Neatorama |
- The First Ever Documentation of Bees Using Tools in a Natural Setting
- Is Your Teen Kid Ready To Have A Smartphone?
- How The Brain Remembers Place and Time
- Can You Upload Your Mind & Live Forever?
- Undercover Cops Dressed as Santa Claus and an Elf Take Down Thieves
- College Dorm with Indoor Balconies
- About Master Bedrooms
- Every Movie Cough
- Giggles the Angry Cat
- Alaska's Lottery: Guess When the River Ice Will Break Up
| The First Ever Documentation of Bees Using Tools in a Natural Setting Posted: 14 Dec 2020 09:26 PM PST
Giant hornets are a threat to Asian honeybees. The hornets scout for bee nests, chew through them, and feed on the poor bees. To stop the hornets from doing this horrible thing, the bees smear animal poop around the entrance of their nest. It's still not clear how this dung actually protects the colony, but in the field, it appears to stop scouting hornets… This is the first ever documentation of bees using tools in a natural setting. Scientists have known for several years that honeybees can learn how to use tools in the lab, but such skills have never been observed in a natural setting with non-plant matter. [...] Traditionally, the definition of a tool requires an object to be found externally, before being altered in some way to give it purpose. Wielding this newly arranged material, the animal must then orient the object to make it most effective. 'Faecal spotting', or the smearing of dung on nests, ticks all four of these boxes and is the first clear cut example of bees using a tool in nature. Learn more about this over at ScienceAlert. (Image Credit: Rushenb/ Wikimedia Commons) |
| Is Your Teen Kid Ready To Have A Smartphone? Posted: 14 Dec 2020 09:26 PM PST
Smartphones, gaming consoles, cash, and computers (including tablets and laptops). These are the most popular gifts that parents plan to give to their teen kids, according to a survey conducted by SellCell in 2019. But are they prepared for such a thing? Can they handle the responsibility of having a smartphone? Psychology Today provides you five questions to ask yourself before you give a smartphone to your teen kid. See the questions over at the site. For now, here is one of them. "Does your child know how to manage his digital reputation?" Everything we post online stays online forever. It can be seen by anyone and everyone, and even if you decide to delete whatever it is you posted, it can be still saved and shared by others. Today, our digital reputation is often the first impression we give the world and the Internet is flooded with examples of kids whose posting mishaps have cost them dearly. Lost opportunities to attend that dream college or to get the perfect job are not uncommon. This may be too much for a new smartphone owner to wrap his young head around. What are your thoughts about this one? (Image Credit: Pixabay) |
| How The Brain Remembers Place and Time Posted: 14 Dec 2020 09:06 PM PST
How is the brain able to recall events in a chronological order? Two studies from UT Southwestern shed light on this question. The findings from these studies could potentially provide a basis for new treatments against memory loss. Almost ten years ago, a certain group of neurons were discovered in rats. Aptly called "time cells", these neurons help in recording the time of events, allowing the brain to correctly arrange the events in an episodic memory. Located in the brain's hippocampus, these cells show a characteristic activity pattern while the animals are encoding and recalling events, explains Bradley Lega, M.D., associate professor of neurological surgery at UTSW and senior author of the PNAS study. By firing in a reproducible sequence, they allow the brain to organize when events happen, Lega says. The timing of their firing is controlled by 5 Hz brain waves, called theta oscillations, in a process known as precession. Lega investigated whether humans also have time cells by using a memory task that makes strong demands on time-related information. Learn more about these studies over at MedicalXpress. (Image Credit: Melissa Logies/ MedicalXpress) |
| Can You Upload Your Mind & Live Forever? Posted: 14 Dec 2020 06:59 PM PST
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| Undercover Cops Dressed as Santa Claus and an Elf Take Down Thieves Posted: 14 Dec 2020 06:59 PM PST
"Get him, Santa!' And Santa Claus does do, tackling a suspect while an elf drew his handgun. This scene took place in Riverside, California, on Friday. Two police officers working undercover outside of a Target store spent their day arresting shoplifters as they left the store. Then they noticed three men stealing a car in the parking lot. NBC 4 News quotes Detective Paul Miranda about the incident: The elf cornered one very perplexed suspect. "When I looked over my shoulder I saw Santa running by me going after the second subject," Miranda said. The driver got away but detectives say they know who he is. As for the other two suspected thieves... "They were apologetic and Santa is currently deciding whether they stay on the naughty list," Miranda said, -via Dave Barry |
