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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 44118 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 9 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Jim 2 Zeb 2 Wizard 2 Sorcerer 2 Princess 2 Ozma 2 Mrs. 2 Mangaboos 2 Eureka 2 Dorothy 1 true 1 time 1 sir 1 man 1 look 1 italian 1 illustration 1 good 1 exit 1 epi 1 enter 1 daup 1 come 1 cler 1 boy 1 Vernon 1 Uncle 1 Truewit 1 Tom 1 Talbot 1 Sorrento 1 Smith 1 Shakespeare 1 Salerno 1 Rome 1 Robert 1 Remington 1 Pompeii 1 Otter 1 OTT 1 Number 1 Naples 1 Nan 1 Mr. 1 Moses 1 Morose 1 Michael 1 Mary 1 MUTE 1 MRS Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 770 time 593 man 491 boy 449 way 407 thing 394 place 374 horse 359 day 341 people 334 room 330 friend 306 house 297 eye 294 sir 288 girl 271 face 262 head 261 hand 259 one 244 lady 242 nothing 231 woman 215 side 215 night 202 voice 198 something 196 door 191 piglet 176 life 172 buggy 162 word 162 money 162 kitten 162 foot 160 country 155 air 152 year 150 daup 140 hour 134 part 133 mother 133 brigand 127 other 125 window 125 road 124 arm 123 city 123 aunt 122 story 121 moment Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 569 Vernon 543 Robert 501 Dorothy 479 Wizard 464 _ 430 David 421 Mrs. 399 Jim 363 Bob 284 Frank 277 Zeb 258 Uncle 230 Moses 226 Frederic 216 Eureka 203 Mr. 193 Clive 182 Jonson 159 Billy 152 MOR 151 Betty 148 Princess 148 Ozma 142 Kate 137 sir 135 DAW 129 Oz 129 CLER 117 LA 99 F 95 OTT 88 Mary 85 Lady 79 Prince 79 CHAPTER 76 Sorcerer 75 Land 74 Smith 70 Gargoyles 68 Mangaboos 68 Farley 65 Tom 64 HAU 62 Remington 62 Nan 62 John 60 Dauphine 59 madam 59 Jack 55 Chicago Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5493 i 4339 he 3917 you 3535 it 2249 they 1621 him 1447 she 1326 me 1250 them 1090 we 601 her 327 us 263 himself 104 themselves 86 myself 63 yourself 62 herself 36 one 35 mine 35 ''s 32 itself 28 ourselves 24 thee 15 yours 14 his 10 ''em 9 hers 7 em 4 wi 4 theirs 3 yourselves 3 thyself 3 ours 3 oneself 3 on''t 2 whispers.--they 2 think?--they 1 you.--what 1 unmasthey 1 thou 1 then,-- 1 prov''d 1 pe 1 on:--you 1 odso 1 o 1 love!--we 1 i''m 1 ay Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 11848 be 4137 have 2610 do 1967 say 1303 go 1073 see 1020 come 913 get 874 make 763 know 693 take 656 look 633 think 486 tell 444 ask 438 give 405 find 393 seem 319 feel 304 leave 301 let 286 put 282 hear 270 stand 244 want 241 try 240 begin 238 eat 238 call 224 answer 223 turn 221 keep 209 follow 208 cry 205 run 205 grow 193 live 190 bring 188 walk 187 talk 168 draw 164 like 163 speak 162 reach 161 wish 160 return 158 sit 156 set 156 fall 154 pass Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3187 not 1170 so 886 up 863 then 691 out 669 now 614 very 614 little 592 good 540 more 473 here 459 just 452 down 442 as 435 well 425 long 424 other 424 all 415 old 396 back 392 much 381 again 375 great 364 true 361 away 331 only 325 never 324 first 302 once 301 too 279 there 262 ever 252 off 229 soon 228 right 213 still 213 even 209 many 202 last 201 own 198 far 197 in 192 big 185 most 183 on 181 over 181 enough 179 young 177 sure 158 around Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 113 good 61 least 41 most 21 near 18 great 17 bad 9 high 9 fine 7 slight 7 j 7 big 6 small 6 lovely 6 happy 5 large 5 hard 5 grand 5 Most 4 early 4 dear 3 noble 3 farth 3 easy 3 deep 2 sweet 2 strong 2 strange 2 stout 2 soft 2 safe 2 rough 2 queer 2 quaint 2 proud 2 nice 2 manif 2 low 2 loud 2 furth 2 fat 2 dark 2 cut 2 close 2 broad 2 bl 1 welcome 1 warm 1 vague 1 ugly 1 true Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 144 most 9 well 9 least 1 worst 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 vernon did not 4 face is dirty 4 head was long 4 jim did not 4 man did not 4 robert did not 4 wizard got out 3 _ is _ 3 people did not 3 people do n''t 2 _ do n''t 2 bob was not 2 boy did not 2 boy had also 2 boy had joined 2 boy was no 2 boy was startled 2 boy was strong 2 boy went willingly 2 boys said nothing 2 david did not 2 days are past 2 