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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 2 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 96978 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 77 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 University 2 God 2 College 1 year 1 work 1 time 1 print 1 man 1 little 1 letter 1 illustration 1 child 1 Wonderland 1 Vita 1 Varietate 1 Tartaglia 1 Sylvie 1 Subtilitate 1 Senate 1 Scotland 1 Scaliger 1 Rome 1 Rev. 1 Propria 1 Press 1 Pope 1 Pavia 1 Paris 1 Padua 1 Oxford 1 Opera 1 Naudé 1 Mrs. 1 Mr. 1 Miss 1 Milan 1 Medicine 1 Macmillan 1 London 1 Lewis 1 King 1 Jerome 1 Italy 1 Gian 1 Galen 1 Ferrari 1 Fazio 1 Euclid 1 Dr. 1 Dodgson Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 461 man 449 time 369 book 366 year 324 life 314 child 307 day 262 letter 258 friend 257 work 231 p. 204 word 181 one 171 thing 165 hand 149 way 141 son 139 father 132 case 131 death 130 end 126 name 120 mind 116 rule 113 fact 112 subject 112 place 112 photograph 111 boy 108 house 106 ch 105 reason 103 part 103 course 102 account 98 story 98 illustration 95 question 92 night 91 room 90 world 89 matter 87 other 87 author 86 power 86 physician 85 picture 84 hour 84 form 80 age Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3224 _ 630 Cardan 343 Mr. 305 Dodgson 293 De 236 Carroll 231 Lewis 147 Oxford 133 Vita 128 Propria 124 Miss 123 Alice 116 Milan 92 Tartaglia 91 tom 89 Mrs. 85 Church 84 i. 84 Christ 75 et 71 University 71 Battista 70 Gian 69 Pavia 69 London 68 Archbishop 67 Pp 65 College 63 God 62 Opera 61 . 56 Wonderland 56 Jerome 55 p. 51 de 50 Bruno 49 Bologna 48 Rev. 48 Printed 47 Sylvie 46 Dr. 45 Macmillan 42 Subtilitate 42 Charles 40 Varietate 39 King 39 Fazio 38 Sir 38 Medicine 38 Euclid Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3075 he 2445 i 1648 it 918 him 702 you 685 me 484 they 412 them 377 we 222 himself 183 she 132 us 125 her 75 myself 55 one 53 itself 45 themselves 27 yours 20 his 18 yourself 16 mine 14 herself 13 thee 9 ourselves 3 thyself 3 theirs 3 ours 3 oneself 3 ''em 2 hers 1 you?--never 1 yerself 1 writes--"they 1 o''er 1 enim Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 6814 be 2744 have 626 do 473 make 464 give 447 write 437 say 373 go 364 take 353 come 328 see 298 find 263 know 222 seem 216 think 215 tell 198 get 164 use 163 send 163 begin 159 bring 155 show 154 follow 152 leave 143 put 140 read 131 set 128 hear 128 call 122 feel 121 let 114 live 114 ask 104 meet 100 look 99 publish 98 believe 97 work 92 appear 91 speak 90 keep 90 die 88 hold 83 fall 80 become 79 try 77 bear 76 pass 75 spend 75 prove Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1168 not 468 so 415 more 389 very 337 little 305 other 303 first 280 well 264 great 252 most 250 then 249 only 243 now 242 up 230 good 217 as 216 out 212 own 211 much 196 same 193 never 188 many 184 long 178 old 169 certain 167 such 160 last 157 even 153 down 144 on 142 once 136 new 136 few 134 ever 117 still 117 also 114 again 112 next 112 always 109 too 107 just 106 indeed 100 here 96 almost 95 rather 92 young 92 far 89 thus 89 there 89 quite Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 67 good 55 least 48 most 21 great 13 high 10 eld 7 low 6 early 6 bad 5 slight 5 happy 5 fine 5 dear 4 deep 4 clear 3 sure 3 strong 3 sharp 3 near 3 large 3 Most 2 young 2 wise 2 small 2 pure 2 long 2 late 2 hard 2 grand 2 gentle 2 fair 2 dull 1 writes:-- 1 wine:-- 1 weak 1 ugly 1 true 1 tiny 1 sweet 1 strange 1 shrewd 1 short 1 sage 1 safe 1 sad 1 rich 1 quick 1 poor 1 pleasant 1 plain Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 204 most 12 well 4 least 1 long 1 lest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 _ is _ 8 _ do _ 7 