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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 50826 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 77 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 nurse 3 London 3 Cross 2 thing 2 sidenote 2 sick 2 room 2 patient 2 observation 2 house 2 german 2 case 2 bed 2 american 2 air 2 Thornton 2 Sonya 2 Red 2 Nona 2 Mildred 2 Major 2 Lord 2 General 2 Eugenia 2 Barbara 1 time 1 russian 1 person 1 man 1 good 1 girl 1 food 1 day 1 caring 1 care 1 York 1 Valesky 1 University 1 Town 1 South 1 Sister 1 Schoenhofer 1 Roberts 1 P.M. 1 Nursing 1 Matron 1 Leininger 1 Lady 1 Kimberley 1 Hospital Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1178 nursing 990 patient 957 nurse 880 time 852 day 721 man 710 girl 649 room 615 person 521 thing 472 hospital 447 house 442 way 432 bed 424 friend 420 woman 411 case 409 night 384 one 355 child 351 people 340 moment 333 work 326 air 320 hour 319 sidenote 296 nothing 288 officer 282 sister 276 place 257 situation 257 life 250 hand 236 soldier 231 ward 229 year 222 care 213 theory 210 window 205 eye 203 home 199 country 198 fact 197 war 196 mother 193 tea 189 food 188 something 185 door 183 experience Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1316 _ 638 Barbara 608 Nona 433 Eugenia 383 Sonya 349 Mildred 339 Cross 331 Red 287 Dick 211 Bianca 188 Nursing 171 c. 161 Dr. 156 General 149 Thornton 134 American 131 Clark 126 Major 113 Sister 112 Charlotta 107 Alexis 103 Miss 100 Mrs. 98 Carlo 92 Countess 91 New 91 Hersey 89 Davis 79 Russia 78 Valesky 78 Colonel 77 France 76 Coblenz 75 States 75 London 74 United 74 Lord 73 England 72 M. 72 Cape 70 Hospital 70 Brussels 68 Lieutenant 66 Captain 64 Luxemburg 64 J. 62 York 62 Schoenhofer 61 . 60 Europe Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4828 i 3561 it 2422 she 2282 you 1957 we 1929 he 1810 they 1062 them 855 me 853 him 778 her 524 us 188 herself 175 one 135 himself 106 themselves 83 myself 66 itself 57 yourself 31 ourselves 13 oneself 9 yours 8 mine 7 hers 7 ''s 6 theirs 6 his 5 ours 2 yourselves 1 thyself Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 15683 be 6693 have 2067 do 1103 go 997 know 848 see 839 care 837 make 790 think 770 come 734 say 692 get 683 take 563 give 519 tell 508 find 427 seem 395 look 378 leave 328 feel 283 ask 277 keep 274 live 261 hear 240 send 231 want 230 understand 228 try 226 speak 223 bring 221 become 218 wish 217 call 210 put 201 grow 199 use 194 return 194 believe 192 let 190 begin 179 turn 178 nurse 174 talk 172 mean 167 sit 163 suppose 162 walk 161 like 158 expect 157 allow Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3385 not 1223 so 1015 very 886 then 845 more 839 up 826 other 779 little 696 only 634 much 633 good 620 now 603 well 509 never 502 as 496 many 470 out 467 sick 452 few 444 first 443 most 439 just 420 here 412 old 403 always 399 great 382 even 368 own 357 too 349 same 340 down 334 often 327 again 321 all 312 long 307 young 299 there 295 ever 285 rather 279 quite 275 back 273 away 267 once 266 such 264 also 256 bad 254 on 251 soon 245 in 239 almost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 153 good 123 least 108 most 33 bad 27 great 16 Most 10 common 9 high 9 fine 7 near 6 slight 6 safe 6 full 5 young 5 light 5 large 5 faint 4 strong 4 small 4 poor 4 late 4 clever 3 strange 3 pure 3 low 3 eld 3 dark 3 close 2 ugly 2 simple 2 nice 2 mere 2 l 2 hard 2 handsome 2 dull 2 dry 2 dear 1 wr 1 warm 1 sad 1 rich 1 rare 1 quiet 1 pretty 1 plucky 1 pleasant 1 old 1 new 1 minute Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 335 most 22 well 21 least 1 hard Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 1 digital.library.villanova.edu Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/33990/33990-h/33990-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/33990/33990-h.zip 1 http://digital.library.villanova.edu/) Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 _ is _ 8 barbara did not 8 eugenia did not 7 _ are _ 7 _ do _ 6 barbara had not 6 children have measles 6 patient does not 6 people do not 5 _ has _ 5 _ was _ 5 barbara was not 5 nona did not 5 nurse does not 5 sonya did not 4 _ did _ 4 _ had _ 4 eugenia had not 4 nurse has not 4 patients are often 4 persons are whole 3 _ think _ 3 barbara got up 3 barbara had never 3 barbara was too 3 girls had only 3 nona had not 3 nona