 2 young 2 wise 2 vague 2 small 2 queer 2 pleasant 2 old 2 odd 2 loud 2 large 2 happy 2 fine 2 dark 2 big 1 wild 1 wet 1 temp 1 sweet 1 stuffy 1 strict 1 strange 1 simple 1 sheer 1 safe 1 remote 1 quiet 1 quaint 1 pure 1 pretty 1 plain 1 nice 1 manner:-- 1 long 1 less Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 124 most 12 least 11 well 1 lowest 1 highest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.cadytech.com 1 books.google.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.cadytech.com/dumas/personnage.asp?key=130 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=4dU0AAAAMAAJ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 frankmorlock@msn.com Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 _ was _ 11 jannet did not 9 _ is _ 7 _ are _ 5 _ did _ 5 janet did not 5 penny did not 4 door was closed 4 jannet had not 3 _ do _ 3 _ had _ 3 _ think _ 3 girls did not 3 girls went back 3 house was perfectly 3 jannet had scarcely 3 jannet was not 3 one was there 3 rosanna asked curiously 2 _ saw _ 2 _ were _ 2 door did not 2 doors were open 2 house is full 2 house was never 2 jannet went all 2 man is dead 2 noise was not 2 penny felt sorry 2 penny was very 2 room was dark 2 room was empty 2 room was not 2 room was still 2 rosanna went on 2 sound was not 2 sounds did not 1 _ am _ 1 _ am here 1 _ asking _ 1 _ be afraid 1 _ be ghosts 1 _ be surprised 1 _ been busy 1 _ came _ 1 _ do n''t 1 _ does _ 1 _ feel _ 1 _ get home 1 _ had not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 penny made no response 2 jannet had not yet 1 _ was no trick 1 _ were not afraid 1 girls are not hard 1 girls were not greatly 1 janet did not even 1 jannet had no record 1 jannet was not particularly 1 men are not patient 1 noise does not at 1 place was not eager 1 room had not rosanna 1 room was not half 1 rosanna was not especially 1 sounds are not very 1 woman had no notion 1 woman is not as A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 34369 author = Clark, Joan title = Penny Nichols and the Mystery of the Lost Key date = keywords = Caleb; Laponi; Leeds; Max; Mr.; Mrs.; Nichols; Rosanna; Winters; penny summary = Rosanna Winters, Penny learned, by listening. "I''d like to know if the store detective caught that man," Penny declared As Penny took her place at the steering wheel she observed that Mrs. Leeds'' automobile had been brought to the hotel entrance by an attendant. to say, Penny and Rosanna went out the back door. Rosanna explained about Mrs. Leeds and her daughter while Penny added As Penny and Rosanna entered the living room, the stranger turned to face Penny and Rosanna could not refrain from smiling, for Mrs. Leeds looked Penny and Rosanna entered the house by the side door. Penny was aware that both Mrs. Leeds and Max Laponi were watching her "We''ll let Mrs. Leeds hunt for the will," Penny declared, "but we''ll look "Oh, Penny," Rosanna gasped, "Mrs. Leeds has locked me out of the house!" "Max Laponi must have found the letter and key which Rosanna lost," Penny id = 43199 author = Farjeon, B. L. (Benjamin Leopold) title = The Last Tenant date = keywords = Barbara; Beatrice; Bob; Cooper; Dr.; Elsdale; Lamb; London; Millet; Molly; Mr.; Ned; Nisbet; Rivers; Ronald; Terrace summary = Before she left the room she said to Bob: "Thank you," said Bob, and we talked of old times with rather eager "You were right, Mr. Millet," said my wife, "the house is haunted." "A good idea," said Bob Millet, in a tone as lively as her own. "Now, sir or madam," said I to the cat, "what do you think of Bob''s "Ask Mr. Elsdale to come up," said Bob; and the landlady departed. "I think," said Ronald, "that a man who is not in any way connected "I shall walk home," I said to Bob. He nodded, as though he understood why at so late an hour I "We thought you were lost," said Bob, and Barbara looked up with a "Mr. Nisbet knows you," I said to Ronald, "and if he should see you we "It will be dangerous to attempt such a thing," said Bob, "while Mr. Nisbet and Dr. Cooper are there. id = 46375 author = Grove, Harriet Pyne title = The Phantom Treasure date = keywords = Chick; Cousin; Hilliard; Holt; Jannet; Meter; Miss; Mrs.; Nell; Paulina; Pieter; Uncle; Van summary = you do, Uncle Pieter?" Jan, like Janet, called Mr. Van Meter by that Jannet thought that so funny, that Uncle Pieter himself looked in to "Yes''m," said Jannet, smiling at the old lady and looking at her with Nell said that P''lina must dye her hair, but Jannet knew "Maybe P''lina is the ghost, then," Nell suggested, and Jannet thought By this time they were in the room, Nell wondering a little at Jannet''s Jannet dropped her hands in her lap and sat there looking at Nell, who Jannet decided to open her mother''s trunk and looked through her keys, been thinking, too, and wanted to ask Miss Jannet about the ghost in Jannet told her, but she had heard what Paulina _said_ was a ghost. a word about a ghost, but Nell sat close to Jannet on the little bed her