| College Dorm with Indoor Balconies Posted: 14 Dec 2020 06:59 PM PST
Twitter user @NBastel posts this photo of a dormitory at Virginia Tech. Yes, those are accessible, not decorative, balconies over indoor space. According to redditor mchoward, who lived near this building during his time at Virginia Tech, the design led to precisely the drunken shenanigans that you're imagining: About a decade ago, the people that lived in this building used to throw massive parties in this common area. It would get absolutely packed and the cops were always called. One time, the apartment complex sent an employee to take pictures. They then sent the pictures to all the residents to shame them ("Look at how dumb you all look!"), which included pictures of students pouring drinks from the balconies to the people below as well as students climbing into the ceiling tiles to get to different balconies without having to go down (apparently one person fell through the ceiling). Of course, no one was embarrassed by the pictures, and they sent them to their friends which resulted in even bigger parties. -via Super Punch |
| Posted: 14 Dec 2020 11:25 AM PST An article at Jezebel is ostensibly an opinion piece on whether couples should sleep in the same bed in a shared bedroom, but a large part of it is a history of the bedroom in Western civilization. While poor people always slept communally due to lack of space, even wealthy families all slept together in medieval times, including servants. The concept of dedicating a room for sleeping, separate from other household activities, came about only gradually.
The custom of keeping the master bedroom on the first floor will not go away, because children grow up and leave, but the folks left behind get older and don't want to climb stairs. We also learn about the evolution of sleeping configurations, including sleeping porches and arranging a bed halfway out of a window, which is hard to picture. Read about the evolution of the master bedroom at Jezebel. |
| Posted: 14 Dec 2020 11:24 AM PST
The website Every Movie Cough is "The world's most complete collection of cinematic coughs (and sneezes)." Mike Lacher and Jason Eppink put a lot of work into this compilation.
You can see all the collected movie coughs in a mega-video, browse the gallery for individual clips, or check out the categories of gross coughs, drowning coughs, Spielberg coughs, and background coughs, or sneezes by themselves. You can even play a game of identifying the movie from an audio clip of a cough, if you think you're an expert on such things. -via Everlasting Blort |
| Posted: 14 Dec 2020 09:32 AM PST
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| Alaska's Lottery: Guess When the River Ice Will Break Up Posted: 14 Dec 2020 09:32 AM PST Pictured above is a tripod that rests on top of the frozen Tenana River in Nenana, Alaska. People all over Alaska place bets on when they think the ice will break and the tripod will tip over, marking the reopening of the river in the spring. The person who gets closest wins the Nenana Ice Classic and a portion of the pot. Last year, the winner got $311,000. The rest of the proceeds went to charities. The lottery began in 1917 to encourage town residents to watch the river during construction of a railroad across the river when broken ice could endanger the work. Now anyone in Alaska can buy a ticket for $2.50. Bailey Berg of Atlas Obscura writes about what this tradition means to the people of Nenana: For two months a year, people place their bets in special red cans that are returned to Nenana in early April. There, teams of locals sort the guesses by hand, entering the tickets into an elaborate analog database that's checked and cross-checked by myriad workers for accuracy. Even though there are roughly 100 employees working six- or eight-hour shifts, it's so time consuming that in recent years the contest has been over well before the tickets are all accounted for. [...] The Classic is a hold-over from Alaska's more Wild West, pre-statehood years. Before becoming the 49th state in 1959, Alaska had a robust gambling culture. Membership in the union changed that. The Alaska Legislature legalized charitable lottery-style games in 1960, largely to allow the Classic to continue (and making it one of the oldest continuously running betting events in the country). Sixteen percent of all ticket sales are used for scholarship programs, local causes, and sporting groups, and a handful of larger medical charities. Last year the Ice Classic was able to donate $90,000. |
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