| 1. GUIDED TOUR
A basic 10 minute guided tour that shows the major features of the database is available. Please CLICK here for more. 2. INTRODUCTION 2.2 UNDERSTANDING THE STRUCTURE OF THE DATABASE There are three basic ways to use the database.
The Search tools are divided into four separate categories, all of which search the texts in the database and return documents:
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| 2.4 BROWSE TABLE NAVIGATION BAR
Browse Table
Find
2.5 NOTES ON MARK-UP CONVENTIONS Materials in the database have been transcribed using original spellings and grammar. In some documents spelling is inconsistent, even within a sentence. For more information on mark-up conventions, contact the editor@alexanderstreet.com PhiloLogic, a suite of software developed by the ARTFL Project at the University of Chicago in collaboration with The University of Chicago Library's Electronic Text Services, provides sophisticated searching of a wide variety of large encoded databases on the World Wide Web. It is an easy to use, yet powerful, full-text search, retrieval, and reporting system for large multimedia databases (texts, images, sound) with the ability to handle complex text structures with extensive indexed metadata. PhiloLogic in its simplest form serves as a document retrieval or look up mechanism whereby users can search a relational database to retrieve given documents and, in some implementations, portions of texts such as acts, scenes, articles, or head-words. This same document retrieval mechanism serves as the basis for defining a corpus in a full-text search. One can, for example, either retrieve all documents in a database written by women from 1935 through 1945 or one can search for words or phrases within database which fit those criteria. The typical PhiloLogic search is broken down into five distinct stages: 1) defining a corpus (i.e. limiting a search), 2) word expansion, 3) word index searching, 4) text extraction, and 5) link resolution and formatting (e.g., SGML to HTML conversion). In other words, after defining a corpus (or one may search an entire database), one can execute a single term, phrase or proximity search. By looking up indices of the word(s) in a relational database, PhiloLogic extracts blocks of text containing the search term(s) with links to larger blocks of text. These extracts are formatted to display on a Web browser and sometimes include links to images, sound recordings, other texts, or even other databases. In addition to simple word and phrase searches, users can perform more sophisticated searches by using extended UNIX-style regular expressions for complex wildcard searching and, in some implementations, morphological and orthographic expansion. All of these mechanisms to expand words can be combined using Boolean operators such as OR (the vertical bar "|") and AND (a space) within a variety of searching contexts. Its functions were originally designed for scholarly research in databases of literary, religious, philosophical, and historical collections of texts as well as important historical encyclopedias and dictionaries. PhiloLogic handles notes so as not to interfere with phrase searching. Users can easily search words with diacritics (either by specifying accents or ignoring them by typing in uppercase) and non-Romanized scripts. At present there are some fifty databases on the Web under PhiloLogic containing languages such as ancient Greek, Latin, Hindi, and Urdu as well as nearly all Western European languages. PhiloLogic can also be set up to recognize or ignore manuscript notations such as different brackets, which can indicate spurious text or editorial emendations. Because the software recognizes typical text structures as real data objects, it understands units, such as words, sentences, paragraphs, sections, and pages, permitting very flexible searching and retrieval of these textual objects. Other full-text engines on the market search for strings of characters. Rather than searching for two words within the same sentence or paragraph (intellectual units), other engines must search for two words within a certain number of characters regardless of sentence or paragraph. With PhiloLogic scholars always know where they are in a given text since pagination can be displayed along side other objects. Such a high degree of indexing can lead to decreases in speed, PhiloLogic indexing has been maximized such that it is still incredibly fast on the Web. For more information on PhiloLogic, contact Catherine Mardikes, ETS Coordinator, The University of Chicago Library. |
| 3. FIND AUTHOR AND FIND SOURCES
3.1 FIND SOURCES The Find Sources tool lets you find all the original works in the database that match your specific criteria. For example, you can find out all the sources published by the Pennsylvania Historical Society or see whether a particular edition is included. Practical Example:
Note: For a detailed discussion of the fields in Find Sources see the section on Fields and their Descriptions below. 3.2 FIND AUTHORS The Find Authors tool lets you find authors in the database that match your specific criteria. For example, you can find all the authors in the database that were born between 1850 and 1870. Practical Example:
Note: For a detailed discussion of the fields in Find Authors see the section onFields and their Descriptions below. |
