Category Archives: science

Ten politically incorrect truths about human nature

Here is an interesting introduction to evolutionary psychology. The idea is that “human behavior is a product both of our innate human nature and of our individual experience and environment”. The “innate human nature” is the product of millions of years of evolution and has a serious impact on our behavior.

The results of this kind of analysis can often seem ‘ugly’ to us. They are not polite, they are not meant to be. They are however very interesting and their clear logic appeals to me.

There are ten examples in the article (not all of which I agree with), but some are interesting. An interesting introduction to the field so I have included a few quick summaries below:

2. Humans are naturally polygamous

  • “Polygyny (the marriage of one man to many women) is widely practiced in human societies”
  • We know that humans have been polygynous over our history because men are generally bigger than women. In other species (specifically other primates), bigger males indicate polygyny

3. Most women benefit from polygyny, while most men benefit from monogamy

  • Contrary to popular belief, polygyny actually benefits women! In a highly unequal society a woman is better off sharing half of a wealthy man than all of a poor one. In a polygenous society poor men lose out and the average women gain. So our monogamous society actually benefits men.
  • “Men in monogamous societies imagine they would be better off under polygyny. What they don’t realize is that, for most men who are not extremely desirable, polygyny means no wife at all”

The Trivers-Willard hypothesis is also discussed

  • The hypothesis states roughly that the sex of a child is slightly skewed depending on the parents’ circumstances to maximize reproductive payoff
  • Sons of wealthy and high status parents will inherit that wealth and status. These sons could go on to have many “wives, mistresses and concubines, and produce dozens or hundreds of children, whereas their equally wealthy sisters can have only so many children”
  • “So natural selection designs parents to have biased sex ratio at birth depending upon their economic circumstances—more boys if they are wealthy, more girls if they are poor.”
  • “This hypothesis has been documented around the globe. American presidents, vice presidents, and cabinet secretaries have more sons than daughters. Poor Mukogodo herders in East Africa have more daughters than sons. Church parish records from the 17th and 18th centuries show that wealthy landowners in Leezen, Germany, had more sons than daughters, while farm laborers and tradesmen without property had more daughters than sons. In a survey of respondents from 46 nations, wealthy individuals are more likely to indicate a preference for sons if they could only have one child, whereas less wealthy individuals are more likely to indicate a preference for daughters.”

Evolutionary arms race seen at warp speed


A lot of people don’t “get” or won’t accept that evolution is real because of the immense time scales required. National Geographic reports on a case when evolution was witnessed over a few years.

A bacteria had been killing almost all male larvae of a species of butterfly found on two Somoan islands. A 2001 study found that 99% of the butterflies were female. As recently as 2005 when an informal count was done no males were found at all. The bacteria was really hammering the males of the species and was in danger of wiping the butterfly out completely.

However, all of a sudden (OK, it took a few years but on evolutionary time scales that is all of a sudden) scientists noticed the male butterflies making a comeback. It seems that a single male evolved a mutation which allowed it to escape the bacteria’s attacks. Because this was such a huge advantage the genes spread extremely rapidly. It seems that the whole recovery took only a few generations.

Evolution in action baby. Don’t deny it. Don’t come with your micro-evolution rubbish. Love it.

How long would you last in space without a suit?

Here is an article discussing how long a person could survive in space without a protective suit on.

The short answer is – not long: about 15 seconds.

There are several ways that you could die in these circumstances:

  • If you try to hold your breath in the vacuum of space your lungs will rupture and you’ll get a mean case of the bends.
  • If you don’t hold your breath (breathe out as much as you can), you’re not going to last too long either.
  • Because of the very low pressure moisture would start to boil. For instance:

    “One NASA test subject who survived a 1965 accident in which he was exposed to near-vacuum conditions felt the saliva on his tongue begin to boil before he lost consciousness after 14 seconds.”

