Frequency-distribution Books
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Power Frequency Magnetic Fields and Public Health
Published in Hardcover by CRC Press (1995-08-27)
List price: $89.95
New price: $89.95
Used price: $32.16
Used price: $32.16
Average review score: 

the first light on magnetic filed versus health
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-22
Review Date: 2002-01-22

Word Frequency Distributions (Text, Speech and Language Technology)
Published in Paperback by Springer (2002-09-01)
List price: $84.95
New price: $63.60
Used price: $95.09
Used price: $95.09
Average review score: 

Practical Guidance for Analyzing Word Frequencies
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-03
Review Date: 2008-12-03
"This book is an introduction to the statistical analysis of word frequency distributions, intended for linguists, psycholinguists,
and researchers working in the field of quantitative stylistics and anyone interested in quantitative aspects of lexical structure...
The aim of this book is to make these techniques accessible to nonspecialists." - R. Harald Baayen
Harald Baayen prepares readers to conduct practical analyses of word frequencies in text samples. The book's closing chapter explores several scenarios in depth, including comparing documents of different overall length, identifying authorship of disputed documents, and profiling references to calendar years in newspaper articles. The first five chapters prepare the reader to understand these extended examples using careful explanation, derivation of key formulas, practice exercises (with answers in the back, of course), and numerous "learner-friendly" sample analyses based on the just-complex-enough text of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. Good instruction with just the right amount of literary whimsy.
Three points represent the essence of the book's technical content:
The central graphical and statistical representation of word frequency analysis is the "frequency spectrum" defined--adequately for even beginners--on page 8. Frequency spectra are lists of all words in a text sample along with how many times each word appears in the sample. These lists are sorted from most to least frequent words. High frequency words are usually function words such as "the" and "a." Key content words, which best summarize a text's topic, are in middle frequency positions. Word frequency spectra also contain numerous very low frequency words, many appearing only once. The tail of low frequency words stretches off to seeming infinity. From a sampling perspective, this long tail is made theoretically longer by the virtual existence of "zero" frequency words which would achieve a frequency of "one" if the text sample size were sufficiently increased. The first chapter further defines frequency spectra and presents other concepts basic to word frequency analysis.
The long tail property underlies the first problem in frequency spectra analysis. The number of unique words in a text sample systematically increases with the word length of the sample. This introduces bias into statistical procedures which compare different-sized text samples. This bias distorts analysis at the full range of document lengths, from brief open-ended survey responses to book-length narratives. Baayen demonstrates these biasing effects in commonly used frequency comparison statistics. He then introduces corrective procedures using such information as the "vocabulary growth rate" observed as a text sample size is incrementally increased in length. The well-organized narrative of describing, demonstrating and solving this problem plays out across chapters two, three and four.
A second problem stems from the statistical assumption that words are randomly distributed within text samples. Obviously this is never true in naturally-occurring text. Less obvious is the type of bias this assumption introduces and how to correct for it. Using clever experimentation, Baayen traces the primary biasing effects to our mid-frequency key content words, which tend to cluster in all text, more so in longer documents. He concludes chapter five with recommendations for adjusted procedures that reduce the biasing effects of these "underdispersed" words.
The reader is now prepared to conduct unbiased analysis of word frequency distributions. The software on the included CD implements the improved frequency analyses devised by the author. It requires Linux, but his web site at the University of Alberta contains a downloadable Windows version. More recent research on the properties of word frequency distributions is available from this web site and is worth reading. Readers interested in the wider field of statistical natural language processing will benefit from Manning and Schutze's Foundations of Statistical Natural Language Processing.
I personally found this book quite valuable, even though I do not conduct any of the specific analyses demonstrated. Much of my word frequency work is semi-automated content analysis of open-ended survey responses (primarily using QDA Miner and WordStat from Provalis Research). Baayen's book has taught me useful corrections that improve the accuracy of my analyses. He achieves his stated goal of making his corrected statistical procedures understandable and accessible to nonlinguists.
Harald Baayen prepares readers to conduct practical analyses of word frequencies in text samples. The book's closing chapter explores several scenarios in depth, including comparing documents of different overall length, identifying authorship of disputed documents, and profiling references to calendar years in newspaper articles. The first five chapters prepare the reader to understand these extended examples using careful explanation, derivation of key formulas, practice exercises (with answers in the back, of course), and numerous "learner-friendly" sample analyses based on the just-complex-enough text of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. Good instruction with just the right amount of literary whimsy.
Three points represent the essence of the book's technical content:
The central graphical and statistical representation of word frequency analysis is the "frequency spectrum" defined--adequately for even beginners--on page 8. Frequency spectra are lists of all words in a text sample along with how many times each word appears in the sample. These lists are sorted from most to least frequent words. High frequency words are usually function words such as "the" and "a." Key content words, which best summarize a text's topic, are in middle frequency positions. Word frequency spectra also contain numerous very low frequency words, many appearing only once. The tail of low frequency words stretches off to seeming infinity. From a sampling perspective, this long tail is made theoretically longer by the virtual existence of "zero" frequency words which would achieve a frequency of "one" if the text sample size were sufficiently increased. The first chapter further defines frequency spectra and presents other concepts basic to word frequency analysis.
The long tail property underlies the first problem in frequency spectra analysis. The number of unique words in a text sample systematically increases with the word length of the sample. This introduces bias into statistical procedures which compare different-sized text samples. This bias distorts analysis at the full range of document lengths, from brief open-ended survey responses to book-length narratives. Baayen demonstrates these biasing effects in commonly used frequency comparison statistics. He then introduces corrective procedures using such information as the "vocabulary growth rate" observed as a text sample size is incrementally increased in length. The well-organized narrative of describing, demonstrating and solving this problem plays out across chapters two, three and four.
A second problem stems from the statistical assumption that words are randomly distributed within text samples. Obviously this is never true in naturally-occurring text. Less obvious is the type of bias this assumption introduces and how to correct for it. Using clever experimentation, Baayen traces the primary biasing effects to our mid-frequency key content words, which tend to cluster in all text, more so in longer documents. He concludes chapter five with recommendations for adjusted procedures that reduce the biasing effects of these "underdispersed" words.
The reader is now prepared to conduct unbiased analysis of word frequency distributions. The software on the included CD implements the improved frequency analyses devised by the author. It requires Linux, but his web site at the University of Alberta contains a downloadable Windows version. More recent research on the properties of word frequency distributions is available from this web site and is worth reading. Readers interested in the wider field of statistical natural language processing will benefit from Manning and Schutze's Foundations of Statistical Natural Language Processing.
I personally found this book quite valuable, even though I do not conduct any of the specific analyses demonstrated. Much of my word frequency work is semi-automated content analysis of open-ended survey responses (primarily using QDA Miner and WordStat from Provalis Research). Baayen's book has taught me useful corrections that improve the accuracy of my analyses. He achieves his stated goal of making his corrected statistical procedures understandable and accessible to nonlinguists.