dorothy did not 2 dorothy felt relieved 2 dorothy was almost 2 dorothy was awake 2 dorothy was first 2 dorothy was nearly 2 dorothy was not 2 dorothy was still 2 dorothy was sure 2 dorothy was surprised 2 dorothy was too 2 eyes had ever 2 eyes were big 2 face was blue 2 faces were decidedly 2 frank got up 2 friend had n''t 2 friends did not 2 friends were dead 2 friends were not 2 friends were now 2 girl stood still 2 girl took heart 2 girl went inside 2 hand do n''t 2 heads were too 2 horse came last 2 horse did not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 boys made no reply 2 boy was no longer 2 dorothy was not especially 2 eye is no proof 2 friends did not often 2 girl had no difficulty 2 heads had no hair 2 jim was not only 2 wizard was not so 1 bob was not willing 1 boys found no end 1 david made no reply 1 david was not at 1 girls have no sense 1 jim was no good 1 man comes not down 1 man had not yet 1 man was not sorry 1 people did not often 1 places is not bad 1 thing go no further 1 time had no eyes A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 22566 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz date = keywords = Dorothy; Eureka; Jim; Land; Mangaboos; Ozma; Princess; Sorcerer; Wizard; Zeb; illustration summary = the horse Jim--his head up in the air, his ears erect and his long legs "May be Jim will go," continued Dorothy, looking at the horse. buggy and joined Zeb and Dorothy, and the kitten followed demurely at "We didn''t ask to come down here; we fell," said Dorothy. "They look like doorways," said Dorothy; "only there are no stairs to "I will, too," said Dorothy, and chose a little room at the end of the "I don''t like these veg''table people," said the little girl. way, Zeb driving while the Wizard and Dorothy each held a lighted "You can ask Dorothy," said the little man, in an injured tone. "Then," said the Wizard, "you will be saved, little Dorothy; and I am "But, at that time," said the Wizard, thoughtfully, "there were two Good "You must come again, some time," said the little Wizard; and she id = 420 author = Baum, L. Frank (Lyman Frank) title = Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz date = keywords = Dorothy; Eureka; Gargoyles; Jim; Mangaboos; Ozma; Princess; Sorcerer; Wizard; Zeb summary = "What is your name?" said Dorothy, thinking she liked the boy''s manner "Maybe Jim will go," continued Dorothy, looking at the horse. said to Zeb, who was a little taller than Dorothy: the buggy and joined Zeb and Dorothy, and the kitten followed demurely "We didn''t ask to come down here; we fell," said Dorothy. "They look like doorways," said Dorothy; "only there are no stairs to "I will, too," said Dorothy, and chose a little room at the end of the "I don''t like these veg''table people," said the little girl. the way, Zeb driving while the Wizard and Dorothy each held a lighted "You can ask Dorothy," said the little man, in an injured tone. "Then," said the Wizard, "you will be saved, little Dorothy; and I am "He''s only a humbug Wizard, though," said Dorothy, smiling at him. "You must come again, some time," said the little Wizard; and she id = 33264 author = Cooper, Elizabeth title = Living Up to Billy date = keywords = Billy; Jack; Jim; Kate; Mrs.; Nan; Smith; Tom summary = way, and Kate, I want you to know when you are setting alone at night, like she lays most of the time, and she looked so white and little and I got a lot to tell you cause things have shaken up a bit. Billy and the kid played out-doors all day and his face got sun burnt It ain''t just the things, if you got lots of money you can buy want a thing real bad and just keep thinking of it night and day, you are going to get it some way and when you come out, Kate, I think you window, and know that all looked so home-like cause I made it so. whole thing out, cause Mrs. Smith is right when she says that dancing She said, "don''t come," that she would let me know all the time how he id = 29297 author = De Mille, James title = Among the Brigands date = keywords = Albano; Angelo; Bob; CHAPTER; Clive; David; Frank; Ludlow; Michael; Moses; Naples; Number; Pompeii; Rome; Salerno; Sorrento; Uncle; boy; italian; look; time summary = Uncle Moses looked for a long time, hoping to see something like David and Clive sat behind, Frank and Uncle Moses on and looked out into the street, was taken by Frank and Bob. Thus the four boys paired off, and made themselves very comfortable.. "Of course," said Bob. At this Frank carefully opened the door again, and looked forth. Frank quietly opened the door, and looked forth, while Bob, in "Uncle Moses," said Bob, gravely, "there''s a great deal in what Uncle Moses turned away with a look of concern in his mild face, "Come, Clive," said David, "let Frank and Bob enjoy their jackasses. "Let''s go for Uncle Moses," said Bob, "or Michael Angelo." "Well, Uncle Moses," said Frank a second time, somewhat impatiently, "But, Uncle Moses," said Clive, "David would never think of such him was Uncle Moses, then Clive, then David, while Frank was on id = 41831 author = Jewett, Sarah Orne title = Betty Leicester''s Christmas date = keywords = Betty; Christmas; Edith; Lady; Mary summary = But Lady Mary would be busy enough with her great house-party of said Lady Mary wistfully, as they began to go up the great steps and good-night, darling," said this dear lady, whom Betty had always longed The minute Betty Leicester looked at Edith Banfield next day she saw a great friend of his; then she looked for Lady Mary, who was at the dear friend Betty, who knows what American girls like best, is kindly A maid appeared to take Edith to her room, and Lady Mary patted Betty''s "So does papa," said Betty; "oh, so very much!--next to Lady Mary and "Why, of course," said Betty, with great pleasure. "Why, Warford, my dear!" said Lady Mary, with great delight, as he met Edith looked on with pleasure, and presently Lady Mary came toward them. for the ladies to go to the drawing-room, and Betty, feeling a little id = 4011 author = Jonson, Ben title = Epicoene; Or, The Silent Woman date = keywords = Amorous; Ben; CEN; CUT; Cutbeard; DAW; Dauphine; Foole; Gifford; God; HAU; Humour; John; Jonson; MAV; MOR; MRS; MUTE; Morose; OTT; Otter; Shakespeare; Truewit; cler; come; daup; enter; epi; exit; good; man; sir; true summary = that your ladies come to see, if I have credit afore sir Daw. TRUE: Yes sir: and then comes reeking home of vapour and sweat, CLER: Master True-wit, lady, a friend of ours. TRUE: Why, sir, he has been a great man at the Bear-garden in his CLER [COMING FORWARD WITH DAW.]: Why, do not you know it, sir LA-F: Are the ladies come, sir John Daw, and your mistress? CLER: Will you speak so kindly to sir John Daw, that has done you TRUE: Nay, faith, in this, sir, she speaks but reason: and, TRUE: Nay sir, you must kiss the ladies; you must not go away, now: TRUE: But he shall not, sir, by your leave. MOR: By no means, good sir; on to the rest: shall you ever come TRUE: Why, an it must, it shall, sir, they say: they''ll ne''er DAW: It is true indeed, sir? id = 58304 author = Stratemeyer, Edward title = Falling in with Fortune; Or, The Experiences of a Young Secretary date = keywords = Chicago; Dr.; Farley; Frederic; Frost; Mr.; Mrs.; Remington; Robert; Talbot; Vernon summary = "If Robert does not want his room searched he can say so," said Vernon "Mrs. Vernon," said Robert, in an agitated tone, "I hope you don''t "Thank you for your justice, Mrs. Vernon," said Robert gratefully. "Mrs. Vernon," said Robert, "your nephew mentioned as one evidence of "Give me your hand, Robert," said Mrs. Vernon impulsively. "By the way," said Frederic, turning toward Robert, "this is Mr. Frost, my aunt''s private secretary." When Robert met Mrs. Vernon at the supper table she said to him, "I feel repaid for all I have done for you, Robert," said Mrs. Vernon. Later in the day when they were together Mrs. Vernon said, "Robert, I When they emerged from the banking house Mrs. Vernon said: "Robert, I "Two letters for you, Mrs. Vernon," said Robert, as he came to the "Well, Robert, what do you think of Frederic''s letter?" asked Mrs. Vernon, as she put her lawyer''s epistle away.