| 4. SEARCHING
4.1 SEARCH OVERVIEW There are two basic kinds of searching in the database.
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| 4.2 FULL-TEXT SEARCHING
4.2.1 Full-Text Searching Full-Text Searching is when you search for specific words or phrases that occur in the texts themselves. PhiloLogic supports wildcard characters and Boolean (logical) operators, which are modeled on UNIX regular expressions to perform "pattern matching" in full-text searching. Pattern matching allows identification of a large number of words corresponding to a defined pattern. Wildcard characters can be useful, for example, in identifying cognates made obscure by affixes and vowel weakening, inconsistencies due to irregular orthography, and variations on account of word inflection as well as for discovering potential emendations for uncertain readings. The most commonly used regular expression operators (wildcard and Boolean) are listed below. 4.2.2 Wildcard Characters in Full-Text Searching
Note: If you are using wildcard characters and would like to see a full list of the words matching your search-term, then run your search as a Frequency by Author search. The results page of a Frequency by Author search lists all the terms found in a database that match your search-term. 4.2.3 Wildcards and Boolean Operators in Full-Text Searching
4.2.4 Punctuation and Full-Text Searching
4.2.5 Selecting a Search Option PhiloLogic at this time offers two kinds of searches: "Single Term and Phrase Search," which is set up as the default, and "Proximity Searching in the Same Sentence or Paragraph." One may select and deselect a search option by clicking on the "radio" buttons. For a fuller discussion see the PhiloLogic User Manual |
| 4.3 FIELD SEARCHING
4.3.1 Searching in Specific Fields When entering search terms in bibliographic fields, as opposed to the full text search box, use the following Boolean operators: uppercase AND, OR, and NOT. One can use a NOT operator by itself (e.g., in the Type field enter: NOT editorial). It must be the first term in the box with no spaces preceding and it cannot be used with other Boolean operators 4.3.2 Advanced Field Searching with Regular Expression Operators As in full text searching, one can use regular expression operators for more specialized searching. The caret sign (^) at the beginning of a word anchors the match at the beginning of the entry (e.g., ^child will find the personal event "Childbirth," but not "Adoption of Child). One can also use the verticle line (|) as a Boolean operator OR. With this operator one can exclude two terms from one's search (e.g., NOT adams|burr). 4.3.3 Punctuation and Spacing in Fielded Searching When entering terms, punctuation and spacing must match exactly that in the fields. The following marks of punctuation produce a "Nothing found" message: ampersand (&), parentheses, question mark, and double quotes (""). If necessary for searching, replace the mark of punctuation with a period, which stand for any single character. |
| 5. FIELDS AND THEIR DESCRIPTIONS |
| Find | Search | ||||||
| Field Name | Sources | Authors | Simple | Diaries | Letters | Advanced | |
| 1 | Age at First Childbirth: (e.g., 22 or 12-20) | x | x | ||||
| 2 | Age at Marriage: (e.g., 15 or 12-16) | x | x | ||||
| 3 | Age When Writing: (e.g., 19 or 15-20) | x | x | x | |||
| 4 | All Author Forms: (e.g., Frost, Mrs. William) | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| 5 | Author: (e.g., Burr, Esther) | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| 6 | Day of Month (e.g. 1 or 2-12) | x | |||||
| 7 | Document Type | x | x | ||||
| 8 | Editor or Translator: (e.g., Gilman, Caroline) | x | |||||
| 9 | Historical Events: (e.g., Civil War) | x | x | x | |||
| 10 | Marital Status (When Writing): | x | x | x | |||
| 11 | Maternal Status (When Writing): | x | x | x | |||
| 12 | Month Written: (e.g., 1 or 1-5) | x | x | x | |||
| 13 | Nationality: (e.g., American) | x | x | ||||
| 14 | Notes: (e.g., single woman) | x | |||||
| 15 | Number of Children: (e.g., 10 or 5-13) | x | x | ||||
| 16 | Number of Marriages: (e.g., 0 or 1-3) | x | x | ||||
| 17 | Occupation: (e.g., Teacher) | x | x | x | x | ||
| 18 | Personal Events: (e.g. Death of spouse) | x | x | x | |||
| 19 | Place of Birth: (e.g., Woodstock | x | |||||
| 20 | Place of Death: (e.g., Illinois) | x | |||||
| 21 | Previously Unpublished (e.g. Yes or No) | x | |||||
| 22 | Publisher: (e.g., Columbia Historical Society) | x | |||||
| 23 | Race: (e.g., White) | x | x | x | x | ||
| 24 | Recipient: (e.g., Adams, John) | x | |||||
| 25 | Recipient's Gender: | x | |||||
| 26 | Record Number: (e.g., S117-D003) | x | x | x | |||
| 27 | Relationship to Author: (e.g., Spouse) | x | |||||
| 28 | Religion: (e.g., Quaker) | x | x | x | x | ||
| 29 | Source Type: (e.g., Diary) | x | |||||
| 30 | Subject Headings: (e.g., Church attendance) | x | x | x | x | ||
| 31 | Subject Headings (Source): (e.g., Pioneer life) | x | |||||
| 32 | Title (Source): (e.g., Pioneer Trek from Ohio) | x | |||||
| 33 | Where Sent (Geographical): (e.g., Philadelphia) | x | |||||
| 34 | Where Sent (Region):(e.g., Mid-Atlantic States) | x | |||||
| 35 | Where Written (Geographical): (e.g., Evanston) | x | x | x | |||
| 36 | Where Written (Region): (e.g., Midwest) | x | x | x | |||
| 37 | Where Written (Setting): (e.g., Military camps) | x | x | x | |||
