Showing posts with label things. Show all posts
Showing posts with label things. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 March 2014

Comment on 10 Mind-Bending Paradoxes That Will Leave You Stumped by A Journal of Musical ThingsThe Weirdness of the Tritone Paradox » A Journal of Musical Things/must visit

Humans March 14, 2014

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Creepy March 13, 2014

Our World Alex Brannan March 15, 2014



Paradoxes can be found everywhere, from ecology to geometry and from logic to chemistry. Even the machine you’re using to read this list has paradoxes of its own. Here are 10 explanations of some of the lesser-known (yet still fascinating) paradoxes of the world. Some concepts are so counterintuitive that we just can’t wrap our minds around them.


Imagine that you are holding a ball. Now picture tearing this ball apart into bits—tear it to pieces, giving the pieces any shape you like. After that, put the pieces back together to form two balls instead of one. How big are these balls in comparison to the one you started with?


Set theoretic geometry would conclude that the matter of the original ball can be separated into two balls of the exact same size and shape as the original ball. Additionally, given two balls of different volume, either ball may be reformed to match the other. This gives way to the cheeky conclusion that a pea may be divided and reshaped into a ball the size of the Sun.


The trick in this paradox is the caveat that you can tear the ball into pieces of any shape. In practice, you cannot really do this—you are limited by the material’s structure and ultimately by the size of atoms. To be able to truly tear the ball however you like, the ball would have to contain an infinite number of accessible zero-dimensional points. The ball would be infinitely dense with these points, and once you separate them, the shapes could be so complex that each would have no defined volume. You could rearrange these shapes, each containing infinite points, into a ball of any size. The new ball would still contain infinite points, and both balls would be equally—infinitely—dense.


Though this idea does not work when you try it on physical balls, it does when you work with mathematical spheres, which are infinitely divisible sets of numbers in three dimensions. The resolution of the paradox, called the Banach-Tarksi theorem, is therefore important to mathematical set theory.


01
Whales are obviously much larger than we are. This means that they also have far more cells in their bodies. Every cell in the body has the potential to become cancerous. Therefore whales have a higher chance of contracting cancer than we do, right?


Wrong. Peto’s paradox, named after Oxford professor Richard Peto, states that the expected correlation between animal size and cancer prevalence is nonexistent. Humans and beluga whales share a relatively similar chance of getting cancer, while certain breeds of tiny mice have a much higher chance.


Some biologists believe that the lack of correlation in Peto’s paradox comes from tumor-suppressing mechanisms in larger animals. These suppressors work to prevent cell mutation during division.


02
For something to physically exist, it must be present for a duration of time. Just as an object cannot lack length, width, or depth, it needs duration—an “instantaneous” object, one that doesn’t last for any amount of time, does not exist at all.


According to universal nihilism, the past and future occupy no time within the present. Furthermore, it is impossible to quantify the duration of what we call the present. Any amount of time that you assign to the present can be temporally divided into parts of past, present, and future. If the present is one second long, then that second can be divided into three parts. The first part is then the past, the second part is the present, and the third is the future. The third of a second that is now considered the present can be further divided into three more parts. This division can occur indefinitely.


Therefore, the present can never truly exist as it never occupies a set duration of time. Universal nihilism uses this argument to claim that nothing ever exists.


03
People have trouble solving problems that require high-level reasoning. On the other hand, basic motor and sensory functions such as walking are no trouble at all. In computers, however, the roles are reversed. It is very easy for computers to process logical problems, such as devising chess strategies, but it takes a lot more work to program a computer to walk or accurately interpret speech. This difference between natural and artificial intelligence is known as Moravec’s Paradox.


Hans Moravec, a research scientist at the Carnegie Mellon University Robotics Institute, explains this observation through the idea of reverse engineering our own brains. Reverse engineering is most difficult for tasks that humans do unconsciously, such as motor functions. Because abstract thought has been a part of human behavior for less than 100,000 years, our ability to solve abstract problems is a conscious one. Therefore, it is much easier for us to create technology that emulates such behavior. On the flip side, actions such as speaking and moving are not ones that we need to actively consider, so it is harder to put these functions into agents of artificial intelligence.


What’s the chance that a random number starts with the digit “1?? Or with the digit “3? or “7?? If you know a little about probability, you would assume that the probability in each case would be one in nine, or about 11 percent.


And yet, if you look at real-world figures, “9? shows up far less than 11 percent of the time. Fewer numbers than expected also start with “8,” while a whopping 30 percent of numbers start with the digit “1.” This paradoxical pattern shows up in all sorts of real measurements, from populations to stock prices to the lengths of rivers.


