Wednesday, July 29, 2020

No time for your stupid question.

No time for your stupid question. Posthumous isnt the right word, but its among my favorite in the English language and Im so dedicated to you, gentle reader, that I would indeed write a posthumous entry if I had to. This is the number one song in heaven. Last Thursday, I had the pleasure of attending the Ig Nobel awards ceremony in H****** Square. The Igs, sponsored by a bunch of Mensa nerds actual Nobel Laureates from both H****** and MIT, celebrate nontraditional research in a variety of disciplines. This year, awards were bestowed upon ten leading researchers from four different continents for answering some of the following questions: 1. Do people swim faster in water or in syrup? 2. What internal pressures are observed upon penguin defecation? 3. Are neutered pets somehow less happy than regular pets? 4. What about Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope is most appealing to a common cricket? 5. How can we best improve our nations economy? 6. Why bother to photograph and retrospectively analyze every meal youve eaten over a period of 34 years? and the best part of this adventure was that it was totally free courtesy of my dorms IFAF allotment. The culture of the dorm is more-or-less floor-basedusually money is allotted by floor, so you tend to have study breaks and go on trips mostly with your floor. Because, I mean, its actual free money. As a result, most people end up becoming great friends with their neighbors early on in their MIT experience. So, to encourage bonding between floors, the housemaster set up an inter-floor activity fund whereby the entire dorm gets $3000 a term to plan activities that integrate two or more floor. Since this is also literally free money, we have to stage a battle to the death at an ExecComm meeting in late September to allocate the preciously limited funding. This year, Conner 2 was crafty enough to procure about $1000 of the funding, $30 of which went toward buying me this awesome ticket specifically so I could blog it for you. But I digress. Want to know the answers to the nagging scientific questions above? Battle on, reader. 1. Do people swim faster in water or in syrup? Professor Edward Cussler won the Ig Nobel in Chemistry (move over, Schrock) for proving, along with 20 student volunteers from the University of Minnesota, that humans swim equally fast in syrup and water. Before you ask, rest assured that backstroke, breast stroke, freestyle, and whatever the other one is were all tested thoroughly. In his mercifully brief acceptance speech (speeches longer than 60 seconds in length were interrupted by Miss Sweetie Poo imploring, Please stop. Im bored. Please stop. Im bored.) Professor Cussler explained that the reasons for this are complicated and left the stage with a flourish. 2. What internal pressures are observed upon penguin defecation? Dr. Victor Benno Meyer-Rochow of Bremen, Germany found out and won the Ig Nobel prize in Fluid Dynamics for this paper, which I can understand embarrassingly well after 10.301. Its good to know that you can model parts of the process as a Newtonian Fluid. The laureate also wore a t-shirt bearing this helpful diagram from his paper. 3. Are neutered pets somehow less happy than regular pets? Of course they are. This led Gregg A. Miller to develop Neuticles, a prosthetic testicular implant available in three sizes and three degrees of firmness. Though, in his own words, it took him a few months to get the ball rolling on the venture, just three years later he became the proud recipient of the Ig Nobel prize in Medicine. From a simple man with a dog and a dream to Ig Nobel laureate truly, Mr. Miller has shown that only a tireless commitment to an abstract ideal can produce truly inspiring scientific research. 4. What about Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope is most appealing to a common cricket? Darth Vaders TIE fighter. Not enchanted? You must not be a cricket. The Ig Nobel Peace Prize went to Claire Rind and Peter Newcastle University for electrically monitoring the activity of a locust brain cell while showing the cricket selected highlights from Star Wars. This might actually be the most scientifically valid Ig Nobel awarded this yearby determining how the cricket reacted to different shapes and velocities, the researchers did make substantial progress in understanding the visual processes of insects. But, of course, showing Star Wars to a cricket can only help promote inter-species peace. 5. How can we best improve our nations economy? Mitra has been bothered for the past few weeks that although the MIT community has been abuzz with news of Professor Schrocks Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Robert J. Aumanns (MIT PhD 1955) prize in Economics has cone mostly ignored. Well, I say, what about Gauri Nandas Ig Nobel in economics? Nanda, a student resaarcher in the media lab has designed an alarm clock that runs away from you until its absolutely sure your awake. The little bugger has recieved quite a lot of national press, and now its invaluable contribution to our nations economy (by ensuring that people actually get up and go to work, thus doing something economical) has been recognized. The cool thing about the media lab is that you can make an alarm clock that runs away or a piece of clothing that changes color or a bumper air hockey table and, like, get your PhD in doing that. 6. Why bother to photograph and retrospectively analyze every meal youve eaten over a period of 34 years? Well, Im not sure this one has a clear answer, really. Dr. Yoshiro Nakamats, winner of the Ig Nobel in Nutrition, delivered perhaps the most inspiring and concise acceptance speech at the Ig Nobel ceremony: Life is long should be longer speech should be shorter Good night. Or perhaps this profound, almost poetic summation of the human condition merely seemed to be a brief moment of clarity amidst an opera dedicated to counting to infinite, programs being folded into paper planes and thrown at the stage (sometimes during the speeches of actual Nobel Laureates) and 24/7 speeches on animal morphology, primate locomotion, the purpose of life. The lattermost of these consist of speeches of 24 seconds that convey everything there is to know about a topic and then 7 words that summarize it in a manner that is understandable to everyone. Anyway, all this commotion left me with quite a favorable impression of Dr. Nakamats. Then some other people on my floor went to the free Ig Informal lectures and discovered some more about Dr. Nakamats, as well as getting the distinguished scientist to autograph their program for him: The toppled thinker is, of course, the international symbol of Ig Nobel. I guess somebody who was actually there should describe this, but in the mean time you can get an idea of it by checking out the good Doctors amazing CV. Apparently he wrote MIT on the chalkboard and asked what it stood for, then made Zach 08 stand up when he got the wrong answer. What did MIT actually stand for? I dont know. He concluded much more curtly than at the ceremony I attended: I have no time for your stupid question. Goodbye. The rest I can only describe via hearsay, but you can extrapolate from the content of this interview. And these quotes: I have a special way of holding my breath and swimming underwater-thats when I come up with my best ideas. Ive created a Plexiglas writing pad so that I can stay underwater and record these ideas. I call it creative swimming. these are snacks Ive invented, which I eat during the day. Ive marketed them as Yummy Nutri Brain Food. They are very helpful to the brains thinking process. They are a special mixture of dried shrimp, seaweed, cheese, yogurt, eel, eggs, beef, and chicken livers-all fortified with vitamins. Twice a day I take thirty-minute naps in a special chair Ive designed-the Cerebrex chair. It improves memory, math skills, and creativity, and it can lower blood pressure, improve eyesight, and cure other ailments. Special sound frequencies pulse from footrest to headrest, stimulating blood circulation and increasing synaptic activity in the brain. An hour in my chair refreshes the brain as much as eight hours of sleep. [Rather than being 1 percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration as Edison suggested, genius is] 1 percent perspiration and 99 percent ikispiration. Now, more than ever, we have to have ikispiration. This means I encourage myself to go through my three elements of creation: suji, the theory of knowledge; pika, inspiration; and iki, practicality, feasibility, and marketability. In order to be successful, you must go through all three stages and make sure that your ideas stand up to all of them, which is ikispiration. Also, these days, the computer saves time and cuts out the 99 percent perspiration. Im so glad I had the opportunity to be in the presence of this magnificent man, however briefly and distantly. By the way, I am somewhat more benevolent than Dr. Nakamats and do have time for your stupid question I mean, dont be discouraged from commenting. Next up: camping!