| 38 | Year of Birth: (e.g., 1790) | x | |||||
| 39 | Year of Death: (e.g., 1834) | x | |||||
| 40 | Year of Publication (Source): (e.g., 1921) | x | |||||
| 41 | Year Written: (e.g., 1865 or 1861-1865) | x | x | x | x | ||
| 5.2 FIELD DESCRIPTIONS WITH SAMPLE SEARCHES
Description: This is the age of a woman when she first delivered a child, whether or not the child survived. It is optional. How to use this field: Key in the age or range of ages in the box Age at First Childbirth. For example, 15 or 40-50. Practical Example:
Description: This is the age when a woman got married for the first time. It is optional. This field can be searched using Advanced Search and Find Authors only. How to use this field: Key in the age or range of ages in the box Age at Marriage. For example, 10-15. Practical Example: See Age at First Childbirth. Note: To search for occurrences of letters or diaries where the woman was never married, or where we have been unable to determine the age, key in 9999 in the field Box. |
| 5.2.3 Age When Writing
Description: This field is the age in years of the author when a document was written. How to use this field: Use this field when you want to restrict a search to materials written by women of at a particular time in their lives. It is particularly useful for examining changing perspectives over time, to explore differences in the vocabulary and preoccupations of the young and the old. Practical Example:
Note: To search for occurrences of letters or diaries where the woman's age is not known, key in 9999 in the field Box. Description: This field includes all forms of the authors' names. It includes variant names, such as maiden name, professional penname, aliases, other married names and nicknames. The same official form of the name is used for display for all occurrences of that name, regardless of the form the author used at the time of writing. How to use this field: Use this field from Find Authors. If you want to see whether an author is included in the database, you should click on the Terms button ajacent to the All Author Forms field. Practical Example:
Description: This is the name of the author of a letter or diary entry. It includes variant names, such as maiden name, professional penname, aliases, other married names and nicknames. The same official form of the name is used for display for all occurrences of that name, regardless of the form the author used at the time of writing. How to use this field: Use this field when you want to analyze word usage or materials by a single author or authors. If you want to see whether an author is included in the database you should click on the Table of Contents: Authors entry on the navigation bar. Names are entered surname, first name, initial. This is a mandatory field. Practical Example:
Description: This contains the day of a month in numerals. It is only used for letters. It is optional. How to use this field: The main use of this field is to determine what was written on a specific day or days. It should be used with caution, because the field can only be used with letters (see note below). Do not key in anything other than numerals into this field. Practical Example:
Note: This field is only available for letters because the diary entries are considered as months. So the most specific searching possible for diaries is by month. |
| 5.2.7 Document Type
Description: This field details the type of document. Every item in the database has been categorized as Letter, Diary, or Editorial. Editorial matter includes prefatory matter from the original sources, appendices and other commentary. How to use this field: This field can be used to restrict a search to include Editorial matter, restrict a search to exclude Editorial matter or restrict a search to letters and diaries only. Practical Example:
Description: This field describes the compiler, editor, translator or author of the source title. The name is entered surname, first name, followed by a comma, and the abbreviation of the function filled (i.e. ed., comp., tr., introd., notes) if not the author. How to use this field: This field is only available in the Find Sources section of the database. It allows users to find works translated or edited by specific individuals. Practical Example:
Description: This field allows you to search the controlled vocabulary of Historical Events. It is a controlled field with a special vocabulary. To see a list of terms go to the Historical Events Table of Contents. How to use this field: This field can be used to restrict a search to a specific historical event or events. If you want to browse a list of all entries in this field, go to the Browse Table navigation bar. Practical Example:
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| 5.2.10 Marital Status When Writing
Description: This field indicates whether a woman was married or single when she was writing. How to use this field: Use this field when you want to restrict a search to materials written by married women or single women. Practical Example:
5.2.11 Maternal Status When Writing Description: This field indicates whether a woman was a mother at time of writing. How to use this field: Use this field when you want to restrict a search to materials written by mothers. Practical Example:
