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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 59022 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 case 3 body 2 patient 2 man 2 disease 2 blood 2 Dr. 1 yeast 1 tube 1 trachea 1 time 1 surgeon 1 stenosis 1 skin 1 pus 1 operation 1 nature 1 matter 1 larynx 1 laryngeal 1 knowledge 1 heart 1 great 1 foreign 1 forceps 1 footnote 1 fig 1 fermentation 1 esophagoscope 1 esophageal 1 direct 1 day 1 cow 1 child 1 chapter 1 chap 1 author 1 artery 1 animal 1 anatomy 1 Wound 1 Water 1 Vol 1 Vertebra 1 Tumours 1 Surgeon 1 States 1 Patient 1 Pasteur 1 Parts Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 841 case 838 body 755 part 686 blood 612 time 520 patient 429 disease 409 heart 394 day 377 tube 360 air 346 side 314 artery 309 fermentation 302 matter 287 man 278 cow 270 place 255 fact 253 yeast 252 year 250 hand 246 manner 246 end 243 point 241 vein 232 esophagus 227 way 227 life 223 operation 213 arm 206 other 201 child 199 use 197 smallpox 195 ferment 193 lung 192 nature 192 head 189 water 188 ventricle 184 pox 184 experiment 183 oxygen 181 animal 179 vessel 179 larynx 178 number 176 mean 175 kind Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 7943 _ 282 M. 218 Bone 180 Dr. 154 de 153 Wound 134 Bandage 133 Head 122 Fracture 115 FIG 108 forceps 108 Patient 106 Operation 106 Muscles 103 Surgeon 97 Mr. 94 Os 93 Water 91 Part 88 King 87 Band 85 Tumours 85 CHAP 84 . 81 Fig 80 Fingers 80 Dressing 80 Bones 76 Arm 75 pus 75 Vertebra 74 Parts 74 Oil 72 Bolster 67 Luxation 66 Tumour 65 Wine 65 Belly 63 Ibid 61 anesthesia 61 Matter 60 Breast 58 le 56 call''d 56 Spirit 56 Skull 56 Remedies 54 Hand 51 Paris 50 Hole Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3949 it 1437 i 1246 he 1196 they 1098 we 574 them 456 him 353 me 175 you 148 ''em 146 us 117 itself 100 she 88 themselves 78 himself 54 myself 36 one 26 her 14 ourselves 5 herself 2 yourself 2 ung 2 theirs 2 shou''d 2 ours 2 his 1 whereof 1 us''d 1 oblig''d 1 mine 1 em 1 discover''d Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 16344 be 3412 have 1074 make 778 do 747 take 473 see 413 find 396 give 372 say 341 appear 323 follow 297 produce 297 pass 281 use 264 become 261 go 257 show 255 draw 251 let 221 know 220 remove 210 require 206 come 202 form 192 lay 191 put 189 cause 185 bring 182 contain 181 leave 180 hold 178 keep 171 remain 166 cut 165 begin 159 die 159 apply 158 call 157 occur 156 observe 151 prevent 147 enter 146 feel 144 live 143 seem 138 insert 136 think 130 prove 130 place 129 happen Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1693 not 728 other 633 so 626 great 622 more 590 same 584 very 493 foreign 491 also 485 first 479 then 457 only 399 well 380 many 378 small 374 as 342 most 339 large 322 up 319 such 317 little 314 long 294 out 294 now 292 much 259 even 241 necessary 238 good 235 low 216 always 215 often 205 certain 202 less 201 thus 201 general 198 right 197 whole 193 left 190 usually 189 upper 177 however 173 never 168 present 168 again 166 still 166 sometimes 163 off 161 too 158 proper 155 few Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 87 least 68 good 61 most 34 great 19 high 18 small 14 large 13 manif 10 slight 10 safe 9 early 6 bad 6 Most 5 old 4 strong 3 wide 3 thick 3 lowermost 3 low 3 long 3 clear 2 young 2 wise 2 weak 2 simple 2 severe 2 pr 2 near 2 minute 2 hard 2 fair 2 eld 2 close 1 white 1 vague 1 unhealthy 1 trachealis 1 tiny 1 sure 1 strict 1 soft 1 short 1 rich 1 ready 1 noble 1 new 1 narrow 1 mean 1 loud 1 light Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 281 most 19 well 18 least 1 us''d 1 long 1 greatest 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 _ are not 5 _ is not 5 blood is incessantly 4 body does not 3 _ do not 3 _ is cur''d 3 _ is immediately 3 _ is readily 3 _ is usually 3 _ see _ 3 blood is not 3 disease is not 3 esophagus is usually 3 patient is unable 2 _ are _ 2 _ are