Physicist Frank Benford first noted this phenomenon in 1938. He found that the frequency of a number appearing as the leading digit drops as the number increases from one to nine. The number one appears as the leading digit approximately 30.1 percent of the time, the number two appears about 17.6 percent of the time, the number three appears about 12.5 percent of the time, and so on until the ninth digit, which appears a mere 4.6 percent of the time.


To explain this, imagine looking at sequentially numbered raffle tickets. Once we’ve noted tickets one through nine, the chance of any number starting with “1? is 11.1 percent. When we add ticket number 10, the chance of a random number starting with “1? goes up to 18.2 percent. As we add tickets 11 through 19, the chance of a ticket starting with “1? keeps rising, peaking at 58 percent. Then when we add ticket 20 and move onward, the chance of a number starting with “2? rises, and the chance of it starting with “1? slowly falls.


Benford’s Law does not apply to every distribution of numbers. For example, sets of numbers that are limited in range, such as human height and weight measurements, do not follow the law. It also does not work with sets that have only one or two orders of magnitude. However, it does apply to many types of data, greatly conflicting with what people would expect. As a result, authorities can use the law to detect fraud. When submitted data does not follow the law, authorities can conclude that someone fabricated the data instead of accurately collecting it.


04
Genes contain all the information necessary for creating an organism. So it stands to reason that complex organisms would have the most complex genomes—and yet that’s not true at all.


Single-celled amoeba have genomes that are 100 times larger than those of humans. In fact, they have some of the largest genomes that have been observed. Furthermore, species that are very similar to each other can have radically different genomes. This oddity is known as the C-value paradox.


An interesting takeaway from the C-value paradox is that genomes can be larger than necessary. If all of the genomic DNA in humans were in use, the amount of mutations per generation would be incredibly high. The genomes of many complex animals, such as humans and primates, includes DNA that encodes nothing. This huge amount of unused DNA, which varies greatly in quantity from creature to creature, accounts for the lack of correlation that creates the C-value paradox.


05
Imagine an ant walking the length of a 1-meter (3.3 ft) rubber rope at the rate of 1 centimeter (0.4 in) per second. Imagine that the rope is also being stretched at 1 kilometer (0.62 mi) per second. Will the ant ever make it to the end of the elongating rope?


Logically, it seems impossible for the ant to do so because its rate of motion is far lower than that of its destination. However, the ant will indeed eventually make it to the other side.


Before the ant begins moving, it has 100 percent of the rope left to traverse. After one second, the rope has become considerably longer, but the ant has also moved, decreasing the fraction of rope remaining. Though the distance in front of the ant increases, the small bit of rope that the ant has already covered elongates as well. So though the overall rope lengthens at a steady rate, the distance in front of the ant increases by slightly less each second. The ant, meanwhile, moves forward at a completely steady rate. In this way, with each passing second, the ant chips away at the percentage he still has to cover.


There is one condition needed for this paradox to have a resolution: The ant must be immortal. For the ant to ever make it to the end, it would have to walk for 2.8 x 1043,429 seconds, which exceeds the lifetime of the universe.


06
Predator-prey models are equations that describe real-world ecological environments. For example, a model may measure how the populations of foxes and rabbits change in a large forest. Suppose the abundance of lettuce increases permanently in the forest. You would expect this to have a good effect on the rabbits that eat lettuce, boosting their population.


The paradox of enrichment states that this may not be the case. The rabbit population rises initially. But the increased density of rabbits in the closed environment leads to an increase in the population of foxes. Rather than finding a new equilibrium, the predators may grow so much in number that they decimate or even wipe out the prey—and thus wipe themselves out as well.


In practice, species may develop means to escape the fate of the paradox, leading to stable populations. For example, the new conditions may induce new defense mechanisms in the prey.


Round up a group of friends, and watch the above video. When it’s over, have everyone say whether the pitch increased or decreased during each of the four pairs of tones. You may be surprised to find that your friends disagree on the answer.


To understand this paradox, you need to know a little about musical notes. A specific note has a specific pitch, which is how high or low it sounds. A note that is one octave above a second note sounds twice as high because its wave has twice the frequency. Each octave interval can be divided into two equal tritone intervals.


In the video, a tritone separates each pair’s sounds. In each pair, one sound is a mixture of identical notes from different octaves—for example, a combination of two “D” notes, one higher than the other. When the sound is played next to a second note one tritone away (for example, a G-sharp between the two D’s), you may validly interpret the second note as either higher or lower than the first.