Note: Possible maternal status types are: Mother; Childless; not indicated. Description: This field enables you to view all letters or diaries written within a particular month. How to use this field: Use this field when you want to restrict your searches to all letters or diary entries sent in a particular month or group of months. Practical Example:
Note: To locate materials where we have been unable to determine the month written, enter 9999 in the Month Written field. |
| 5.2.13 Nationality
Description: This field enables you to find materials written by individuals of a particular nationality. This field is primarily "American" or "Canadian". How to use this field: Use this field when you want to restrict your searches to all materials written by women of a particular nationality. Practical Example:
Note: This field is primarily "American" or "Canadian". Occasionally authors may be citizens or subjects of another country and still qualify for inclusion in the database. For example, English women who are wives of Royal governors who qualify for inclusion by the length of their residence. Description: Many records within the source database have annotations. This field enables you to perform keyword searches of these annotations. This field can only be accessed through the Find Sources section of the database. How to use this field: Use this field to find sources based on keywords for concepts not indexed in the Subject heading field. Practical Example:
Description: This field is the number of children surviving childbirth or ever adopted. How to use this field: Use this field when you want to restrict your searches to materials where the writer has a certain size family. Practical Example:
Note: Use 0 to find women who were never pregnant, who had only miscarriages or abortions, or who never adopted children. |
| 5.2.16 Number of Marriages
Description: This field is the number of times a woman was married during her life. How to use this field: Use this field to find women married more than once. Practical Example:
Note: Enter 0 in this field to find women who were never married or 9999 for occurrences where we have been unable to determine the status. Description: This field describes the author's occupation, if any. It is an Optional field. How to use this field: Use this field to find documents written by a woman in a particular occupation - for example, all Teachers. Note: All occupations throughout a woman's life are entered. This is not tied to when a woman is writing. An individual may have several occupations through their life. Practical Example:
To see what Occupation terms are available click the Terms button. Copy terms that you want and paste them into the box. Be careful to delete any semicolons and replace them with the appropriate Boolean operator. Description: This is a controlled field that describes key events in a woman's life. How to use this field: For a full list of all terms used in the database you can either go to the Browse Table: Personal Events or you can click on the Terms button adjacent to the field. Use this field to restrict your search to documents pertaining to a key event, such as childbirth or the death of a spouse. Practical Example:
Description: This field describes the location of the author's birth, if known. It is used only in the Find Author section of the database. It is an Optional field. How to use this field: Use this field to find women born in a particular place or region. Note: Use "Not indicated" to find occurrences where we have been unable to determine the place of birth. Practical Example:
To see what Place of Birth terms are available click the Terms button. Copy terms that you want and paste them into the box. Be careful to delete any semicolons and replace them with the appropriate Boolean operator. |
| 5.2.20 Place of Death
Description: This field describes the location of the author's death, if known. It is used only in the Find Author section of the database. It is an Optional field. How to use this field: Use this field to find women who died in a particular place or region. Note: Use "Not indicated" to find occurrences where we have been unable to determine the place of death. Practical Example:
To see what Place of Death terms are available click the Terms button. Copy terms that you want and paste them into the box. Be careful to delete any semicolons and replace them with the appropriate Boolean operator. Description: This field indicates whether or not the source work has been published or not before appearing in the database. How to use this field: Use this field to find manuscript materials that have not been published before. It is only available in the Find Sources tool. Practical Example:
Description: This field indicates the name of the publisher of the source work. It is used only in the Find Sources section of the database. How to use this field: Use this field to find all source works by particular publisher. Practical Example:
Note: Publisher names are standardized and may vary from the form of the name that appears on the source's title page. |
| 5.2.23 Race
Description: This field indicates whether the authors was White, Black, Asian, American Indian or Hispanic or not indicated. How to use this field: Use this field to find all documents written by authors from a particular race or races. Practical Example: Find me all letters written by Black women to men.
