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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 99861 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 83 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Pole 3 Peary 3 North 3 Mr. 3 Cape 3 Bartlett 3 Arctic 2 illustration 2 ice 2 York 2 Society 2 Roosevelt 2 New 2 Marvin 2 Land 2 Greenland 2 Eskimos 2 Dr. 2 Columbia 2 Captain 2 Borup 2 Bay 2 April 1 time 1 sledge 1 mile 1 lead 1 day 1 american 1 Whitney 1 Sound 1 Sheridan 1 Professor 1 Polar 1 Parker 1 October 1 National 1 Mount 1 March 1 King 1 Josiah 1 Jesup 1 Jeffer 1 Ice 1 Henson 1 Grant 1 Graham 1 Etah 1 Esquimos 1 Esquimaux Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1644 ice 1074 day 1043 man 948 time 845 dog 696 sledge 666 snow 606 mile 561 ship 554 water 539 land 494 party 485 wind 441 year 432 hour 413 expedition 402 work 391 life 379 night 377 sea 376 camp 375 sun 362 way 350 foot 347 lead 330 boy 305 observation 304 line 301 bear 298 igloo 277 eye 274 winter 269 supply 266 side 263 food 260 point 259 world 254 thing 251 north 251 hand 243 journey 235 place 226 return 220 shore 218 meat 213 game 212 storm 211 light 209 distance 207 end Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1707 _ 943 Peary 675 Pole 607 Mr. 544 Andy 522 | 502 Cape 488 Chet 409 Eskimos 395 North 319 Cook 310 Dr. 296 Arctic 286 Dawson 268 Eskimo 257 Roosevelt 250 Bartlett 216 Barwell 214 Captain 192 Marvin 191 Greenland 191 Commander 189 Bay 187 Land 181 York 176 Professor 176 Polar 158 New 150 M. 135 Borup 133 Columbia 128 April 103 Jeffer 101 Etah 100 March 96 Sound 95 MacMillan 95 Henson 90 Ice 84 S. 84 King 83 Society 82 Whitney 82 A. 81 Sheridan 81 Esquimos 78 Island 77 W. 75 Graham 70 POLE Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4618 i 3596 we 3163 it 2396 he 1534 they 1032 me 867 you 864 us 790 them 711 him 188 myself 176 himself 169 she 113 themselves 109 her 67 one 67 itself 45 ourselves 23 ''em 16 mine 16 herself 13 yourself 11 yours 7 his 6 ours 5 theirs 2 em 1 you''ve 1 ye 1 thumbscrews 1 there.--andrew 1 oneself 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14361 be 5446 have 1557 do 1213 make 1044 go 918 come 773 take 739 get 700 see 641 say 613 give 546 know 525 leave 511 reach 475 find 379 follow 371 seem 336 tell 319 feel 299 keep 283 think 279 start 273 return 267 try 266 look 253 begin 248 use 243 turn 241 bring 224 pass 217 become 209 rise 199 cover 197 ask 192 move 191 lose 188 want 188 send 185 break 185 answer 184 carry 183 set 182 stand 172 run 171 fall 168 put 164 travel 163 remain 162 show 162 call Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2208 not 806 up 666 now 654 so 633 then 616 more 607 out 594 good 574 only 574 long 512 other 493 first 466 little 463 as 444 back 413 here 408 great 403 well 394 last 387 very 387 again 369 much 349 few 311 many 302 far 300 also 299 about 292 down 290 still 285 new 285 most 281 there 277 same 269 away 268 even 266 later 264 too 261 such 259 open 258 just 248 off 247 soon 245 never 239 own 228 small 226 on 226 old 226 ever 221 almost 220 possible Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 164 good 73 most 56 least 42 great 31 bad 26 high 25 farth 16 low 14 near 13 Most 12 large 11 strong 10 fine 9 slight 9 cold 8 hard 7 poor 7 old 5 fit 5 early 4 young 4 narrow 4 easy 4 dark 3 wild 3 small 3 safe 3 sad 3 mean 3 light 3 lazy 3 heavy 3 bright 2 weak 2 tall 2 rough 2 grand 2 fast 2 brave 2 big 2 able 1 weird 1 tough 1 topmost 1 tiny 1 swift 1 strange 1 southw 1 soft 1 slender Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 212 most 16 least 11 well 1 brightest 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 chet went out 4 days went by 4 peary did not 3 _ reached etah 3 day was beautiful 3 ice was much 3 ice was so 3 snow was deeper 3 wind did not 2 _ left sydney 2 _ made good 2 andy came out 2 andy did not 2 andy saw something 2 andy was right 2 chet did not 2 chet was not 2 day was april 2 dogs came out 2 dogs do not 2 dogs had not 2 dogs were not 2 dogs were so 2 dogs were soon 2 dogs were tired 2 eskimos are not 2 eskimos do not 2 eskimos were not 2 expedition did not 2 expeditions were not 2 ice did not 2 ice does not 2 ice had already 2 ice is not 2 man does not 2 man had ever 2 miles is covered 2 night is perhaps 2 parties came in 2 peary came along 2 peary is about 2 peary is not 2 peary was not 2 peary was president 2 pole had not 2 pole is near 2 pole is not 2 pole was not 2 sea was rough 2 snow was so Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ do not camp 1 _ was not satisfied 1 chet said no more 1 chet was not so 1 chet was not superstitious 1 dog was not distasteful 1 dogs had no trouble 1 dogs had not yet 1 eskimos are not brutes 1 eskimos are not highly 1 eskimos have no religion 1 eskimos were not pleased 1 expeditions were not so 1 ice does not readily 1 ice is not so 1 ice is not very 1 life was no picnic 1 man does not usually 1 miles did not much 1 peary did not scruple 1 peary had no doctor 1 peary made no mention 1 peary told no one 1 peary was not worthy 1 pole is not reachable 