Archive for December, 2007

Margaret Mead joins LFHCfS

Sunday, December 23rd, 2007

MargaretMead.jpgMargaret Mead has joined the Luxuriant Flowing Hair Club for Scientists, as an historical honorary member. Ann Sasahara, who nominated her, says:

Margaret Mead (1901-1978) was an American cultural anthropologist, who moved us away from ethnocentric anthropological studies to less judgemental, more culturally-relativistic studies. She taught us that our culture has certain beliefs and other cultures have other beliefs; neither outlook is right or wrong, they are merely different. I love her fly-away locks.

Margaret Mead, Ph.D., LFHCfS
Cultural Anthropologist
Columbia University
New York City, USA

Ritual object: Plush for eternity

Saturday, December 22nd, 2007

Scholars of ritual have a new kind of domestic trinket that cries out, if silently and with full patent protection, for study. The object is described in U.S. patent# 7,308,741, which was granted December 18, 2007 to Mary F. Rydberg of Scottsdale, Arizona and Sharon M. Robinson of Fountain Hills, Arizona.

Huggable cremated remains storage systems

EternaHug_200w.jpgA system for storing cremated remains in one or more holders that may be comfortably held by an individual. The present invention comprises a “plush container”, such as a stuffed animal…

The invention is marketed under the name “Eternahugs,” with lots of legalities.

One incarnation is called “EternaBears.” The vendor say of it: “The EternaBear originated because of a common human emotion, grief.”

Another variation is called the EternaPillow. It is, one presumes, for the individual who’d like to rest their head on the dead.

(Thanks to Martin Gardiner for bringing this to our attention.)

PSYCHOLOGY LESSON: Oedipus complex?

Friday, December 21st, 2007

When I was a psychology professor, I always found it difficult to make students understand Freud’s notion of the Oedipus complex, which is a rather counterintuitive notion. Any other teachers of psychology who have similar problems explaining psychoanalytic concepts (or students who struggle to understand them) might want to go to the Wilkinson Sword homepage, and click on “Fight for Kisses: Whose Skin is Smoother” down at the bottom. This short video will bring Freud’s controversial theories to vivid and memorable life.

So writes Miss Conduct.

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Potato: order of merit

Friday, December 21st, 2007
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Two well-known researchers of the International Potato Center (CIP) in Lima, Peru were decorated with the Order of Merit of the Diplomatic Service of Peru Jos? Gregorio Paz Sold?n by the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Peru, Dr. Oscar Ma?rtua De Roma?a, on 30 May 2006

during celebrations to mark the National Day of the Potato.

Professor Carlos Ochoa Nieves and Dr. Alberto Salas L?pez are both plants taxonomists of international renown, who have practically devoted their lives to research on the potato in Peru.

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So says a May 31, 2006 writeup by The Potato Musuem. Further details are available from The International Potato Center.

(Thanks to Maddalena Feliciello for bringing the museum to our attention.)

Trinkaus and Santa, Round 4

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

Santa-SunSentinel_200w.jpgTwo strangely charming old men arrive each Christmas. One, Santa Claus, is fictional. The other, Professor John Trinkaus, of the Zicklin school of business in New York City, merely seems fictional.
This year is Trinkaus’s fourth on the international Christmas scene. His gift to us - all of us - this time is a study called Visiting Santa: An Additional Look.

It is a follow-up to last year’s Visiting Santa: A Further Look. That was a sequel to the previous year’s Visiting Santa: Another Look, which expanded on the work he described in the very first of his Santa-related studies, the 2004 classic Santa Claus: An Informal Look.

Each of these reports gives a cheerfully dreary look at the behaviour of children and their parents in a shopping mall….

So begins this week’s Improbable Research column in The Guardian.

[NOTE: Trinkaus won the 2003 Ig Nobel Literature Prize for his numerous studies of things that annoy him. It is believed that, directly or indirectly, Trinkaus's Santa research inspired the South Florida Sun-Sentinel's "Scared of Santa" photo gallery, the source of the photo shown here. ]