Note: If you enter "Not Indicated" the database will respond with all documents where the race of the author is unknown. Description: This is the name of the person to whom a letter is addressed. How to use this field: This field is only available in the Search Letters section of the database. Practical Example: Find letters written to Cadwallader Colden.
Note: Names are entered surname, first name, initial. Description: This is the gender of the person to whom a letter is addressed. How to use this field: This field is only available in the Search Letters section of the database. It is useful for analyzing differences in vocabulary in letters addressed to men as opposed to fellow women. Practical Example:
Note: The gender of the recipient may be known even if the recipient name is not known. |
| 5.2.26 Record Number
Description: This is the mandatory, unique identifier for each document in the database. It consists of the source work identifier and the individual document number, in the form: S1-D001. How to use this field: This field allows you to go quickly to a specific entry in the entire database. Type in the document number exactly as it appears; the field is case sensitive. Description: This describes the relationship between the recipient and the author of a letter. It primarily describes family and romantic relationships; all other relationships are listed as Other. How to use this field: This field is only available in the Search Letters section of the database. It is useful for analyzing differences in vocabulary in letters addressed to variant groups of relationships, e.g., siblings or parents. Practical Example:
Note: The relationship of the recipient may be known even if the recipient name is not. Description: This describes the religious background or beliefs of the author. How to use this field: This field can be used to analyze the vocabulary, behavior and experiences of women with particular religious beliefs. Practical example:
Note: Terms in this field are standardized in an authority file. "Not Indicated" is used when we have been unable to ascertain the religion. "Christian" is used where a specific denomination is not known. |
| Description: This field details the type of source. How to use this field: This field can be used from Find Sources only to restrict a search to a type of source. Practical Example:
Description: This is a composite field consisting of all terms in the Name Subject field, Organization Subject field, Title as Subject field, Topical Subject field, Broad Subject field, Historical Event subject field, and Geographic Subject field. How to use this field: This field can be used to find a wide range of materials, including specific places, people, works of literature, and historical events. Practical example: Find materials that discuss Shakespeare and his works.
Practical example: Find all materials pertaining to Boston. Click on the navigation bar to Search Texts. Click on the navigation bar to get to Simple Search. Key in Boston into the Subject Headings box. Click on the SEARCH button. The system responds with a list of all occurrences. Practical example: Find all materials pertaining to the Bible.
Practical example: Find all materials about the Battle of Stono Ferry.
To see what Subject terms are available click the Terms button. Copy terms that you want and paste them into the box. Be careful to delete any semicolons and replace them with the appropriate Boolean operator. 5.2.31 Subject Headings (Source) Description: This field includes subject headings for sources. How to use this field: Use this field from the Find Sources form to search for sources by subject headings. Practical example: Find sources that deal with Domestic matters.
Description: Use this field to find sources by title. It is used only in the Find Sources section of the database. It is a mandatory field. How to use this field: Use this field to find sources with specific words in the title. Practical Example:
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| 5.2.34 Where Sent (Region)
5.2.35 Where Written (Geographical) Description: This field is used to identify the location where letters or diaries were written. The names are standardized in an authority file. Generally specific localities will be used (e.g., Boston, MA, but there may also be state or regional locations used. State abbreviations for cities and towns conform to the modern postal abbreviations. How to use this field: Use this field when you want to restrict your searches to materials written from a particular place. Practical Examples
Find me letters sent from the East Coast in 1849.
