Saturday, 10 July 2010

Refs Subconsciously Call More Fouls on Plays to the Left

Until we invent reliable robot soccer referees, fans have one more reason to suspect the refs of bias.
Referees are more likely to make foul calls when they see the action moving from right to left, or leftward, according to a new study by brain researchers at the University of Pennsylvania.
Twelve varsity soccer players were shown identical images of plays, with the only difference being that some viewed the images flipped horizontally, so there were right-to-left and left-to-right versions. The participants that saw the action as moving from right-to-left were statistically more likely to call a foul.
Other studies have shown that the direction in which people read and write leads to a bias toward rightward or leftward action. One study found that Italians were more likely to view a soccer goal as “stronger, faster and more beautiful” when it was presented with a left-to-right trajectory rather than the other way around, and that Arabic speakers showed the opposite bias.
Before we throw the human refs out in favor of robots, the bias that they found would need to be repeated with more participants, preferably with video, and with speakers of Arabic or other languages written right to left to confirm any correlation with reading and writing habits.
The study appeared online July 7 in PLoS One.
Image: Flikr/seriouslysilly
Jess McNally @'Wired Science'

Friday, 9 July 2010

I will let you work out what the post title should be for this one!

♪♫ 23 Skidoo - F.U.G.I.


(Thanx Claudia!)
Directed by Richard Heslop:
"made at St Martins Colledge of Art round about 1980 something if I can remember, which I can't...shot in London...8mm film and found footage..."

I'm with you on this Luke!

Luke Rowe LuckenbachTX 'Psychic' octopus picks Spain to win Sunday's World Cup final in South Africa #wc2010 #worldcup #esp Spain #ger Germany come on #ned Netherlands

The (g)olden days...

GodBlock

GodBlock is a web filter that blocks religious content. It is targeted at parents and schools who wish to protect their kids from the often violent, sexual, and psychologically harmful material in many holy texts, and from being indoctrinated into any religion before they are of the age to make such decisions. When installed properly, GodBlock will test each page that your child visits before it is loaded, looking for passages from holy texts, names of religious figures, and other signs of religious propaganda. If none are found, then your child is allowed to browse freely.

'Never slaughter a chicken in front of a monkey'

Li Chun's monkey /Quirky China News
A Chinese man who saved a one-armed, one-legged monkey says the primate has paid him back - by killing all of his chickens.
Li Chun, from Menghai village, Yunnan province, says the monkey has become a member of his family since he nursed it back to health. It has become to devoted to the family and performs many chores around the home - but it also copies everything Li does. When it saw him crack some eggs to make a meal it went into the hen coop and smashed all of the eggs it could find. And when Li slaughtered a chicken, the monkey copied him and has since killed about 80 chickens, reports the Chuncheng Evening Post.
"From then on, whenever it's not occupied, it jumps into the chicken pen, and kills the chickens, no matter how big or small, and tries to pluck them," said Li. "His record is nine chickens in one day. The lesson I have learned is to never slaughter a chicken in front of a monkey." Li found the seriously injured monkey in a forest more than a year ago when it jumped into a basket on his back. He found the monkey's right arm and left leg were rotten and took it home where he cut off the decayed limbs and gave it anti-inflammatory medication.
He nursed the monkey back to health and it made an astonishing recovery, putting on weight and soon started to help around the home. It helps look after Li's dog's puppies and even wiped away Li's tears when he was grieving the death of his father. Li said: "It sat besides me quietly and extended his only arm to wipe the tears on my face. He would softly pat my face and head, and look at me with great sympathy.
@'Orange' 
(Thanx Son #2!)

Brazil footballer's ex-lover 'was fed to dogs'


Report card: Could do SO much better!

With Julia Gillard's 'East Timor refugee solution' falling to bits and with her intention to still bring in the Clean Feed internet filter nothing has really changed has it? 
This despite a coalition including state schools, librarians and key players in the internet industry warning that protecting children online could be harder with a mandatory internet filter in place.
Meanwhile three Australian internet providers have this morning announced that they have agreed to voluntarily block a list of  URLs compiled by the Australian Communications and Media Authority, Communications Minister Stephen Conroy ahead of the federal government's planned internet filtering plan.

Funnily enough...

She is suddenly getting LOTS more followers...

Cary in the Sky with Diamonds

Before Timothy Leary and the Beatles, LSD was largely unknown and unregulated. But in the 1950s, as many as 100 Hollywood luminaries—Cary Grant and Esther Williams among them—began taking the drug as part of psychotherapy. With LSD research beginning a comeback, the authors recount how two Beverly Hills doctors promoted a new “wonder drug,” at $100 a session, profoundly altering the lives of their glamorous patients, Balaban included.

♪♫ Pick up-a penguin...a p-p-p-penguin♪♫

Gang 'picks up penguin' from Dublin city zoo

Fault Lines - Mental Illness in America's Prisons

Spiritualized Working on New Album of Pop Songs