  • There are also some pretty extreme temperatures in space: -130 C to 90 C. However, in a vacuum the body loses heat very slowly so this is unlikely to kill you too quickly.
  • Finally, the article mentions a “spake hickey”:

    “Caused from the swelling and bursting of the skin’s small blood vessels”

Armed robots to be deployed in Iraq


The Americans actually have a surprisingly high number of robots in service in Iraq. They have been heavily utilizing robots bomb disposal robots to good effect.

Wired has an article saying that the first armed robots are now to be deployed. There are already 3 of these deployed in Iraq and they haven’t yet fired the attached M249 machine guns.

Pretty scary that we are already at this point.

Babies are little liars

This article is about experts finding that babies start lying as young as 6 months old. From the article:

Infants quickly learnt that using tactics such as fake crying and pretend laughing could win them attention. By eight months, more difficult deceptions became apparent, such as concealing forbidden activities or trying to distract parents’ attention.

By the age of two, toddlers could use far more devious techniques, such as bluffing when threatened with a punishment.

Fake crying is one of the earliest forms of deception to emerge, and infants use it to get attention even though nothing is wrong. You can tell, as they will then pause while they wait to hear if their mother is responding, before crying again.

Little buggers.

High flies

These guys are doing research into the effects of alcohol and drugs by getting fruit flies drunk and high. The image below shows the effects of an experiment using “volatilized free-base cocaine”. The images trace the paths of the flies for 1 minute after exposures to cocaine.

  1. Normal flight paths
  2. After a smallish dose of cocaine
  3. After a serious dose of cocaine.

Volunteers needed for a 17 month mission to Mars (kinda)


The Russians want to run a simulated trip to Mars in order to assess the physiological and psychological effects of being enclosed with 5 other people for 520 days. They are asking for volunteers willing to take part in the simulation which sounds horrible to me.Highlights from the article:

  • Once the doors are closed tight, the volunteers will be cut off from all contact with the outside world except by a delayed radio link.
  • Communications with the simulated mission control and loved-ones will take up to 40 minutes, the time that a radio signal takes to cross the void between Earth and a spaceship on Mars
  • They will get paid 120 euros (158 dollars) a day.

Bionic eye

This Economist article is about a technology being developed which can restore some sight to people who are blind. In a certain type of blindness, the nerve that takes information from the eye to the brain is OK, it’s just the cells on the retina which collect light that are problematic.

The researchers implanted a chip with basically a digital camera in it and connected the chip to the patient’s optical nerve. There are only 1240 sensors on the chip compared to the 120 million in a healthy eye, but results were still exciting:

“Patients reported being able to distinguish between dark walls and a light window, and a dark table and white plates. The image was coarse compared with normal vision because of the small number of pixels, and the patients did not see fully in colour, although they reported being able to distinguish white, grey and yellow tones. Nevertheless, enough sight was restored to make a difference to each of the volunteers’ lives.”

Body x-rays being used in Amsterdam’s Schiphol

Body scanning x-ray at schipholSchiphol airport in Amsterdam has introduced a new x-ray based body scanner for added security. The scanner reveals body contours and is supposed to reveal any concealed dodgy items. Apparently people are actually going for it because it speeds up the whole security process -people will do almost anything for convenience.

I know I would have this scan if it would speed things up at the security check points.

An interesting idea on how to read text faster – LiveInk

A group
of scientists
in the US
reckon
that they
have a better
way of reading
text online.

They break
the text into
short phrases
like this.

The whole idea behind it is that the human eye didn’t evolve to read blocks of text, so it isn’t necessarily very good at it. Their research findings show that when reading a block of text our area of focus is pretty much circular (see image).

Area of focus when reading

So our brain is getting hit with characters from the lines above and below what we are reading. They reckon this is tiring to the brain and reduces speed and comprehension. Their software analyzes the structure of the sentences and breaks them up into short phrases.

Check out this example on their site.

Now that I think about it, I frequently use bullets and shorter sentences because they are easier to read and understand. I should sue these guys!