How Penguins Move in a Group

(YouTube link)

Emperor penguins huddle together to keep warm in the cold Antarctic winter -as anyone who's seen Happy Feet knows. The way penguins arrange themselves in clusters and move is quite efficient for a flock of birds waddling on ice. New Scientist compares it to the way cars move in a traffic jam. But if you've ever been in a traffic jam, you know that human drivers don't employ much logic at all.

The model also shows that rather than simply being caused by cold penguins pushing in, waves can originate from birds at many different spots in the huddle, as long as their steps exceed a 2-centimetre threshold distance. This is about twice the thickness of the penguin feather layer. "That means a perfectly compact huddle tries to maintain each bird's maximum fluffiness and insulation," Zitterbart says.

Waves that started in two different groups can merge, helping smaller huddles grow into large throngs of thousands of birds that can withstand temperatures as low as -50 °C and wind gusts of 200 kilometres per hour.

Further research involves putting fake high-tech eggs on the feet of some penguins who do not have real eggs, in order to measure penguin movement more precisely. And oh yes, enjoy the incongruous dramatic music that accompanies this science video. -via Time Newsfeed


Comments (0)

Interesting test. I scored 75% overall. If we weren't allowed to replay the sounds, I probably would've scored much lower. It took a few listens for some of them before I figured out the pattern.
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I too got 95% - it's all to do with narrowing your choices from the ones given. I can't remember the one I got wrong, but there were quite a few I had to replay the sound on before I felt confident enough to click.
Still - good fun.
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I don't know, I'd rather not do this. My synaesthesia is feeling a lot more restricted than it was before, but I feel that it will be worse if I try to match my synaesthesia, or use to think like, a certain person's own opinion of these sensations.
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I don't think it's really synesthesia-based, nach. The symbols only really represent things like the pitch of the phrase (an upward arrow as the pitch rises) or two sounds played together (two symbols overlapping). To base such a test on synesthesia would be next to impossible, as it would be different for everyone.
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I got a 90, but seeing as Frank is the only one who scored lower than what is considered "high-normal," I'm thinking this thing might not be as hard as it says it is.
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I got 95...

Bean, it only matters if you actually are synesthetic, which I sort of doubt you are... the symbols don't have to match the music, you just have to remember that each symbol represents a different melody...and varies each time. It doesn't matter if they "match" or not. After all, for most of us, no melody sounds square...or triangular.
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I didn't really understand it. Were we meant to match the music to the symbols using logic, or our instincts, or just what we thought best represented it? This is kind of like the scoring they use for experimentalism, but really basic. I didn't finish the test in the end, it just got on my nerves (and I'm usually really good at music... )
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Let's see: for the scoring there's three categories that basically mean GREAT, one for NORMAL, and one for GOOD TRY.

Wouldn't want anyone to feel bad for scoring poorly on an abstract internet test.
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