Another paradoxical application of tritones is an infinite sound that appears to constantly drop in pitch, though it actually cycles continually. This video plays such a sound for 10 hours.


07
Sitting in front of you are two glasses of water that are identical except for one thing: The water on your left is hotter than the water on your right. Place both of these glasses in the freezer. Which will freeze faster? You’d think the colder glass on the right would, but that might not be the case. Hot water can freeze faster than cold water.


This odd effect is named after a Tanzanian student who observed it in 1986 while freezing milk to make ice cream. But some of history’s greatest thinkers—Aristotle, Francis Bacon, and Rene Descartes—had previously noted this phenomenon without being able to explain it. Aristotle mistakenly attributed it to what he called “antiperistasis,” the idea that a quality intensifies in the environment of its opposite quality.


Several factors contribute to the Mpemba Effect. The hot glass of water may lose a large amount of water from evaporation, leaving less water that needs to be cooled. Warmer water also holds less dissolved gas, which could cause the water to more easily develop convection currents, thereby making it easier for the water to freeze.


Another theory lies in the chemical bonds holding the water molecule together. A molecule of water has two hydrogen atoms bonded to a single oxygen atom. When water heats up, the molecules move apart, and the bonds can relax and give up some of their energy. This lets them cool faster than water that had not been heated to begin with.

Alex Brannan is a student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and an aspiring fiction writer.


View the original article here

Comment on 10 Mind-Bending Paradoxes That Will Leave You Stumped by A Journal of Musical ThingsThe Weirdness of the Tritone Paradox » A Journal of Musical Things/must visit

178964030


Mysteries March 16, 2014

f


History March 16, 2014

183131963


Creepy March 16, 2014

f


Our World March 15, 2014

158909167


Crime March 15, 2014

featured american 2


 Misconceptions March 15, 2014

87675551


 Crime March 14, 2014

f


Space March 14, 2014

f


Humans March 14, 2014

f


 Creepy March 13, 2014

178964030


Mysteries March 16, 2014

f


History March 16, 2014

183131963


Creepy March 16, 2014

f


Our World March 15, 2014

158909167


Crime March 15, 2014

featured american 2


Misconceptions March 15, 2014

87675551


Crime March 14, 2014

f


Space March 14, 2014

f


Humans March 14, 2014

f


Creepy March 13, 2014

Our World Alex Brannan March 15, 2014



Paradoxes can be found everywhere, from ecology to geometry and from logic to chemistry. Even the machine you’re using to read this list has paradoxes of its own. Here are 10 explanations of some of the lesser-known (yet still fascinating) paradoxes of the world. Some concepts are so counterintuitive that we just can’t wrap our minds around them.


Imagine that you are holding a ball. Now picture tearing this ball apart into bits—tear it to pieces, giving the pieces any shape you like. After that, put the pieces back together to form two balls instead of one. How big are these balls in comparison to the one you started with?


Set theoretic geometry would conclude that the matter of the original ball can be separated into two balls of the exact same size and shape as the original ball. Additionally, given two balls of different volume, either ball may be reformed to match the other. This gives way to the cheeky conclusion that a pea may be divided and reshaped into a ball the size of the Sun.


The trick in this paradox is the caveat that you can tear the ball into pieces of any shape. In practice, you cannot really do this—you are limited by the material’s structure and ultimately by the size of atoms. To be able to truly tear the ball however you like, the ball would have to contain an infinite number of accessible zero-dimensional points. The ball would be infinitely dense with these points, and once you separate them, the shapes could be so complex that each would have no defined volume. You could rearrange these shapes, each containing infinite points, into a ball of any size. The new ball would still contain infinite points, and both balls would be equally—infinitely—dense.


Though this idea does not work when you try it on physical balls, it does when you work with mathematical spheres, which are infinitely divisible sets of numbers in three dimensions. The resolution of the paradox, called the Banach-Tarksi theorem, is therefore important to mathematical set theory.


01
Whales are obviously much larger than we are. This means that they also have far more cells in their bodies. Every cell in the body has the potential to become cancerous. Therefore whales have a higher chance of contracting cancer than we do, right?


Wrong. Peto’s paradox, named after Oxford professor Richard Peto, states that the expected correlation between animal size and cancer prevalence is nonexistent. Humans and beluga whales share a relatively similar chance of getting cancer, while certain breeds of tiny mice have a much higher chance.


