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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 69398 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 69 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 house 3 disease 2 work 2 illustration 2 chapter 2 Sanitary 2 Health 2 City 2 Authority 2 Act 1 water 1 tuberculosis 1 teacher 1 street 1 sidenote 1 school 1 sanitary 1 room 1 right 1 refuse 1 physician 1 physical 1 milk 1 man 1 law 1 hygiene 1 health 1 germ 1 food 1 find 1 eye 1 examination 1 condition 1 city 1 child 1 cell 1 cause 1 cart 1 body 1 american 1 York 1 Works 1 Whitechapel 1 Vestry 1 Vestries 1 United 1 States 1 St. 1 Parliament 1 Officer Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1252 house 1132 child 1027 health 1011 school 939 disease 657 work 612 condition 596 year 589 people 555 germ 534 time 482 body 475 person 473 water 452 room 438 law 412 man 407 part 401 authority 379 number 363 case 363 air 359 street 356 power 335 teacher 334 food 320 life 318 state 318 milk 317 place 316 district 316 day 315 city 309 class 307 death 295 population 295 eye 291 fact 285 way 282 evil 277 | 270 thing 264 sidenote 253 matter 251 tooth 246 community 240 result 236 effect 235 fever 230 metropolis Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1644 _ 1151 | 737 London 534 Health 465 Medical 442 Act 385 Officer 347 Board 303 St. 200 City 187 New 181 Parliament 169 York 154 Metropolitan 133 Vestries 132 Sanitary 124 Council 117 District 100 Authority 99 c. 99 Vestry 97 Officers 96 Dr. 95 Government 92 Committee 83 Boards 82 FIG 67 School 67 CHAPTER 65 Whitechapel 64 George 63 County 61 vol 58 health 57 Works 57 Local 56 Commissioners 54 Lambeth 54 Acts 52 Public 52 Mr. 50 England 48 Report 47 Lord 46 United 45 Westminster 45 Street 44 Commission 43 States 43 P.P. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3008 it 1319 they 796 we 789 you 785 them 712 he 451 i 177 themselves 153 us 139 him 136 she 122 itself 69 himself 65 me 51 one 37 her 25 ourselves 14 yourself 12 herself 4 myself 3 oneself 3 his 2 theirs 1 |10.1 1 yours 1 them:-- 1 them--"they 1 stores| 1 on''y 1 nervousness 1 iv 1 it:-- 1 destroyed:-- 1 described:-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14311 be 3467 have 1481 do 1046 make 575 give 564 take 402 find 376 get 367 see 337 use 324 know 296 keep 296 go 286 cause 286 become 278 live 265 show 265 carry 262 work 260 come 246 say 239 prevent 223 write 213 exist 198 put 190 follow 184 provide 184 call 181 require 179 pass 176 remove 172 leave 170 tell 167 increase 157 need 156 grow 154 allow 151 think 146 build 144 let 136 learn 135 enforce 134 kill 132 contain 130 teach 130 deal 129 eat 126 regard 125 bring 119 report Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2323 not 812 great 795 more 726 so 662 many 634 other 586 very 575 only 544 sanitary 509 such 496 well 452 most 427 out 417 as 411 public 383 much 380 physical 369 large 335 local 334 even 305 little 300 good 300 also 295 up 281 same 257 first 246 small 245 now 245 bad 236 too 232 thus 227 then 223 poor 217 long 211 certain 208 necessary 204 less 202 new 201 often 201 far 200 own 197 high 192 few 179 medical 175 never 175 just 175 clean 170 however 166 almost 165 sick Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 114 good 100 most 88 least 59 bad 57 great 40 high 22 Most 18 low 13 large 9 poor 8 near 7 strong 7 slight 6 foul 4 manif 4 grave 4 full 4 fine 4 early 3 |the 3 small 3 simple 3 late 3 easy 3 deep 3 deadly 3 common 2 |w 2 wide 2 safe 2 ready 2 mild 2 loud 2 long 2 loathsome 2 heavy 2 healthy 2 hard 2 gross 2 clear 2 cheap 1 z 1 true 1 stout 1 sore 1 slow 1 short 1 scanty 1 sad 1 rich Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 352 most 21 least 12 well 2 highest 1 worst 1 filed,--most Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org 1 gallica.bnf.fr Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/47308/47308-h/47308-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/47308/47308-h.zip 1 http://gallica.bnf.fr 1 http://archive.org/details/sanitaryevolutio00jeph 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 _ doing things 9 _ getting things 7 disease is not 6 people do not 5 act did not 5 | found | 4 _ doing _ 4 houses are so 4 law is as 3 _ do not 3 _ do things 3 germs do not 3 people living therein 3 time went on 3 water is essential 3 years went on 2 _ get things 2 child is often 2 children are no 2 children do not 2 children have tuberculosis 2 disease do not 2 disease does not 2 germs are not 2 germs are so 2 health are not 2 house is so 2 houses are not 2 law does not 2 london was thus 2 people are all 2 people did not 2 room is perfectly 2 water does not 2 water was not 2 work is not 2 work making antitoxin 2 work was also 2 | do n''t 1 _ are specially 1 _ becomes | 1 _ comes through 1 _ do up 1 _ give up 1 _ has always 1 _ has here 1 _ has heretofore 1 _ is easy 1 _ is no 1 _ knowing _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 children are no less 1 _ is no longer 1 act had no adequate 1 act were not properly 1 air is not only 1 conditions are not readily 1 disease is not altogether 1 disease is not only 1 disease is not so 1 disease made no further 1 germs are not disease 1 germs is no longer 1 health had no power 1 health is no reason 1 health were not so 1 houses had no supply 1 houses have no yards 1 law was not compulsory 1 persons are not clean 1 persons had no supply 1 room does no good 1 room is not more 1 room was not more 1 school has not yet 1 school is not only 1 time is not far 1 water is not always 1 work is not good 1 year was not much A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 21353 author = Allen, William H. (WIlliam Harvey) title = Civics and Health date = keywords = Bureau; Children; City; Dr.; M.D.; New; States; United; York; american; chapter; child; condition; disease; examination; eye; find; health; hygiene; illustration; law; man; milk; physical; physician; right; school; teacher; tuberculosis; work summary = medical examination of all school children takes the place of a private THE BEST INDEX TO COMMUNITY HEALTH IS THE PHYSICAL WELFARE OF SCHOOL City, is the physical condition of the school child. dangers is the physical examination of children at school,--private, by the New York board of health on 150 children in one school made up the school board of New York City that teachers make this first test school or health authorities should examine the teeth of all children total time required to examine school children for teeth needing Physically examine school children by all means, but do not fail to 1. School conditions that injure child health also injure teacher remedial_ work necessary for the health of public school children but If health needs of school children were Committee on Physical Welfare of School Children, New York, 39-41, 166, Committee on Physical Welfare of School Children, New York, 39-41, 166, id = 54454 author = Boulnois, H. Percy (Henry Percy) title = Dirty Dustbins and Sloppy Streets A Practical Treatise on the Scavenging and Cleansing of Cities and Towns date = keywords = Act; Authority; Health; Sanitary; cart; house; refuse; street summary = towns on the question of disposal of house refuse--Condemnation scavenging or the removal of house refuse, and also that of street snow, (12) The watering of streets, and (13) The cost of all such removal of house refuse and the cleansing of earth closets, house refuse and the cleansing of streets. street sweeping and cleansing, the removal of snow, and a short The effective watering of streets and roads in any town during the water must be spread upon the streets every dry day, the cost of streets and roads of our towns is that of carrying the water in collection of house refuse and cleansing the streets should be it is found that the cost of removing the house refuse and and removal of the house refuse and cleanse the streets with their the work of collection of house refuse and the cleansing of house refuse and cleansing and watering streets in fourteen large id = 47308 author = Jephson, Henry (Henry Lorenzo) title = The Sanitary Evolution of London date = keywords = Act; Acts; Authority; Board; City; Commissioners; Committee; Council; County; District; George; Government; Health; Lambeth; London; Medical; Metropolitan; Officer; Parliament; Sanitary; St.; Vestries; Vestry; Whitechapel; Works; house summary = regarded the public health and sanitary condition of the people. putting into operation the provisions of this Act. The occasional statement in the report of a Medical Officer of Health But the great fact that in the vital matter of the public health London provisions of the Metropolitan London Management Act. One of the Medical Officers of Health gives an illustration:-Its Medical Officer of Health reported in 1867 that nearly 5,000 houses by "local authority"--Vestry and District Board--and nearly ten years legislation for London," wrote the Medical Officer of Health for St. James'' in 1872, "that the metropolis has not been regarded as a whole, condition of the housing of the people of London, and yet something not Health (London) Act of 1891 made the sanitary authorities primarily Sanitary Authorities, and the reports of the Medical Officers of Health well the existing condition of the housing of the people of London. id = 12036 author = Richardson, Benjamin Ward title = Hygeia, a City of Health date = keywords = city; disease; house; room; sanitary; water; work summary = town or large village than a city for my description; but as the great The population of the city may be placed at 100,000, living in 20,000 The acreage of our model city allows room for three wide main streets From the circumstance that the houses of our model city are based on of the house, those which form the walls of the rooms, are glazed in our model city, and all the kitchen offices, are immediately beneath these garden roofs; are, in fact, in the upper floor of the house only live connected, have both died out in our model city. Passing along the main streets of the city we see in twenty places, The medical officers attached to the hospital in our model city are to other houses in the city. The slaughter-houses of the city are all public, and are separated I infer, then, that in our model city certain forms of disease would id = 53974 author = Tuttle, Thomas Dyer title = Principles of Public Health A Simple Text Book on Hygiene, Presenting the Principles Fundamental to the Conservation of Individual and Community Health date = keywords = FIG; body; cause; cell; chapter; disease; food; germ; illustration; sidenote summary = there are a great many things beside germs that cause our bodies to [Sidenote: How disease germs get into milk:] [Sidenote: Different germs cause different diseases] If we kill all the germs that come from people sick with a certain to destroy the germs of disease as they come from sick people. Disease germs get into our bodies in three principal ways: they are [Sidenote: How we may keep disease germs out of the air:] [Sidenote: How we may keep disease germs out of the air:] [Sidenote: How germs may cause sickness without entering the body] Some germs that cause disease do not get into the body, but grow people still have in their bodies the germs that cause the disease, We know that typhoid fever germs get into the body with food, but This disease, like typhoid fever, is caused by a germ that leaves