tumours 2 _ are very 2 _ is call''d 2 _ is rarely 2 _ is so 2 air is more 2 air is only 2 arteries do not 2 arteries is nothing 2 artery is open''d 2 blood is diffus''d 2 blood is further 2 bodies are usually 2 body is large 2 body is transparent 2 body is usually 2 cases were not 2 disease did not 2 esophagus is readily 2 esophagus is relatively 2 fermentation is correlative 2 fermentation is not 2 fermentation was active 2 forceps are best 2 hands were several 2 man did not 2 parts are there 2 yeast does not 2 yeast is not 1 _ are altogether 1 _ are best 1 _ are bones 1 _ are commonly 1 _ are fortunately 1 _ are gross Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not generally 1 _ are not pairs 1 _ is no longer 1 _ is not commonly 1 _ is not especially 1 _ is not evident 1 _ is not only 1 arteries do not apparently 1 body does not often 1 body has not already 1 cases were not less 1 disease is not epidemic 1 esophagus are not horizontal 1 fermentation is no longer 1 fermentation is not due 1 fermentation is not merely 1 man came not again 1 matter does not entirely 1 patient makes no fight 1 patients have no pilots 1 place be not higher 1 yeast has no action A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 23769 author = Cox, Joseph Bradford title = Report on Surgery to the Santa Clara County Medical Society date = keywords = February; patient; pus summary = At the end of about a week the patient left the bed, and to subside, and at the end of about ten days I considered my patient the day, and in the evening, his knee, which had been somewhat painful for appearance of the patient, viz: a typhoid condition, feeble pulse, coated There was but very little pus discharged from this opening Since there was no local injury to the knee in this case which could have The patient did well; complained of but little pain; did not use opiates. ounces of blood was removed from the sinus, by aspiration. of the sinus, led me to conclude that the blood which was left and that Made an opening in the lower part of the pouch to the left of the opening the sinus freely, by an incision two inches long, which could not id = 19261 author = Jackson, Chevalier title = Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy A Manual of Peroral Endoscopy and Laryngeal Surgery date = keywords = Bronchoscopic; Clinic; ESOPHAGUS; Fig; Vol; author; body; case; chapter; child; direct; esophageal; esophagoscope; forceps; foreign; laryngeal; larynx; patient; stenosis; trachea; tube summary = foreign body work, the esophageal speculum shown at A and B, in Fig. 4, is of the greatest service. foreign-body work in the larynx, and for the removal of benign _Upper-lobe-bronchus Forceps_.--Foreign bodies rarely lodge in an Posterior forceps-spaces are often scanty in cases of foreign bodies for removing large, smooth foreign bodies from the esophagus.] distal tube-mouth to a foreign body or a growth while forceps are In recent cases fixed foreign bodies cause little cough; in their removal by bronchoscopy, the cases of prolonged foreign body hiding a foreign body should be removed with the aspirating tube (Fig. 9) rather than by swabbing or sponge-pumping, when the bronchoscopic The limitations of bronchoscopic removal of foreign bodies are usually it is no longer a case of foreign body in the esophagus. the author; and he has removed foreign bodies from patients over 80 Foreign Bodies in the Larynx, Trachea, Bronchi and Esophagus id = 34157 author = Le Clerc, M. (Charles Gabriel) title = The Compleat Surgeon or, the whole Art of Surgery explain''d in a most familiar Method. date = keywords = Arm; Bandage; Bolster; Bone; Dressing; Fingers; Fracture; Head; Muscles; Operation; Parts; Patient; Surgeon; Tumours; Vertebra; Water; Wound; blood; body; chap; skin summary = _Bones_, _Muscles_, _Tumours_, _Ulcers_, and _Wounds_ simple and They are Tumours, Impostumes, Wounds, Ulcers, Fractures, Dislocations, and the Upper-Jaw-Bone