Some biologists believe that the lack of correlation in Peto’s paradox comes from tumor-suppressing mechanisms in larger animals. These suppressors work to prevent cell mutation during division.


02
For something to physically exist, it must be present for a duration of time. Just as an object cannot lack length, width, or depth, it needs duration—an “instantaneous” object, one that doesn’t last for any amount of time, does not exist at all.


According to universal nihilism, the past and future occupy no time within the present. Furthermore, it is impossible to quantify the duration of what we call the present. Any amount of time that you assign to the present can be temporally divided into parts of past, present, and future. If the present is one second long, then that second can be divided into three parts. The first part is then the past, the second part is the present, and the third is the future. The third of a second that is now considered the present can be further divided into three more parts. This division can occur indefinitely.


Therefore, the present can never truly exist as it never occupies a set duration of time. Universal nihilism uses this argument to claim that nothing ever exists.


03
People have trouble solving problems that require high-level reasoning. On the other hand, basic motor and sensory functions such as walking are no trouble at all. In computers, however, the roles are reversed. It is very easy for computers to process logical problems, such as devising chess strategies, but it takes a lot more work to program a computer to walk or accurately interpret speech. This difference between natural and artificial intelligence is known as Moravec’s Paradox.


Hans Moravec, a research scientist at the Carnegie Mellon University Robotics Institute, explains this observation through the idea of reverse engineering our own brains. Reverse engineering is most difficult for tasks that humans do unconsciously, such as motor functions. Because abstract thought has been a part of human behavior for less than 100,000 years, our ability to solve abstract problems is a conscious one. Therefore, it is much easier for us to create technology that emulates such behavior. On the flip side, actions such as speaking and moving are not ones that we need to actively consider, so it is harder to put these functions into agents of artificial intelligence.


What’s the chance that a random number starts with the digit “1?? Or with the digit “3? or “7?? If you know a little about probability, you would assume that the probability in each case would be one in nine, or about 11 percent.


And yet, if you look at real-world figures, “9? shows up far less than 11 percent of the time. Fewer numbers than expected also start with “8,” while a whopping 30 percent of numbers start with the digit “1.” This paradoxical pattern shows up in all sorts of real measurements, from populations to stock prices to the lengths of rivers.


Physicist Frank Benford first noted this phenomenon in 1938. He found that the frequency of a number appearing as the leading digit drops as the number increases from one to nine. The number one appears as the leading digit approximately 30.1 percent of the time, the number two appears about 17.6 percent of the time, the number three appears about 12.5 percent of the time, and so on until the ninth digit, which appears a mere 4.6 percent of the time.


To explain this, imagine looking at sequentially numbered raffle tickets. Once we’ve noted tickets one through nine, the chance of any number starting with “1? is 11.1 percent. When we add ticket number 10, the chance of a random number starting with “1? goes up to 18.2 percent. As we add tickets 11 through 19, the chance of a ticket starting with “1? keeps rising, peaking at 58 percent. Then when we add ticket 20 and move onward, the chance of a number starting with “2? rises, and the chance of it starting with “1? slowly falls.


Benford’s Law does not apply to every distribution of numbers. For example, sets of numbers that are limited in range, such as human height and weight measurements, do not follow the law. It also does not work with sets that have only one or two orders of magnitude. However, it does apply to many types of data, greatly conflicting with what people would expect. As a result, authorities can use the law to detect fraud. When submitted data does not follow the law, authorities can conclude that someone fabricated the data instead of accurately collecting it.


04
Genes contain all the information necessary for creating an organism. So it stands to reason that complex organisms would have the most complex genomes—and yet that’s not true at all.


Single-celled amoeba have genomes that are 100 times larger than those of humans. In fact, they have some of the largest genomes that have been observed. Furthermore, species that are very similar to each other can have radically different genomes. This oddity is known as the C-value paradox.


An interesting takeaway from the C-value paradox is that genomes can be larger than necessary. If all of the genomic DNA in humans were in use, the amount of mutations per generation would be incredibly high. The genomes of many complex animals, such as humans and primates, includes DNA that encodes nothing. This huge amount of unused DNA, which varies greatly in quantity from creature to creature, accounts for the lack of correlation that creates the C-value paradox.


05
Imagine an ant walking the length of a 1-meter (3.3 ft) rubber rope at the rate of 1 centimeter (0.4 in) per second. Imagine that the rope is also being stretched at 1 kilometer (0.62 mi) per second. Will the ant ever make it to the end of the elongating rope?