Power Electronics and Variable Frequency Drives: Technology and Applications
Published in Hardcover by Wiley-IEEE Press (1996-09-21)
List price: $155.95
New price: $124.76
Used price: $115.95
Used price: $115.95
Average review score: 

AN ACADEMIC TREATISE
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-25
Review Date: 2000-06-25
If you are trying to learn about varible frequency drives or how to build them look elsewhere. If you are willing to spend
hours looking for a small piece of practical information, this book MIGHT have it. Dicussion of topics is not conducive to
an intuitive understanding of the subject.
AN ACADEMIC TREATISE
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-25
Review Date: 2000-06-25
If you are trying to learn about varible frequency drives or how to build them look elsewhere. If you are willing to spend
hours looking for a small piece of practical information, this book MIGHT have it. Dicussion of topics is not conducive to
an intuitive understanding of the subject.
A compendium of papers
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-17
Review Date: 2000-10-17
This book is a selection of papers that deals with the basic principles of power electronics and drives. The idea was not
to give a definitive and unified treatise on the subject. It is instead a collection of papers for the practitioner and the
novice to gain some understanding of the basis of the ideas behind drives and power electronics by reading the original papers
written by the original researchers. These papers are considered to be definitive in the mind of the editor. If you need
a complete guide to the analysis of power electronic circuits and drives, this is not the book. I would recommend Principles
of Power Electronics by Kassakian et. al. or Power electronics: Converters, Applications and Design, by Mohan et.al.
This book is more for the graduate student or the researcher who needs to read the original work in order to move along in their research. This is not for the practically minded trouble shooter or the designer.
Not quite there
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-19
Review Date: 2000-05-19
The text has some useful attributes, namely lists of references and wide range of coverage. The problem is that detail is
lacked in some of the coverage. Some of the chapters are a bit self-serving to the authors of those chapters. The referenced
papers at the end are predominantly papers written by the authors themselves. Seems to not acknowledge techniques and ideas
other than their own.
AN ACADEMIC TREATISE
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-25
Review Date: 2000-06-25
If you are trying to learn about varible frequency drives or how to build them look elsewhere. If you are willing to spend
hours looking for a small piece of practical information, this book MIGHT have it. Dicussion of topics is not conducive to
an intuitive understanding of the subject.
20 GHz low voltage linear laser modulator for RF distribution (AFRL-IF-RS-TR)
Published in Unknown Binding by Rome Laboratory, Air Force Research Laboratory, Information Directorate, Rome Research Site (2001)
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3D Visualization of Tactical Communications for Planning and Operations Using Virtual Reality Modeling Language (VRML) and
Extensible 3D (X3D)
Published in Spiral-bound by Storming Media (2001)
List price:
New price: $45.95

Accident analysis of two Turkish underground coal mines [An article from: Safety Science]
Published in Digital by Elsevier (2004-10-01)
List price: $8.95
New price: $8.95
The distribution and frequency of rickets in one of the fishery districts of Finmark and relation of diet to the disorder,
(Acta pædiatrica. vol. XII, supplementum III [i.e. 17])
Published in Unknown Binding by Almqvist & Wiksells boktryckeri-a.-b (1931)
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Admixture in Hispanics: distribution of ancestral population contributions in the continental United States.(Abstract): An
article from: Human Biology
Published in Digital by Wayne State University Press (2003-02-01)
List price: $5.95
New price: $5.95
Estimating cross tables: A study on frequency distributions of economic data classified by size (Aerr)
Published in Unknown Binding by Dept. of Agricultural Economics, University of Illinois (1965)
List price:
Age-length-frequency distributions of Dover sole (Microstomas Pacificus) landed in Oregon in 1948 and 1951-65 from PMFC Area
2D (Investigational report / Fish Commission of Oregon, Research Division)
Published in Unknown Binding by Fish Commission of Oregon, Research Division (1968)
List price:
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To electrical engineers, dealing with line construction and with people against the development, based in pseudo technical knowledge need to have references so,I think that is an important book to help development in a bases of science.
I recomend it to the media, before write, study or ask to those that deals with the matter.