1 pole is not visible 1 pole was no haphazard 1 pole was not direct 1 pole was not possible 1 sea had not yet 1 sledge was no easy 1 sledges were no longer 1 snow is not often 1 snow was not deep 1 snow were not as 1 time had not yet 1 time was not altogether 1 wind was not strong 1 wind was not too 1 work was not particularly A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 36962 author = Cook, Frederick Albert title = My Attainment of the Pole Being the Record of the Expedition That First Reached the Boreal Center, 1907-1909. With the Final Summary of the Polar Controversy date = keywords = Annoatok; April; Arctic; Bartlett; Bay; Bradley; Cape; Captain; Cook; Copenhagen; Dr.; Eskimos; Greenland; Land; Mount; Mr.; National; New; North; October; Parker; Peary; Polar; Pole; Society; Sound; Whitney; York; american; day; ice; illustration; mile; time summary = that Mr. Peary (a year later than Dr. Cook) reached the Pole. of pin-point accuracy, the North Pole has been honestly reached by Dr. Cook, three hundred and fifty days before any one else claimed to have THE LAND-ADHERING PACK ICE OF POLAR SEA--THE MOST DIFFICULT returned from the famine-land of ice and cold--the world of his awakes, turns over, drinks some ice-water, eats a little half-cooked The land, the sea, the air, ice, and snow, have great individual LAND--ADHERING PACK ICE OF POLAR SEA--THE MOST DIFFICULT TRAVEL OF THE They hoped to get back to land and off the ice of the Polar sea in one upbuilding of the ice of the North Polar Sea. Snapping our whips and urging the dogs, we traveled until late in the Dr. Cook reached the Pole, I doubt Peary, his observations bear the [Illustration: THE LAND-DIVIDED ICE-PACK REPORTED BY PEARY PROVES COOK''S id = 20923 author = Henson, Matthew Alexander title = A Negro Explorer at the North Pole date = keywords = Arctic; Bartlett; Borup; Cape; Captain; Columbia; Commander; Dr.; Esquimos; Marvin; Mr.; North; Peary; Pole; Roosevelt summary = THE ROOSEVELT STARTS FOR HOME--ESQUIMO VILLAGES--NEW DOGS When the news of the discovery of the North Pole, by Commander Peary, To-day there is a more general knowledge of Commander Peary, his work thirty-three hours at North Pole, while Commander Peary was determining of the ice-cap of North Greenland in 1895, with Commander Peary and Hugh ice-cap of North Greenland, I marched with Peary and Lee from the first trip of the _Roosevelt_:--Commander Peary, Captain Bartlett, MAKING PEARY SLEDGES--HUNTING IN THE ARCTIC NIGHT--THE EXCITABLE DOGS Without the Esquimo dog, the story of the North Pole, would remain March 4: Heavy snow fall; but Commander Peary routed out all hands, and Commander Peary, Captain Bartlett, and Dr. Goodsell here, and fourteen Esquimos. dogs and sledges having been secured, I noticed Commander Peary at work The four Esquimos who stood with Commander Peary at the North Pole, were forty hours'' rest at Cape Columbia, Commander Peary had his sledges id = 18975 author = Peary, Robert E. (Robert Edwin) title = The North Pole Its Discovery in 1909 under the auspices of the Peary Arctic Club date = keywords = April; Arctic; Bartlett; Bay; Borup; Cape; Columbia; Eskimos; Etah; Grant; Greenland; Henson; Jesup; Land; March; Marvin; New; North; Peary; Pole; Roosevelt; Sheridan; Society; York; ice; illustration; lead; sledge summary = TYPICAL VIEW OF THE ICE OF THE ARCTIC OCEAN NORTH OF GRANT LAND 209 the ships became imprisoned by the ice for the winter, a few miles north the sledge party that finally reached the long-courted "ninety North." sixty miles north of Etah, we came to a dead stop in the ice pack off return the following year, when the Peary Arctic Club would send a ship Cape Columbia of supplies for the spring sledge journey toward the Pole. The fall work ended with the return of Bartlett and his party from Cape Marvin, with his men and supporting parties, going north to Cape Bryant with two Eskimos, twenty dogs, and one sledge, leaving the main party My four Eskimos carried the technic of dogs, sledges, ice, and cold as OF DEPARTURE AND RETURN OF NORTH POLE SLEDGE PARTY] OF DEPARTURE AND RETURN OF NORTH POLE SLEDGE PARTY] id = 38968 author = Stratemeyer, Edward title = First at the North Pole; Or, Two Boys in the Arctic Circle date = keywords = Andy; Barwell; Chet; Dawson; Esquimaux; Graham; Ice; Jeffer; Josiah; King; Mr.; Pole; Professor summary = "Yes, but he said he had all the men he wanted." Andy Graham gave "If I can''t get a job, I''m going hunting for a few days," said Andy half Chet gave his chum a hand, and slowly Andy came out of the hollow. "I''d like to look for my father, Andy," and Chet''s face clouded. On the way Chet asked Barwell Dawson how soon he expected to start for "He certainly knows how to shoot," said Andy to Chet. helped Barwell Dawson pack up; and two days later started for Pine Run. There was mild surprise in the village when it was learned the two boys "Well, let Uncle Si shift for himself," said Andy to Chet. "Three cheers for Barwell Dawson!" cried Andy, and he and Chet and the "And what are you going to do?" asked Chet of Andy, one day.