Logically, it seems impossible for the ant to do so because its rate of motion is far lower than that of its destination. However, the ant will indeed eventually make it to the other side.


Before the ant begins moving, it has 100 percent of the rope left to traverse. After one second, the rope has become considerably longer, but the ant has also moved, decreasing the fraction of rope remaining. Though the distance in front of the ant increases, the small bit of rope that the ant has already covered elongates as well. So though the overall rope lengthens at a steady rate, the distance in front of the ant increases by slightly less each second. The ant, meanwhile, moves forward at a completely steady rate. In this way, with each passing second, the ant chips away at the percentage he still has to cover.


There is one condition needed for this paradox to have a resolution: The ant must be immortal. For the ant to ever make it to the end, it would have to walk for 2.8 x 1043,429 seconds, which exceeds the lifetime of the universe.


06
Predator-prey models are equations that describe real-world ecological environments. For example, a model may measure how the populations of foxes and rabbits change in a large forest. Suppose the abundance of lettuce increases permanently in the forest. You would expect this to have a good effect on the rabbits that eat lettuce, boosting their population.


The paradox of enrichment states that this may not be the case. The rabbit population rises initially. But the increased density of rabbits in the closed environment leads to an increase in the population of foxes. Rather than finding a new equilibrium, the predators may grow so much in number that they decimate or even wipe out the prey—and thus wipe themselves out as well.


In practice, species may develop means to escape the fate of the paradox, leading to stable populations. For example, the new conditions may induce new defense mechanisms in the prey.


Round up a group of friends, and watch the above video. When it’s over, have everyone say whether the pitch increased or decreased during each of the four pairs of tones. You may be surprised to find that your friends disagree on the answer.


To understand this paradox, you need to know a little about musical notes. A specific note has a specific pitch, which is how high or low it sounds. A note that is one octave above a second note sounds twice as high because its wave has twice the frequency. Each octave interval can be divided into two equal tritone intervals.


In the video, a tritone separates each pair’s sounds. In each pair, one sound is a mixture of identical notes from different octaves—for example, a combination of two “D” notes, one higher than the other. When the sound is played next to a second note one tritone away (for example, a G-sharp between the two D’s), you may validly interpret the second note as either higher or lower than the first.


Another paradoxical application of tritones is an infinite sound that appears to constantly drop in pitch, though it actually cycles continually. This video plays such a sound for 10 hours.


07
Sitting in front of you are two glasses of water that are identical except for one thing: The water on your left is hotter than the water on your right. Place both of these glasses in the freezer. Which will freeze faster? You’d think the colder glass on the right would, but that might not be the case. Hot water can freeze faster than cold water.


This odd effect is named after a Tanzanian student who observed it in 1986 while freezing milk to make ice cream. But some of history’s greatest thinkers—Aristotle, Francis Bacon, and Rene Descartes—had previously noted this phenomenon without being able to explain it. Aristotle mistakenly attributed it to what he called “antiperistasis,” the idea that a quality intensifies in the environment of its opposite quality.


Several factors contribute to the Mpemba Effect. The hot glass of water may lose a large amount of water from evaporation, leaving less water that needs to be cooled. Warmer water also holds less dissolved gas, which could cause the water to more easily develop convection currents, thereby making it easier for the water to freeze.


Another theory lies in the chemical bonds holding the water molecule together. A molecule of water has two hydrogen atoms bonded to a single oxygen atom. When water heats up, the molecules move apart, and the bonds can relax and give up some of their energy. This lets them cool faster than water that had not been heated to begin with.

Alex Brannan is a student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and an aspiring fiction writer.


View the original article here

Secretion secrets: things you didn’t know about ear wax/must visit

ear wax bud Cleaning ear wax with a cotton bud Earwax is one of those bodily substances which few of us like to discuss in polite company.


Like other secretions, it is something that most of us deal with in private. Yet it also holds a fascination for many.


In the past, it has been used as a lip balm and salve for puncture wounds.


But it can do a little more than that. Recent research suggests it can indicate a build up of pollutants in the body - and it could even be used to diagnose certain conditions.


Here are five things you - probably - didn't know about ear wax.

1. How it gets out The cul-de-sac of the ear canal The cul-de-sac of the ear canal

The cells inside the ear canal are unique in the human body - they migrate. "You could put an ink dot on the eardrum and watch it move over a few weeks and it would be 'carried out' by the movement of the cells." according to Prof Shakeel Saeed at London's Royal National Throat, Nose and Ear hospital.