To see what Geographical terms are available click the Terms buttons. Copy terms that you want and paste them into the box. Be careful to delete any semicolons and replace them with the appropriate Boolean operator. Note: In the case of a diary where the location changes over a month, the where written at the beginning of the month is described. Description: This field is used to identify the region where letters or diaries were written. The names are standardized in an authority file, with cross references from other forms of name. All Geographic terms in the database are standardized. Note: Regional terms are restricted to the United States and Canada and have been selected based on contemporary (2001) breakdowns (e.g., West (U.S.) refers to California, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington). Most locations are assigned to two or three regions, based on the state (i.e., all cities in the same state will be assigned to the same regions). Regions assigned to a state are not hierarchical. In the case of a diary where the location changes over a month, the where written regional at the beginning of the month is described. The terms are standardized in an authority list. How to use this field: Use this field when you want to restrict your searches to materials, written from a particular place. Practical Examples
To see what Geographical terms are available click the Terms button. Copy terms that you want and paste them into the box. Be careful to delete any semicolons and replace them with the appropriate Boolean operator. |
| 5.2.37 Where Written (Setting)
Description: This field describes the place the author is writing from (i.e., city, town, farm, shipboard, etc.). How to use this field: Use this field when you want to restrict your searches to all letters or diary entries written in a particular kind of place - e.g. shipboard. Practical Example:
Description: This field describes the year of the author's birth, if known. It is used only in the Find Author section of the database. It is an Optional field. How to use this field: Use this field to find women born in a particular year or period. Note: Use 9999 to find occurrences where we have been unable to determine the year of birth. Practical Example:
Description: This field describes the year of the author's death, if known. It is used only in the Find Author section of the database. It is an Optional field. How to use this field: Use this field to find women who died in a particular year or period. Note: To search for occurrences where we could not ascertain the year of death, key in 9999. Practical Example:
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| 5.2.40 Year of Publication (Source)
Description: This field describes the year of the source's publication. It is used only in the Find Sources section of the database. It is an Optional field. How to use this field: Use this field to find sources that were published in a particular year or period. Practical Example:
Description: This field describes the year in which the letter or diary was written. How to use this field: Use this field when you want to restrict your searches to all letters or diary entries written in a particular year or range of years. Practical Example: |
| 6. RESULTS
6.1 OCCURRENCES WITH CONTEXT/CONTEXT DISPLAY Occurrences with Context Display is the default results format option. This report indicates the number of texts searched, the search term(s) entered in a defined corpus, and the total number of occurrences found. (The number of occurrences displays at the top of the report if PhiloLogic has detected the number before generating the first 25 occurrences. If not, the total number of occurrences displays at the bottom of the report.) Following this general information is a list of occurrences. Each occurrence is represented by a short citation consisting of abbreviations for the author's name and the title of the work with a reference to where the term(s) in question occur within the document. (Full entries for the short citations are listed in the Results Bibliography at the bottom of the report.) Along side the citation is listed several levels of context, shown in blue in the example below (links to the table of contents and occurrences have been disabled). 1. Winslow, Harriet Wadsworth Lathrop. "Diary of Harriet Wadsworth Winslow, August, 1814" [Page 29 | Paragraph | Section | Document] cordial welcome." 21. --When I reflect on the multitudes of my fellow-creatures who are perishing for lack of vision, and that I am living at ease, without aiding in the promulgation of the Gospel, I am almost ready to wish myself a man, that I might spend my life with the poor heathen. But I check the thought, and would not alter one plan of Infinite wisdom. I could, however, cheerfully endure pain and hardship for them, and for my dear Redeemer. Has he not given his life for multitudes now perishing, as well as for my soul? And Oh, how basely ungrateful and selfish in
Below the short citation there is a passage of text consisting of some forty words on either side of the key word, which is highlighted. PhiloLogic, however, displays as much text as needed to capture all words in a multi-term search and all search words are highlighted. The reference listed with the short citation is linked to the text. If clicking on the page number, one retrieves the full page with key words still highlighted. The same is true for paragraph and the three other levels of hierarchy. Links to the previous and next page, paragraph or levels respectively, if they exist, are provided. Note: Remember that, when searching for two or more terms within the same paragraph, the context display expands the amount of text displayed to include all of the search terms in the paragraph. At times the text displayed in a proximity search to accommodate all the search terms may be several screens in length since some paragraph divisions in documents in some databases are very far apart. In cases where a search finds more than 25 occurrences, PhiloLogic provides the first 25 occurrences with links at the bottom of the report to the remaining occurrences of the search in sets of one hundred. One may also retrieve a full list of occurrences which can be useful for down-loading or printing, but which may take some time to retrieve. Note: when results number over hundreds or thousands of occurrences, the report may not be complete when first starting to view results. In this case, one sees the message "The search is still in progress. 908 occurrences have been generated so far. (please follow the link(s) below to check on the progress) ". The server continues to append results until it has completed the entire report and, by clicking on any of the sets of one hundred, one can retrieve the full report. |
| 6.2 LINE-BY-LINE DISPLAY
The Line-by-Line display indicates the number of texts searched, the search term(s) entered in a defined corpus, and the total number of occurrences found. (The number of occurrences displays at the top of the report if PhiloLogic has detected the number before generating the first 25 occurrences. If not, the total number of occurrences displays at the bottom of the report.) Following this general information is a list of occurrences. Each occurrence is represented by a short citation consisting of abbreviations for the author's name and the title of the work with a reference to where the term(s) in question occur within the document. References (E.g. Bayley:D1266-14) are a concatenation of an Author abbreviation, the document identifier within the database, and the Page Number. The report is followed by the Results Bibliography, wherein you can find a full citation for the References in the report. Here is an example of the Line-by-Line display (links to the table of contents and occurrences have been disabled). Bibliographic criteria: doctype=diary Searching 1333 documents for scrup.*. Your search found 6 occurrences Context Display Sorted byAuthor Sorted by Source 1.
