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Duck drafting, scorpion sex scoop Ig Nobel awards

The sex lives of constipated scorpions, cute ducklings with an innate sense of physics, and a life-size rubber moose may not appear to have much in common, but they all inspired the winners of this year’s Ig Nobels, the prize for comical scientific achievement.

Held less than a month before the actual Nobel prizes are announced, the winners at the 32nd annual Ig Nobels ceremony were announced on a webcast on the Annals of Improbable Research magazine’s website.

The winners, honoured in 10 categories, also included scientists who found that when people on a blind date are attracted to each other, their heart rates synchronise, and researchers who looked at why legal documents can be so utterly baffling, even to lawyers.

As has been an Ig Nobel tradition, real Nobel laureates handed out the prizes, using a bit of video trickery: The Nobel laureates handed the prize off screen, while the winners reached out and brought a prize they had been sent and self-assembled into view.

Winners also received a virtually worthless Zimbabwean 10 trillion dollar bill.

Here are some of the winners:

* Get your ducks in a row
“Science is fun. My sort of a tagline is you’re not doing science if you’re not having fun,” said Frank Fish, a biology professor at West Chester University in Pennsylvania who shared the physics Ig Nobel for studying why ducklings follow their mothers in single-file formation.

It is about energy conservation: The ducklings are drafting, much like cyclists and runners do in a race, he said.

“It all has to do with the flow that occurs behind that leading organism and the way that moving in formation can actually be an energetic benefit,” said the appropriately named Mr Fish.

* Love at first sight?
Eliska Prochazkova’s personal experiences inspired her research on dating that earned her and colleagues the cardiology Ig Nobel.

She set people up on blind dates in real social settings, measured their physiological reactions and found the heart rates of people attracted to each other synchronised.

So is her work evidence of love at first sight?

“It really depends, on how you define love,” Ms Prochazkova, a researcher at Leiden University in the Netherlands, said.

“What we found in our research was that … within the first two seconds of the date, the participants made a very complex idea about the human sitting in front of them.”

* A cruel sting
Solimary Garcia-Hernandez and Glauco Machado, of the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil, won the biology Ig Nobel for studying whether constipation ruins a scorpion’s sex life.

Scorpions can detach a body part to escape a predator – a process called autotomy. But when they lose their tails, they also lose the last portion of the digestive tract, which leads to constipation – and, eventually, death, they wrote in the journal Integrated Zoology.

“The long-term decrease in the locomotor performance of autotomised males may impair mate searching,” they wrote.

* That’s a moose, dummy
Magnus Gers won the safety engineering Ig Nobel for making a moose “crash test dummy” for his master’s thesis at KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm.

Frequent moose and vehicle collisions on Sweden’s roads can result in injuries and death to human and animal, Mr Gers said. Yet carmakers rarely include animal crashes in their safety testing.

* Can you speak legalese?
Anyone who has ever read the ‘terms and conditions’ knows legal documents can be incomprehensible.

That frustrated Eric Martinez, a graduate student in the brain and cognitive science department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who also has a law degree from Harvard.

Along with Francis Mollica and Edward Gibson, he shared the literature Ig Nobel for analysing what makes legal documents unnecessarily difficult to understand, research that appeared in the journal Cognition.

“Ultimately, there’s kind of a hope that lawyers will think a little more with the reader in mind,” he said. 

“Clarity doesn’t just benefit the layperson, it also benefits lawyers.”

By Mark Pratt in New York

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