If this didn't happen the mini cul-de-sac of the ear canal would soon fill up with dead cells created by the natural process of skin shedding.


This movement also propels the wax - produced by the modified sweat glands which line the ear canal - towards the outside. It's thought that normal movements of the jaw - through eating and talking - assist with this movement.


Prof Saeed has noticed that ear wax does sometimes get darker as we age - and that men whose ears get noticeably hairier as they age sometimes find that the wax can't escape through this jungle of hair.

2. It has anti-microbial properties Cerumen or ear wax secreted by a gland in the ear canal Cerumen or ear wax secreted by a gland in the ear canal

Ear wax contains waxy oils but much of it is made up of keratinocytes - dead skin cells. The rest of cerumen - to give it its technical name - is a mixture of substances.


Between 1,000 to 2,000 glands produce anti-microbial peptides - whilst sebaceous glands close to hair cells add into the mix alcohols, an oily substance called squalene, cholesterol and triglyceride.


The production of earwax doesn't vary much between men and women. young or old - but in one small study its triglyceride content decreased from November to July.


Cerumen also contains lysozyme, an antibacterial enzyme capable of destroying bacterial cell walls. Other researchers are less convinced and claim that it is the perfect medium in which bacteria can grow.

3. It matters where your family is from Japanese ear wax

Asian and non-Asian ears produce different types of earwax according to scientists at the Monell Institute in Philadelphia. Chromosome 16 is home to the "wet" or "dry" gene for earwax - with the wet variant dominating.


A small change in the gene ABCC11 is related to both the dry-type earwax and also for reduced underarm body odour found in Chinese, Japanese and Korean individuals.


The American study measured the concentration of 12 volatile organic compounds found in earwax - in groups of East Asian and white men.


In 11 out of the 12 compounds the Caucasian earwax had greater amounts of odorous compounds.


Kate Prigge from Monell says their analysis of the smell of ear wax is a first step towards finding out whether they might eventually use it to detect disease.


The institute studies a rare genetic disorder called maple syrup urine disease, which can be easily diagnosed through the scent of earwax compounds. Swabbing someone's ears is a much simpler and cheaper process then doing a genetic test.


Dr Prigge does realise how odd her choice of career might sound. She says: "You tell someone that you work in human body odour you get a good laugh," says Prigge. "But when you explain the importance behind it or how much information can be gained in these types of studies, people often understand why."

4. A vacuum rather than a syringe might help clear it microsuction Carrie Roberts said the procedure was "miraculous"

Carrie Roberts is in her 40s and has an ear wax problem. She had her ears syringed at the GPs several times, tried hot oil with no success - and ended up with both ears blocked.


Ms Roberts decided to pay for micro-suction treatment, where the ear canal is cleaned with an instrument like a tiny vacuum cleaner.


Prof Saeed prefers this method to syringing. "With syringing you are going in 'blind' - not under direct vision. If you use water it has to get past the wax and come back, bringing the wax with it.


"If there is no gap it can't get through and it shouldn't be forced. It is uncommon to damage the ear drums during syringing, but it does happen."


With the micro-suction the whole procedure is carried out whilst looking into the ear canal with a microscope.


Carrie said the procedure was "painless, a little noisy and very quick".


She adds: "It felt like one of those things they put in your mouth at the dentist to suck water out while you are having a filling, but in your ear. It has been miraculous."


Carrie is a convert. "I will go every time now. Much better than syringing as I didn't feel dizzy and faint afterwards, it was much quicker and I didn't have to mess about with olive oil for a week first.

5. It can be a pollution monitor Ear scoop Ear implements from the 1800s

Earwax, like many other bodily secretions, can show traces of certain toxins in the body such as heavy metals. But it's an odd place to look and no more reliable than a simple blood test.


There are also some rare metabolic disorders that affect earwax. The most notable earwax scientific discovery of recent times is that of a 24cm wax earplug from a blue whale.


Unlike humans which shed their earwax and dead skin cells, filter-feeding whales retain their earwax, recording life events similar to the way tree rings reveal arid and wet seasons during its lifetime.


The earwax was analysed by Sascha Usenko, a environmental scientist at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. He and his team found that during the 12-year-old male whale's life it came into contact with 16 different pollutants such as pesticides.


There was a peak of exposure during the first year of life - suggesting that these were transferred from its mother either in the womb or through her milk.


High levels of the stress hormone cortisol appeared in the waxy plug as the animal reaches sexual maturity - when competing for a mate would have been a priority.