and being terminated in the Lower-Lip near the Corner of The Little-Finger hath two proper Muscles, _viz._ an _Extensor_ and an Bodies out of the Wound, let a Servant draw together its Sides or Lips; and It is a Wound of the Head complicated with a Fracture of the Skull-Bone. Ulcer hath not as yet laid open the Bone on the outside, the Trepan ought cut off, small Bolsters being laid under their ends; then the Wound is to of six Fingers, having a Hole in the middle to let in the Head: One of its If the Fracture were near the Head of the _Humerus_ or Arm-Bone, a sort of in like manner draws the Arm, to remove the Head of the Bone out of the id = 58460 author = Smith, Southwood title = Use of the Dead to the Living date = keywords = Edinburgh; anatomy; body; case; disease; knowledge; man; operation; surgeon summary = of affording Dead Bodies to the Schools of Anatomy, by Legislative The most important diseases have their seat in the organs of the body; extent to which anatomical knowledge is the means of saving human life. opening the body (for the man lived only ten days after Pelletan first means of which she performs all her operations in the bodies of animals, received by the pores, the body remains in its natural state: that, on world by the public dissection of two human bodies. lawful, in point of conscience, to dissect a dead body in order to learn felony, to dig up or remove a dead human body with intent to dissect operations must be performed, medical men must be educated, anatomy must anatomy, on receiving dead bodies from the hospitals, infirmaries, shall be allowed to gain knowledge by operating on the bodies of the id = 5694 author = Various title = The Harvard Classics Volume 38 Scientific Papers (Physiology, Medicine, Surgery, Geology) date = keywords = April; Aristotle; Dr.; Emperor; Galen; God; Guise; June; King; Liebig; London; March; Mr.; Paris; Pasteur; animal; artery; blood; case; cow; day; disease; fermentation; fig; footnote; great; heart; matter; nature; time; yeast summary = the great artery, appear springing from the heart. OF THE QUANTITY OF BLOOD PASSING THROUGH THE HEART FROM THE VEINS quantity of blood which the left ventricle of the heart will heart, for it is the only organ in the body which contains blood the human subject so like the cow-pox that, in many cases, it the great number of cases occurring in his practice, "The cause Fermentation soon takes place in them, and the carbonic acid gas first case, and 1 of yeast to 89 of fermented sugar in the the day when fermentation first appears in the production of a yeast sufficient to cause the first appearance of fermentation Fermentation by means of yeast appears, therefore, to be whilst in the other case the ferment consists of cells of yeast. and constitute their ferment, live without air or free oxygen; pure sugar, caused to ferment by means of yeast, contains none of id = 28322 author = Yandell, David Wendel title = Pioneer Surgery in Kentucky: A Sketch date = keywords = Brashear; Dr.; Dudley; Kentucky; States; man summary = achievements of Kentucky Pioneers in Surgery, I shall not attempt the It proved to be the first operation of the kind in the United States. operation in surgery came so near perfection that it would successfully the age of twenty he began the study of medicine, in Lexington, with Dr. Frederick Ridgely, a very cultivated physician and popular man, who had His father, Samuel McDowell, was a man of note and influence operated by the lateral method, and for many years used the gorget in and the patient lived, in good health, to be forty-nine years old. The only published report of McCreary''s case is from the pen of Dr. Johnson, in the New Orleans Medical and Surgical Journal for January, A younger man than either of those I have attempted to sketch, Dr. Benjamin Winslow Dudley, now came upon the stage. medical colleges--would practically cover Dr. Dudley''s career, and would