Ig Nobel Prizes 2007


The Ig Nobel Prizes for 2007 were awarded at a ceremony at Harvard University on October 4th. Pictured is winner Dan Meyer demonstrating his research on sword-swallowing at the award ceremony. The Ig Nobel prizes are awarded each year for unusual and imaginative research that makes people laugh, but also makes people think. Here are the winners.
MEDICINE: Brian Witcombe of Gloucester, UK, and Dan Meyer of Antioch, Tennessee, USA, for their penetrating medical report "Sword Swallowing and Its Side Effects."

PHYSICS: L. Mahadevan of Harvard University, USA, and Enrique Cerda Villablanca of Universidad de Santiago de Chile, for studying how sheets become wrinkled.

BIOLOGY: Prof. Dr. Johanna E.M.H. van Bronswijk of Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands, for doing a census of all the mites, insects, spiders, pseudoscorpions, crustaceans, bacteria, algae, ferns and fungi with whom we share our beds each night.

CHEMISTRY: Mayu Yamamoto of the International Medical Center of Japan, for developing a way to extract vanillin -- vanilla fragrance and flavoring -- from cow dung.

LINGUISTICS: Juan Manuel Toro, Josep B. Trobalon and Núria Sebastián-Gallés, of Universitat de Barcelona, for showing that rats sometimes cannot tell the difference between a person speaking Japanese backwards and a person speaking Dutch backwards.

LITERATURE: Glenda Browne of Blaxland, Blue Mountains, Australia, for her study of the word "the" -- and of the many ways it causes problems for anyone who tries to put things into alphabetical order.

PEACE: The Air Force Wright Laboratory, Dayton, Ohio, USA, for instigating research & development on a chemical weapon -- the so-called "gay bomb" -- that will make enemy soldiers become sexually irresistible to each other.

NUTRITION: Brian Wansink of Cornell University, for exploring the seemingly boundless appetites of human beings, by feeding them with a self-refilling, bottomless bowl of soup.

ECONOMICS: Kuo Cheng Hsieh, of Taichung, Taiwan, for patenting a device, in the year 2001, that catches bank robbers by dropping a net over them.

AVIATION: Patricia V. Agostino, Santiago A. Plano and Diego A. Golombek of Universidad Nacional de Quilmes, Argentina, for their discovery that Viagra aids jetlag recovery in hamsters.


Links for each winner and/or their winning research can be found at Improbable Research. Link -via J-Walk Blog

The only thing that seems odd to me about the gay bomb is the benefits of it as opposed to just dumping LSD all over them. What, is the goal to make the workplace really awkward after a wild night out?
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Well, LSD permanently alters your brain.

But a gay bomb sounds funny - however, I wonder about the implications. If that was possible, that means theired be a gas of pheremones or somehting that could cause that effect, right? Well, what about pranksters who got their hands on it and let some gas off in the college football team's locker room before an important game, or a rival frat house? Sure it'd be super hot (if you were gay), but would that be the equivalent of rape?

And if so, would the military application be the equivalent of mass-rape? Of men.

Stuff like that..
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I think that its rather revealing of how some military leaders think. As in, what is the scariest, most horrible thing that could happen, ever? Gay people. Duh.
It's pathetic that people in power, and with the authority to actually cause research to start, are that...I can't even think of an appropriate word.
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