View the original article here

10 things we didn't know last week/must visit

 Ringo Starr


 1. Elephants can differentiate between men and women, and between different ethnicities, when they hear a voice.



Find out more


2. The line often attributed to John Lennon - "Ringo isn't the best drummer in the world. He isn't even the best drummer in the Beatles" - was actually uttered by British comedian Jasper Carrott in 1983.


Find out more (the Times)


3. Lone peacocks fake the noise of sexual congress to attract peahens.


Find out more


4. Bradley Wiggins is a fan of the Archers.


Find out more


5. There were pygmy tyrannosaurs.


Find out more (Guardian)


6. The rise of Genghis Khan's empire coincided with the mildest, wettest weather in more than 1,000 years, which may have kept his horses well fed.


Find out more


7. The "five-second rule" does work - time is a significant factor in the transfer of germs from floor to food.


Find out more (the Times)


8. If a kitten doesn't encounter a human in a friendly context between the ages of three to eight weeks, it is more liable to go feral.


Find out more


9. Humans make almost identical judgements of other people merely by hearing (not seeing) them say "hello".


Find out more (New Scientist)


10. Animals avoid power lines because they see frightening ultraviolet flashes that are invisible to humans.


Find out more (Daily Telegraph)


Seen a thing? Tell the Magazine on Twitter using the hashtag #thingIdidntknowlastweek


Follow @BBCNewsMagazine on Twitter and on Facebook


View the original article here

Secretion secrets: things you didn’t know about ear wax/must visit

ear wax bud Cleaning ear wax with a cotton bud Earwax is one of those bodily substances which few of us like to discuss in polite company.


Like other secretions, it is something that most of us deal with in private. Yet it also holds a fascination for many.


In the past, it has been used as a lip balm and salve for puncture wounds.


But it can do a little more than that. Recent research suggests it can indicate a build up of pollutants in the body - and it could even be used to diagnose certain conditions.


Here are five things you - probably - didn't know about ear wax.

1. How it gets out The cul-de-sac of the ear canal The cul-de-sac of the ear canal

The cells inside the ear canal are unique in the human body - they migrate. "You could put an ink dot on the eardrum and watch it move over a few weeks and it would be 'carried out' by the movement of the cells." according to Prof Shakeel Saeed at London's Royal National Throat, Nose and Ear hospital.


If this didn't happen the mini cul-de-sac of the ear canal would soon fill up with dead cells created by the natural process of skin shedding.


This movement also propels the wax - produced by the modified sweat glands which line the ear canal - towards the outside. It's thought that normal movements of the jaw - through eating and talking - assist with this movement.


Prof Saeed has noticed that ear wax does sometimes get darker as we age - and that men whose ears get noticeably hairier as they age sometimes find that the wax can't escape through this jungle of hair.

2. It has anti-microbial properties Cerumen or ear wax secreted by a gland in the ear canal Cerumen or ear wax secreted by a gland in the ear canal

Ear wax contains waxy oils but much of it is made up of keratinocytes - dead skin cells. The rest of cerumen - to give it its technical name - is a mixture of substances.


Between 1,000 to 2,000 glands produce anti-microbial peptides - whilst sebaceous glands close to hair cells add into the mix alcohols, an oily substance called squalene, cholesterol and triglyceride.


The production of earwax doesn't vary much between men and women. young or old - but in one small study its triglyceride content decreased from November to July.


Cerumen also contains lysozyme, an antibacterial enzyme capable of destroying bacterial cell walls. Other researchers are less convinced and claim that it is the perfect medium in which bacteria can grow.

3. It matters where your family is from Japanese ear wax

Asian and non-Asian ears produce different types of earwax according to scientists at the Monell Institute in Philadelphia. Chromosome 16 is home to the "wet" or "dry" gene for earwax - with the wet variant dominating.


A small change in the gene ABCC11 is related to both the dry-type earwax and also for reduced underarm body odour found in Chinese, Japanese and Korean individuals.


The American study measured the concentration of 12 volatile organic compounds found in earwax - in groups of East Asian and white men.


In 11 out of the 12 compounds the Caucasian earwax had greater amounts of odorous compounds.


Kate Prigge from Monell says their analysis of the smell of ear wax is a first step towards finding out whether they might eventually use it to detect disease.


The institute studies a rare genetic disorder called maple syrup urine disease, which can be easily diagnosed through the scent of earwax compounds. Swabbing someone's ears is a much simpler and cheaper process then doing a genetic test.