Morris:D43-3
(p.27)re.
Jan. 31st, 1777 The scruples of my own mind being satisfied A Line-by-Line Display differs from a Context Report in that it limits the text displayed to only a single line of text. The search term, which is highlighted, is centered in the line so that a user can quickly scan the results. At the bottom of the report one finds the Results Bibliography, which lists the full references for the short citations above. Unlike the Context report, a Line-by-Line Display only offers one level of linked context. The user may toggle from the Line-by-Line Display to a Context Report or to the results sorted by Author and Sorted by Source. In cases where a search finds more than 25 occurrences, PhiloLogic provides the first 25 occurrences with links at the bottom of the report to the remaining occurrences of the search in sets of one hundred. One may also retrieve a full list of occurrences which can be useful for down-loading or printing, but which may take some time to retrieve. Note: when results number over hundreds or thousands of occurrences, the report may not be complete when first starting to view results. In this case, one sees the message "The search is still in progress. [908] occurrences have been generated so far. (please follow the link(s) below to check on the progress) ". The server continues to append results until it has completed the entire report and, by clicking on any of the sets of one hundred, one can retrieve the full report. Note: When executing a "Proximity Search," especially with paragraph set as the searching parameter, it is best to avoid the Line-by-line format since all search terms are not likely to be in the single line of text displayed. The term that is located first in the paragraph is the one that is centered in the single line of text. Using the Context results format ensures that all terms are included in the display even if the paragraph should happen to run for several pages. One can switch from a Line-by-line format to a Context Report format at any time while viewing results and switch back. PhiloLogic takes the user to the same set of results being viewed at the time of the switch. |
| 6.3 SORTING RESULTS BY AUTHOR
Results can be sorted using a Sorted by Author report. This report indicates how many times a work occurred in documents by a particular author. To do this choose Frequency by Author at the bottom of the Letter, Diary or Advanced Search screens, or select Sort by Author from the Context or Line by Line display. A Sorted by Author report indicates the bibliographic criteria entered, the number of documents searched, the search term(s) entered, the number of unique forms derived from the search term(s) within the database, a list of those unique forms, and the total number of occurrences found in the defined corpus. Following this information, the report indicates the number of occurrences by author in descending order of frequency with individual titles listed with a link to the digital table of contents for each title and a link to the occurrences found within that title. This report also shows what terms within a database one's search criteria are searching (for example, one can discover that entering the search term school.* in the database searches for all these unique terms above). See below for an example (links to the table of contents and occurrences have been disabled). Bibliographic criteria: doctype=diary Searching 1333 documents for convalesc.*. Number of Unique Forms: 5 Search Terms: convalescence | convalescent | convalescents | convalescing | Convalescent Your search found 10 occurrences. Frequency by Author in descending numeric order: 1. Gibbons, Abigail Hopper, 1801-1893: 8 Any definable corpus or search can be used in generating this report. Unlike Context Display and Line-by-line reports, this report does not display text, only frequency statistics with links to occurrences displayed in Context display format. Note: the sets of occurrences linked to from the frequency report are numbered in chronological order, not by frequency. In other words, clicking on the [Occurrences] link for a title at the top of the list could, for example, bring up occurrences numbered 21-28 instead of 1-8 because that author's title while ranked first in frequency is not first chronologically. |
| 6.4 SORTING RESULTS BY SOURCE