cardan did not 6 _ have _ 5 _ did _ 4 cardan was not 3 _ be _ 3 cardan had now 3 cardan was now 2 _ am _ 2 _ are _ 2 _ do n''t 2 _ feeling _ 2 _ has _ 2 _ is not 2 _ was _ 2 _ was not 2 cardan goes on 2 cardan was about 2 cardan was deeply 2 cardan was evidently 2 cardan was still 2 cardan was well 2 cardan went first 2 child got well 2 life is short 2 work is very 1 _ am still 1 _ are many 1 _ be carlotta 1 _ be more 1 _ be so 1 _ being as 1 _ come forth 1 _ come over 1 _ did n''t 1 _ does n''t 1 _ feeling pain 1 _ get rich 1 _ goes down 1 _ goin'' out 1 _ had _ 1 _ had not 1 _ has many 1 _ has n''t 1 _ has yet 1 _ have never 1 _ is almost 1 _ is altogether 1 _ is equal Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ is not great 1 cardan did not seriously 1 cardan finds no problem 1 cardan had no scruples 1 cardan makes no direct 1 cardan makes no mention 1 cardan took no notice 1 dodgson had not sufficient 1 dodgson was no easy 1 friends are not men 1 life has no doubt 1 man is no more 1 men was not perhaps 1 men were not fraught 1 time was not yet 1 time were not able 1 word is not too 1 year is not _ A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 11483 author = Collingwood, Stuart Dodgson title = The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll (Rev. C. L. Dodgson) date = keywords = Alice; Bishop; Bruno; Carroll; Charles; Christ; Church; College; Common; Dean; December; Diary; Dodgson; Dr.; Euclid; God; Lewis; London; Macmillan; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Oxford; Press; Rev.; Sylvie; University; Wonderland; child; illustration; letter; little; print summary = two books I have seen was the answer of a little girl whom Lewis revelation to the undergraduate who heard for the first time that Mr. Dodgson of Christ Church and Lewis Carroll were identical. Death of Archdeacon Dodgson--Lewis Carroll''s rooms at Christ Death of Archdeacon Dodgson--Lewis Carroll''s rooms at Christ time (knowing the sad end of the dear little boy), the funny parts A little book, published during this year, "Alice (a dramatic version "For auld lang syne" the author sent a copy of his book to Mrs. Hargreaves (Miss Alice Liddell), accompanied by a short note. A letter written about this time to his friend, Miss Edith Rix, gives The following letter written to a child-friend, Miss E. In December, the Logical controversy being over for a time, Mr. Dodgson invented a new problem to puzzle his mathematical friends id = 19600 author = Waters, W. G. (William George) title = Jerome Cardan: A Biographical Study date = keywords = Algebra; Antonio; Archbishop; Arithmetic; Battista; Bologna; Cardan; Cassanate; College; Fazio; Ferrari; Galen; Gian; God; Italy; Jerome; King; Medicine; Milan; Naudé; Opera; Padua; Paris; Pavia; Pope; Propria; Rome; Scaliger; Scotland; Senate; Subtilitate; Tartaglia; University; Varietate; Vita; man; time; work; year summary = reason that the circumstances of Cardan''s life, the character of his work, to treat the more noteworthy episodes of Cardan''s life and work, and the streets of a city was as strong in Cardan''s time as it is to-day. All his life long Cardan was a dreamer of dreams, and he gives an account condition of Algebra at the time when Cardan sat down to write. The _Book of the Great Art_ was not published till six years after Cardan suspecting that Cardan cared little what happened so long as the young man Cardan''s life for the six years which followed was busy work to compare Cardan with Julius Cæsar Scaliger, his rival, and a man THE year 1555 may be held to mark the point of time at which Cardan physician in question called attention to a certain book in which Cardan in writing the record of 1576, says that if Cardan''s life had been