had once 3 nona was glad 3 nona was not 3 sonya was not 3 sonya was too 3 things are not 2 _ am _ 2 _ are laws 2 _ is always 2 _ is too 2 _ looks _ 2 _ making _ 2 _ saw _ 2 _ see _ 2 _ told _ 2 _ try _ 2 _ were _ 2 barbara had again 2 barbara had also 2 barbara had little 2 barbara looked so 2 barbara went on 2 bed be always Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 patient gets no more 2 patient had no capital 2 people do not enough 2 people do not even 2 people have no idea 2 things are not fancy 1 barbara asked no more 1 barbara had no such 1 barbara made no effort 1 barbara made no further 1 barbara said not once 1 barbara was not so 1 cases were not very 1 days were not difficult 1 eugenia gave no sign 1 eugenia is not well 1 eugenia made no attempt 1 girls were not seriously 1 men had no time 1 mildred had no idea 1 mildred made no effort 1 mildred was no longer 1 nona had no acquaintances 1 nona had no home 1 nona made no reply 1 nona was not tremendously 1 one was no longer 1 patient was not well 1 people are not glad 1 people are not so 1 people had no money 1 sonya had no better 1 sonya had no desire 1 sonya is not content 1 sonya was not able 1 sonya was not at 1 time made no effort 1 woman does not really 1 work was not quite A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 42988 author = Boykin, Anne title = Nursing as Caring: A Model for Transforming Practice date = keywords = Boykin; Leininger; Nursing; Schoenhofer; University; York; care; caring; nurse; person summary = the Nursing as Caring model, I am personally aware that the living of challenge practicing nurses to "come to know self as caring person in Theory derivation: Application to nursing, the caring perspective within professional role development. perspective of the theory Nursing as Caring, to encounter person as less person in the nursing situation as they live and grow in caring. others, to understand nursing as nurturing persons living caring and the nurse coming to know self as caring person in ever deepening and nurse in developing an ever-present awareness of self as caring person. that the nurse come to know the other as caring person in the moment. story, the meaning for this nurse of knowing herself as caring person, The nurse communicates a knowing of the other as caring person, by the nurse to nurture persons as they live and grow in caring. knowing of the nursed as caring person. id = 52250 author = Laurence, E. C. (Eleanor Constance) title = A Nurse''s Life in War and Peace date = keywords = A.M.; Boers; Cape; Durban; England; General; Hospital; Kimberley; Lady; London; Lord; Major; Matron; P.M.; Roberts; Sister; South; Town; day; good; man; time summary = I think we get very good times off duty here--one hour off one day, and Beni Hassan, and another day I went ashore and had a good look round One day we went out by train, and then did a little climbing, and got I liked both the night and the day staff nurse in that ward, and they rest, but the sisters and officers went on most of the day unpacking and staff at work for some time, and with lots of bad cases in the wards it and the wards are heavy, and need a good many men for night duty. has been very hard worked night and day; at one time eight trains went They both went round the hospital several times, and on Christmas Day night duty, I found that the day sister left them all to the orderlies id = 12439 author = Nightingale, Florence title = Notes on Nursing: What It Is, and What It Is Not date = keywords = London; air; bed; case; food; house; nurse; observation; patient; room; sick; sidenote; thing summary = [Sidenote: Nursing the sick little understood.] into the patient''s room or ward, few people ever think, where that air patient''s room or ward is aired, as it is called--poisoned, it should quiet, all tend to making night the best time for airing the patients. [Sidenote: Airing damp things in a patient''s room.] If a nurse declines to do these kinds of things for her patient, [Sidenote: Sick room airing the whole house.] happens, the nurse makes it her business to turn the patient''s room into [Sidenote: Nurse must have some rule of thought about her patient''s [Sidenote: Nurse must have some rule of time about the patient''s diet.] [Sidenote: Nurses often do not think the sick room any business of I once told a "very good nurse" that the way in which