Dr Prigge does realise how odd her choice of career might sound. She says: "You tell someone that you work in human body odour you get a good laugh," says Prigge. "But when you explain the importance behind it or how much information can be gained in these types of studies, people often understand why."

4. A vacuum rather than a syringe might help clear it microsuction Carrie Roberts said the procedure was "miraculous"

Carrie Roberts is in her 40s and has an ear wax problem. She had her ears syringed at the GPs several times, tried hot oil with no success - and ended up with both ears blocked.


Ms Roberts decided to pay for micro-suction treatment, where the ear canal is cleaned with an instrument like a tiny vacuum cleaner.


Prof Saeed prefers this method to syringing. "With syringing you are going in 'blind' - not under direct vision. If you use water it has to get past the wax and come back, bringing the wax with it.


"If there is no gap it can't get through and it shouldn't be forced. It is uncommon to damage the ear drums during syringing, but it does happen."


With the micro-suction the whole procedure is carried out whilst looking into the ear canal with a microscope.


Carrie said the procedure was "painless, a little noisy and very quick".


She adds: "It felt like one of those things they put in your mouth at the dentist to suck water out while you are having a filling, but in your ear. It has been miraculous."


Carrie is a convert. "I will go every time now. Much better than syringing as I didn't feel dizzy and faint afterwards, it was much quicker and I didn't have to mess about with olive oil for a week first.

5. It can be a pollution monitor Ear scoop Ear implements from the 1800s

Earwax, like many other bodily secretions, can show traces of certain toxins in the body such as heavy metals. But it's an odd place to look and no more reliable than a simple blood test.


There are also some rare metabolic disorders that affect earwax. The most notable earwax scientific discovery of recent times is that of a 24cm wax earplug from a blue whale.


Unlike humans which shed their earwax and dead skin cells, filter-feeding whales retain their earwax, recording life events similar to the way tree rings reveal arid and wet seasons during its lifetime.


The earwax was analysed by Sascha Usenko, a environmental scientist at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. He and his team found that during the 12-year-old male whale's life it came into contact with 16 different pollutants such as pesticides.


There was a peak of exposure during the first year of life - suggesting that these were transferred from its mother either in the womb or through her milk.


High levels of the stress hormone cortisol appeared in the waxy plug as the animal reaches sexual maturity - when competing for a mate would have been a priority.


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Five lesser-spotted things Tony Benn gave the UK/must visit

 14 March 2014 Last updated at 10:25  Magazine Monitor A collection of cultural artefacts Pictures of Tony Benn; Concorde; Radio 1 logo; postage stamp Tony Benn was known for his radical politics, but his career left a legacy of uniquely British artefacts he helped develop, writes Jon Kelly.


1. British stamp design. As Postmaster General from 1964-6, the republican Benn wanted to permit the introduction of "non-traditional" designs - of landscapes, portraits of composers and so on - without the Queen's head, but he faced resistance from Buckingham Palace. The compromise that resulted from his campaign - a small cameo silhouette in the corner of pictorial stamps - can still be seen to this day.


2. The postcode system. Since the late 1950s, the Post Office had been trialling a method of six-digit alphanumeric codes to sort mail in the Norwich area. In October 1965, under Benn's watch as Postmaster General, the Post Office announced it would extend the system to the rest of the country. Benn also oversaw the opening of the Post Office Tower, now the BT Tower.


3. BBC Radio 1. Benn introduced the 1967 Marine Broadcasting Offences Act that closed down the pirate radio stations which were transmitting offshore around the coast of Britain. The legislation made it almost impossible for the likes of Radio Caroline to keep going and paved the way for the launch of Radio 1 in September of the same year.


4. E in Concorde. As minister of technology from 1966-70, Benn was responsible for the development of the Anglo-French supersonic airliner. Others can take credit for designing and building it, but Benn successfully resisted Treasury efforts to cancel it because of spiralling costs. He also restored the letter "e" to the project's name, which had been removed by former Prime Minister Harold Macmillan after a falling out with Charles de Gaulle. "E stands for excellence, for England, for Europe and for the entente cordiale," Benn said.


5. The rucksack with a built-in seat. Long a keen amateur inventor - he bolted a chair onto the roof of a car for his 1970 election campaign - Benn proudly showed off his creation, the "frontbencher", at the age of 83. "I was carrying around a stool and a rucksack and thought it would better if I put them together," he said. Less successful than his other innovations, he offered Sir Richard Branson the opportunity to manufacture it, but the tycoon turned him down.


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