Archive for 'Ig Nobel'

Ig Nobel show Thursday at the IET in London (and live webcast)

Thursday, April 4th, 2013

The Institute of Engineering and Technology (IET) is hosting a big Ig Nobel show Thursday night (4 April), beginning at 6:00 pm.

It’s in the IET Building on Savoy Place (not far from Charing Cross), beginning at 6:oo pm.

The event is FREE (and also, we are told, unfettered) — but you’d best book reservations.

The event will also be WEBCAST LIVE.

Paper airplanes will be on hand, and in the air. The show features:

This is a featured event in the 2013 Ig Nobel Tour of the UK.

BONUS (after the event occurred): recorded video of the event

IET-flyer-image

 

Kees Moeliker: How a dead duck changed my life

Monday, April 1st, 2013

Ig Nobel Prize winner Kees Moeliker’s TED talk is now online. The people at TED chose to debut it on April 1:

Kees was awarded the 2003 Ig Nobel Prize for biology, for documenting the first scientifically recorded case of homosexual necrophilia in the mallard duck. [REFERENCE: "The First Case of Homosexual Necrophilia in the Mallard Anas platyrhynchos (Aves: Anatidae)" C.W. Moeliker, Deinsea, vol. 8, 2001, pp. 243-7.]

In the talk he mentions several other Ig Nobel Prize winners. Details about their work appears on the Ig Nobel Prize winners web page.

BONUS: Amanda Palmer, who has played stirring roles in several Ig Nobel Prize ceremonies, also gave a TED talk this year.

BONUS: On the TED blog, Brooke Borel talks about their favorite Ig winners

Saucy for the goose, saucy for the gander, cunnilingus for fruit bats

Thursday, March 28th, 2013

Ed Yong reports (with relish) on a successor to the Ig Nobel Prize winning study on fruit bat fellatio:

Oral sex in fruit bats is clearly a hot area of research. In just four years, the number of papers on this topic has doubled from, er, one to two.

It started in 2009, with a study that described regular fellatio among the short-nosed fruit bat. It earned its authors an  Ignobel Prize in 2010….

Now, to balance things off, a new paper describes cunnilingus among another fruit bat species—the Indian flying fox….

marimuthuThe new study is:. “Cunnilingus Apparently Increases Duration of Copulation in the Indian Flying Fox,Pteropus giganteus,” Jayabalan Maruthupandian and Ganapathy Marimuthu [pictured here], PLoS ONE, March 27, 2013. The authors are at Madurai Kamaraj University, Madurai, India. This video documents the discovery described in the paper:

A loving, applied mathematical tribute across a generation

Wednesday, March 27th, 2013

L. Mahadevan, who was awarded an Ig Nobel Prize in physics for studying how sheets get wrinkled, wrote a loving tribute, a few months ago, to his teacher Joseph Keller [pictured here]. Keller is a two-time Ig Nobel Prize winner. The entire essay appears in SIAM News. Here are snippets:

kellerJoe Keller’s contributions to the mathematical sciences have led to many honors, including the National Medal of Science and the Wolf Prize for Mathematics… Last month, in the riotous ceremony that accompanies the annual awarding of the Ig Nobels, he was also recognized for his contributions to the funny sciences, twice (he may well be the first double winner). The first of his Ig Nobels corrected an omission (dating from 1999) for explaining the teapot effect and the second for work published in 2010 on the swaying of ponytails (shared with a group from the UK who calculated the shape of a ponytail). And what precisely were the prize-winning contributions?

Anyone who has poured tea from a kettle knows to be wary of the dribble along the spout that can ruin everything. Most scientists, asked to explain this effect, will mumble something about surface tension . . . NOT! Inspired by experiments of the rheologist Marcus Reiner (who poured colored tea underwater, where interfacial forces are unimportant but the effect persists), Keller wrote a note [2] about how inertial effects (and Bernoulli’s principle) can explain this phenomenon. Nearly 30 years later, with J.-M. Vanden-Broeck, he worked out a more complete theory [5,6], which was recognized by the 1999 Ig Nobel, though Keller’s contributions were inadvertently forgotten. In an interesting recent addendum, a group of scientists showed that by coating the spout with carbon black, they could change the wettability of the teapot and thence the effect, subtly modifying the role of inertia [1]—and showing that good problems never die! …

SIAM News has now published a letter written in response to that essay:

The 2012 Ig Nobel for Physics

To the Editor:

I read with great pleasure the article on Joseph B. Keller and the 2012 Ig Nobel for physics (SIAM News, December 2012). Keller is a man known for his intellect, creativity, and professional integrity (and a personal academic hero of mine). Readers may want to know that the 2012 Ig Nobel prize for physics was shared with Raymond E. Goldstein, Patrick B. Warren, and Robin C. Ball for a delightful paper on the shape of ponytails (Physical Review Letters, 2012). The 1999 Ig Nobel for physics was shared with Len Fisher for calculating the optimal way to dunk a biscuit. While it is certainly true that Wilkins won the Nobel prize for the determination of the structure of DNA in 1962, readers will appreciate the fact that it was shared with Watson and Crick.—Alain Goriely, University of Oxford.

Tonight — Ig Nobel Prizes celebrated in Swansea, Wales

Wednesday, March 27th, 2013

Tonight, drop by the Science Cafe, in the Dylan Thomas Centre, 1 Somerset Place, Swansea, Wales. I’ll be doing a talk about the Ig Nobel Prizes, Improbable Research, and all that. It’s part of the 2013 Ig Nobel tour of the UK (which will continue next week in London).

Adam Walton and I talked about the talk, and about lots of other things, in a broadcast yesterday on BBC Radio Wales.