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Analysis of cats during a cat show reveals they mostly lazed around

Feedback is entranced by researchers' detailed study of cat behaviour during a "feline exposition", which shows the cats were mainly sleeping, resting and looking around

Intentional cattiness

When cats are forced to endure a crush of mass attention from an adoring public, do they continue to behave in their famous, endearing, imperious ā€œcat-likeā€ ways? Simona Cannas and her colleagues at the University of Milan in Italy produced some data that may bring attention to the question.

Their study, ā€œā€œ, published in the Journal of Veterinary Behavior, focuses on 82 cats at a cat show. (The researchers, using professional lingo, say the event was ā€œa feline expositionā€.)

They gathered the data meticulously: ā€œthe observer stood in front of the cages once an hour, from 10 to 17 [minutes past], for a total of 8 times for each catā€.

They saw what they saw: ā€œAnalysis of behaviors exhibited by cats during the exposition day revealed that most of them were sleeping (93.9%), resting (62.2%), and looking at their surroundings (92.7%).ā€

The researchers’ conclusion leaves room, still, for debate as to what those cats had in mind. The study says ā€œthe cat show environment represents a situation full of stressful stimuli for the cat; despite this, our results have identified few behaviors of discomfort or stress… Further studies are required to confirm and deepen our results.ā€

What a yarn

Very long, thin things vary a lot in what their mathematician’s-eye-catching length-to-thinness ratio makes it possible for them to do.

A from North Carolina State University hails the creation of ā€œyarn-shaped supercapacitorsā€, so called because the devices are thread-like and can behave as capacitors, controllably storing and disbursing electrical charge. The press release quotes Wei Gao, a co-inventor of the technology.

She said: ā€œImagine you can make a yarn, just a regular textile yarn, that you also make into a battery. You can basically hide it in your clothing. If you can do that, you can add so many more functions to your clothing.ā€

We may be entering a technological Age of Thin Things.

As Feedback has noted (1 October 2022), a new city planned as part of Saudi Arabia’s Neom project is designed to be 170,000 metres long by 200 metres wide. Could the North Carolinian yarn-shaped supercapacitor tech be incorporated into the Saudi city’s exoskeleton? That would be a drastic leap to the future for a country that insists it wants to move beyond its current economic reliance on oil.

This suddenly-almost-plausible possibility shows the prescience of Wallis Simpson, former Duchess of Windsor, who is said to have said almost a century ago: ā€œOne can never be too rich or too thin.ā€

Measuring addiction

The old saying ā€œIf you can measure it, it must be importantā€ haunts the many research efforts to explain why it is important to measure two of the five fingers on a person’s hand. Specifically, the second and fourth fingers. The two-finger quest kinda, sorta resembles an addiction. Sometimes this quest looks at addiction itself as being, maybe, something you can better understand by measuring fingers.

Typically, finger-ratio explanations grow in some vague way from the notion that hormone levels in the uterus before birth somehow explain the relative lengths, years later, of a person’s fingers.

Finger-ratio-centric research studies are numerous and imaginative. They vary widely – almost wildly – in the kinds of important mysteries the researchers seek to explain.

How varied? Here are a few of the subjects addressed in recent years in published digit-ratio studies: ā€œvoice behavior in bankersā€; ā€œhunting success among Hadza huntersā€; religiosity in university students; ā€œparental income inequality and children’s digit ratioā€; artistic ability; ā€œage at first marriage in semi-nomadic people from Namibiaā€; ā€œpsychological features in a sample of caversā€; bite injuries occurring in fistfights; ā€œmanagerial skills of managers employed in public and private organizations of Udaipur Cityā€; and ā€œnumber of sex partnersā€.

And addiction. Mehmet Gürkan Gürok and colleagues at various institutions in Turkey have recently written a paper called ā€œā€œ. They published it in the Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse. Like most finger-ratio studies, this one was done with great care: ā€œWe obtained the lengths of 2D and 4D of the subjects by using sensitive calipers and calculated the 2D:4D.ā€ And as is customary, it is full of promise: ā€œOur findings can be considered promising as to whether prenatal hormonal factors are important in the etiopathogenesis of addiction.ā€

The Denver sniff test

When something – and its headline – smells funny, maybe it is worth looking into. People who happen across a sombre study by environmental scientists in the US might react first to the ambiguity of its title: ā€œā€œ.

Was that title meant to be solemnly serious? Deadpannedly funny? Both? Whatever the intent, Feedback salutes its authors. Their wording triggered the olfactoric-linguistical sensibilities of Mason Porter, who alerted us to it.

Marc Abrahams created the Ig Nobel Prize ceremony andĀ co-foundedĀ the magazine Annals of Improbable Research. Earlier, he worked on unusual ways to use computers. His website isĀ .

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