her patient''s room [Sidenote: Nurse must observe for herself increase of patient''s id = 17366 author = Nightingale, Florence title = Notes on Nursing: What It Is, and What It Is Not date = keywords = God; London; Lord; air; bed; case; house; nurse; observation; patient; room; sick; sidenote; thing summary = [Sidenote: Nursing the sick little understood.] into the patient''s room or ward, few people ever think, where that air patient''s room or ward is aired, as it is called--poisoned, it should quiet, all tend to making night the best time for airing the patients. [Sidenote: Airing damp things in a patient''s room.] dirty as usual, the window of the sick room is kept a little open [Sidenote: Sick room airing the whole house.] happens, the nurse makes it her business to turn the patient''s room into [Sidenote: Nurse must have some rule of thought about her patients [Sidenote: Nurse must observe for herself increase of patient''s [Sidenote: Nurse must have some rule of time about the patient''s diet.] [Sidenote: Nurses often do not think the sick room any business of I once told a "very good nurse" that the way in which her patient''s room id = 22095 author = Vandercook, Margaret title = The Red Cross Girls with the Russian Army date = keywords = Alexis; Barbara; Cross; Eugenia; General; Mildred; Nona; Sonya; Thornton; Valesky; american; russian summary = Now at the close of Mildred Thornton''s speech to Nona, Barbara Meade To Nona Davis'' American eyes the young man seemed a typical Russian of General Alexis said a few words in Russian which the young soldier Nona was glad that both Mildred and Barbara were busy at the time, Sonya told of her own life and of Nona''s mother when they were little One afternoon, after Nona had been nursing her friend, Sonya Valesky, for some time, Mildred Thornton went alone into a little Russian church. "I am Nona Davis, an American Red Cross nurse on my way back to the Personally Barbara agreed with Eugenia and wished that Nona and Mildred So Nona''s attention wandered from Mildred to her other friend, Sonya On the same afternoon that Nona and Barbara read the news of Sonya except to sit either between Mildred and General Alexis, or Nona and her id = 33990 author = Vandercook, Margaret title = The Red Cross Girls with Pershing to Victory date = keywords = Bianca; Carlo; Charlotta; Clark; Cross; Dr.; Hersey; Major; Red; Sonya; american; german summary = Never were Sonya Clark and the six Red Cross nurses to forget this, In the car with Sonya the American girls had but little to say to one Afterwards Sonya and the Red Cross nurses discovered that the little The little room soon became crowded, not only with the Red Cross girls no more of the little deserted French girl until she and Bianca looked It was early morning when the Red Cross girls drove into the little But as usual Sonya Clark''s task was looking after the Red Cross nurses, old-fashioned bed in the American Red Cross hospital in Luxemburg. So it chanced that the group of Red Cross girls and the little Luxemburg The little countess desired one of Bianca''s cast-off Red Cross Besides, I do so want to go to the United States when Mrs. Clark and Bianca and several of her Red Cross nurses return home. id = 53730 author = Vandercook, Margaret title = The Red Cross Girls in Belgium date = keywords = Barbara; Belgium; Brussels; Cross; Dick; Eugenia; Mildred; Nona; Red; Thornton; german; girl summary = Running further forward, Barbara slipped her arm inside Eugenia''s. girls arrived in Brussels, Barbara had little to do except make Dick spoke in his old light-hearted fashion, although Barbara could see wanted to tell you, Barbara, but Nona felt it best not to. Barbara glanced toward Nona and then at Dick. On the same afternoon of Dick Thornton''s coming into Belgium Eugenia "We received our orders for work this afternoon, Eugenia dear," Barbara Eugenia had guessed correctly in thinking Barbara was tired. Dick Thornton had taken Barbara''s hand and was looking searchingly into Eugenia was waiting this time near the place where Barbara was compelled Eugenia took Barbara''s face between her beautiful, firm hands and gazed Then Barbara and Eugenia were interrupted by two persons coming toward "I have something I''d like to tell you, Barbara, before Nona and Mildred So it had been both Eugenia''s and Barbara''s fancy to go back for a time