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Tag: statistics

Why commuters do not read

July 3, 2009 Stephen Drew

One of the curses of my new job is having to commute from Cambridge into London two or three (or four or five …) days a week. Commuting must be good for something. One of the things I find it good for is primate behaviour research. I have found, for example, than commuters do not […]

Research Newscommuters, reading, statistics

The dread tomato addiction

April 29, 2009 Marc Abrahams

THE DREAD TOMATO ADDICTION by Mark Clifton This essay originally appeared in the February 1958 edition of Astounding. The dates in this version have been modified (all dates plus 50 years). Ninety-two point four per cent of juvenile delinquents have eaten tomatoes. Eighty-seven point one per cent of the adult criminals in penitentiaries throughout the […]

Arts and Scienceepidemiology, statistics, tomato

Measurement: Who’s the Most Famous of Them All?

February 28, 2009 Marc Abrahams

Eric Schulman, famed author of The History of the Universe in 200 Words or Less (which appeared in the January/February 1997 issue of AIR), has produced another in his continuing statistical analyses of fame (which is related, in a fashion, to celebrity). Click here to see Schulman’s new study in its entirety. Here is a […]

Arts and Science, Research Newsfame, statistics

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