hand, but Jannet said, "I''m not forgetting, Nell, that I came to id = 58653 author = Heiner, Alvin title = The Revealing Pattern date = keywords = Professor; Reamer summary = He was a man easily smiled at; a little birdlike individual carrying midafternoon lull and said, "I am Professor Jonathan Waits. I had never heard it put quite that way before, but from Professor He beamed at the ceiling and said, "What a fine old library, my "Then possibly you''d like to know about my work." "Psychic research?" I inquired, wanting him to know we New Englanders Professor Waits said, then went on. who doesn''t know the history of the Reamer mansion." "Not ''of the Reamer mansion'', my dear. "You mean this isn''t a beginning, Professor?" facet of the case, I am more interested in Henry Reamer himself. wise man once said, ''If you would understand violence, look also into "Did you have trouble finding what you wanted, Professor?" Do you know who Henry Reamer''s murderer was?" "Look at it this way, Miss Hopstead. Professor Waits? Professor Waits? Professor Waits died of id = 23738 author = Ingram, Eleanor M. (Eleanor Marie) title = The Thing from the Lake date = keywords = Aunt; Bagheera; Barrier; Caroline; Cousin; Desire; Ethan; Locke; Michell; Mr.; New; Phillida; Roger; Vere; York; eye; house; like; man; thing summary = I imagine Phillida had the vaguest ideas of what such places were like. Phillida''s voice came over the wire to me like the morning song of a A Phillida as new to my eyes as the house! Sun and sweet wind had worked white magic in the long-closed house. Under cover of the table she put her hand into Vere''s, and silence held not stay away from the house for a night, risking that Desire Michell minds like the meeting of eyes in understanding--all in the dark? A long sigh of rising wind passed through the house like a sucked breath Barrier; the light so like the bright imagined head of Desire. thought of Phillida and Vere down in the pleasant living room tempted me key fitted, had come through the dark house to the door of the room So I learned to know Phillida and Mr. Vere and----" id = 31469 author = Lovecraft, H. P. (Howard Phillips) title = The Shunned House date = keywords = Benefit; Harris; Mercy; Providence; Rhoby; Street; house; thing; uncle summary = giving the deep cellar a street frontage with door and one window above Not till my adult years did my uncle set before me the notes and data to the shunned house in Benefit Street. houses and bank walls of Benefit Street. of a new and finer house in Westminster Street, in the growing part of Rathbone was a practical man, and rented the Benefit Street house Harris, then owner of the house, many times before his death in 1916; half expected, that where the shunned house now stood the Roulets had at once to examine the cellar of the shunned house itself with a new and disused door opening from the cellar directly upon Benefit Street, uncle and I conveyed to the shunned house two camp chairs and a folding Carrington Harris''s house. be delivered the next morning at the cellar door of the shunned house in id = 4700 author = Regnard, Jean François title = The Unforseen Return date = keywords = Mr.; Prim; Roger summary = Good day, my dear Lucy--how are things with you, child? Go, run, my dear Lucy: beg her to come here as soon as possible. tell your father when he returns from his business trip to Spain? the way, haven''t you received any money for me in the past few days? Hey, good day, Roger--the prodigal returns. violent father returning impromptu from a long trip; a son in the aside a little and think of a way to prevent him from entering his own I believe my son will be very happy to see me back and in good health. I don''t want to talk to you, I want to speak to the father of Mr. Edward Richly who is in two words an imbecile and a fool. You must know, sir, that your son has been I don''t know about your niece, but my son is a rogue, Mrs. Prim. id = 16538 author = nan title = The Alleged Haunting of B—— House Including a Journal Kept During the Tenancy of Colonel Lemesurier Taylor date = keywords = B----; Bute; Colonel; Freer; H----; Langton; Lord; March; Miss; Moore; Mr.; Mrs.; S---- summary = both these rooms I heard the loud and inexplicable noises every night, usual, came out of his room to hear if I had seen or heard anything, room was much nearer to where the sounds came from) said he had heard same noises were heard at all hours day and night by herself and her _February 9th, Tuesday._--Last night we--Miss Moore and I--heard had heard Mrs. W---talking in Miss Langton''s room. Miss Moore and I again this morning heard noises in No. 8, more you when I left, heard sounds of footsteps going round her room, March 6th by Miss Freer, who had not heard at all of his experiences, (Miss Moore heard their voices when she came to my room at ten Miss Langton in No. 8 heard sounds after daylight--footsteps heard sounds as of some one reading in Miss Langton''s room, No.