Results can be sorted using a Sorted by Source report. To do this choose Frequency by Source at the bottom of the Letter, Diary or Advanced Search screens, or click on Sort by Source when in a context display. This report indicates the bibliographic criteria entered, the number of documents searched, the search term(s) entered, the number of unique forms derived from the search term(s) within the database, a list of those unique forms, and the total number of occurrences found in the defined corpus. Following this information, the report indicates the number of occurrences by title in descending order of frequency with a link to the digital table of contents for each title and a link to the occurrences found within that title. This report also shows what terms within a database one's search criteria are searching (for example, one can discover that entering the search term school.* in the database searches for all these unique terms above). See below for an example (links to the table of contents and occurrences have been disabled). Bibliographic criteria: doctype=letter Searching 1181 documents for measles. Number of Unique Forms: 2 Search Terms: measles | Measles Your search found 3 occurrences. Frequency by Source in descending numeric order: 1. Life of Abby Hopper Gibbons: Told Chiefly through Her
Correspondence, vol. 2: 2 The Frequency by Source Report is useful if one is curious how frequently an author uses term(s) in one work as compared to his/her other works or in his/her works as compared to others' works. Any definable corpus or search can be used in generating this report. Unlike Context Display and Line-by-line reports, this report does not display text, only frequency statistics with links to occurrences displayed in Context Display format. Note: the sets of occurrences linked to from the frequency report are numbered in chronological order, not by frequency. In other words, clicking on the [Occurrences] link for a title at the top of the list could, for example, bring up occurrences numbered 21-28 instead of 1-8 because that title while ranked first in frequency is not first chronologically. |
| 6.5 SORTING RESULTS BY YEAR (FREQUENCY BY YEAR)
Results can be sorted by using a Frequency by Year report. This report indicates how many times a work occurred in documents in a particular year. To do this choose Frequency by Year at the bottom of the Letter, Diary or Advanced Search screens. A Frequency by Year report indicates the bibliographic criteria entered, the number of documents searched, the search term(s) entered, the number of unique forms derived from the search term(s) within the database, a list of those unique forms, and the total number of occurrences found in the defined corpus. Following this information, the report indicates the number of occurrences by title in descending order of frequency with a link to the digital table of contents for each title and a link to the occurrences found within that title. This report also shows what terms within a database one's search criteria are searching (for example, one can discover that entering the search term craft* in the database searches for these unique terms). See below for an example (links to the table of contents and occurrences have been disabled). Bibliographic criteria: doctype=letter Searching 1181 documents for craft.*. Number of Unique Forms: 3 Search Terms: craft | crafty | Crafts Your search found 10 occurrences. Frequency by Year in descending numeric order: 1. 1839: 4 The Sorted by Year Report is useful if one is curious how frequently a word appears over time. Any definable corpus or search can be used in generating this report. Unlike Context Display and Line-by-line reports, this report does not display text, only frequency statistics with links to occurrences displayed in Context Display format. |
| 6.6 NAVIGATING DOCUMENTS FROM WORD SEARCHES
In Context Display one finds several options for viewing more context around one's matched term(s). In addition to "page" and paragraph, you'll section and page. These divisions reflect the logical organization of the document from smaller parts (paragraph) to larger parts document. What each level represents depends upon the text itself. Each letter is considered to be a document, no matter how long it is. A diary is divided into paragraphs, sections (typically a day), and documents (a month of entries). For diaries with short entries you will find it easiest to view the full document. For diaries with longer entries you will find it easiest to view section by section. Any part of any level may be selected by simply clicking on it. Once a user goes to a second level of context, he/she will find the search term(s) still highlighted. One may also find the next and previous sections for each level if one should wish to "flip through" the document by sections (provided that a next or previous section exists for a given level). Notes: In PhiloLogic notes never interfere when searching the text to which they refer. Note references are linked to notes and occurrences in text from notes are linked to page references. Note and page references can be found on any level of context (e.g., Page, Paragraph, Section, Document), but not from a first-level results screen. Images: Images are displayed as both inline images and linked to images once the user pulls up any level of context (e.g., Page, Paragraph, Section, Document), but not from a first-level results screen. |
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