This study quoted in Scientific American raises some interesting considerations for online "friending" behaviours - it would be a valuable extension to this research to determine if similar factors applied to social networks!
A new study published September 21 in Group Processes & Intergroup Relations suggests that when people are able to choose friends from a larger, more diverse group, they pick pals who are most similar to themselves. Those in smaller groups, however, wind up with dissimilar—but closer—friendships.
"The ironic finding is that in more diverse environments, we find less diverse friendships," says social psychologist Angela Bahns of Wellesley College in Massachusetts, lead author of the study. She compared students at large and small college campuses to see how their social environments shaped their friendship choices. Although you might expect people who go to a large, varied campus to spend time with a more diverse group of people, in fact it just allows them to be more exclusive, Bahns says.
Whereas there is a large body of research suggesting that we have a universal preference for similarity (in everything from behavior to first-name initials), similar is not always better, according to Bahns. In fact, she found that in spite of more differences in attitudes, values and behaviors, students on small campuses reported closer friendships than their large-campus counterparts.
"If you live in a world where there's not much choice, you're going have to settle for people who are not as similar as you," says co-author Chris Crandall, a psychologist at the University of Kansas (K.U.) in Lawrence. "But you can be perfectly happy with friends who aren't that similar."
Employers that take disciplinary action against an employee for posting damaging or inappropriate comments on social media sites such as Facebook can face legal - and potentially costly - ramifications if they do so without following basic workplace laws and procedures.
According to Jenny Inness, senior associate at Harmers Workplace Lawyers, employers should first consider whether the employee's conduct is sufficiently connected to the employment relationship before taking action in response to erring employees in the digital sphere.
Inness said that an employer's right to take action for 'after hours' conduct has always been a complex issue. "It's a tricky balance between an employee's right to privacy and an employer's right to protect its organisation," she said.
She added that an employer is permitted to take action against an employee (including dismissal) because of their 'after hours' (or 'private') activities if the conduct is connected with the relationship of employment and has serious enough implications for the employer.
Instances where employers may have reasonable grounds for disciplinary action against an employee include social media posts that:
The issue that isn't raised in this article is the monitoring of employees social media activity by employers - when does this cross the line?
Yep - I think that pretty much sums it up!
Now - dare I photograph my PhD study - the physical space?
Not today! ;-)
Friday Weird Science: Having trouble pooping? Maybe you should look…at your bra.
Oct 01 2010 Published by scicurious under Friday Weird Science, Uncategorized
I had another post lined up for this week, but I saw this abstract over at NCBI ROFL…and was lost. I had to blog it. It is GOLD.
(Blogging GOLD, I say)So ladies. Your bra. Does it make you feel…inhibited? Do you feel it constipates your breast freedom, so to speak?
Lee, Kikufuji, Tokura. “Field studies on inhibitory influence of skin pressure exerted by a body compensatory brassiere on the amount of feces.” Journal of Physiological Anthropology, 2000.
Additional citations go out to all my awesome Twitter peeps who provided me with the euphemisms utilized throughout this post. You are all ASTOUNDING. And that…is a compliment. Honest. I couldn’t fit them all, but I really did try my hardest! Now, let’s lay some cable, and get this party started.
First, let’s start with “body compensatory brassiere”. That’s a bra, with the “characteristic to keep bust at a higher position, using two side bones and wire”. So, an underwire bra.
Sci personally wants to know why on earth people would conceive of a study testing the effects of bra wearing on how many kids you drop off at the pool, but there you have it. The idea apparently arose from previous work showing that skin pressure exerted by your clothing can inhibit your SALIVA. Really. Apparently they think this resulted because the pressure on your skin suppressed the peripheral nervous system (PNS), and thus your salivary glands. I’m not too sure what to think of this, as one would think that inhibition of the PNS would have a LOT more effects than how much you drool, but we’ll take it as it comes for the moment.
More to the point, previous work with girdles (heh, I love that, “previous work with girdles”, I shall have to quote me) has shown that you get smaller and slower #2 when you are “under the influence of a girdle”. And well, if a girdle, could maybe the pressure exerted by a bra change your log dropping abilities?
So they took 7 female subjects, ages 11-41 years (yes, really). All of them suffered from no constipation and were under no medication at the time. The women went braless for a week, then wore the bra for a week, and spent the last week uninhibited and nippin’ out. For those three weeks, EVERY TIME they ipnched a loaf, they had to record it…and WEIGH IT THEMSELVES. One wonders what scales they had to do this, and how they got the women to do it. I really hope they were paid. For the duration of the experiment, the amount they ate and drank was carefully controlled.
You can see that on the weeks when the girl was braless, she had significantly larger battles with the septic tank than when she was wearing a bra. I personally wonder about the low showings of spreading the gospel which took place on the first and last days of each week, but she’s actually pretty regular, considering.
Now, the whole group:
Yes, that x axis IS misspelled.Overall, the subjects not only had lower dump truck volumes when they were wearing a bra, they ALSO went more days without taking the Browns to the Superbowl.
So what explanation did the authors come up with for these findings? They have three hypotheses:
1) The skin pressure produced by the bra reduces saliva, resulting in longer times to digest starch, and so it takes longer to take a deuce with the food you’ve eaten.
2) The skin pressure produced by the bra reduced intestinal motility due to inhibition of the PNS, and inhibited intestinal motility stopped the girls from making a good call on the butt-phone.
3) The increased skin pressure might slow the propulsion of the food through the intestine, increasing water absorption, and delayed transit made taking an upper decker more difficult.
I…have to say. These don’t seem all that plausible. I mean, well ok, they do. BUT, I really have to wonder. HOW DID THEIR BRAS FIT. Were they too tight? A LOT of women wear bras that are WAY too tight in the chest band, so maybe that kind of pressure stopped them from dropping some ballast? In addition, there are sociological pressures here. Perhaps those times going without a bra, the women felt more RELAXED, and being more relaxed, had an easier time popping a squat.
But really, if all it takes is that teensy bit of skin pressure to make your squirt hurt, I don’t know that there’s much we can do unless we all go nudist.
Now, there are MANY problems with this paper. The number of subjects was low, the AGE of subjects was insanely variable (11-41?!? REALLY?!), and none of the women were larger than a C cup, which to my mind is not helpful. I would be way more interested the degree to which women had problems when they were significantly large in the mammaries, which results in a lot of bad bra fit and pinching and pressure, not to mention the greater pressure involved holding the girls front and center. But the paper itself is just so deliciously awesome that I cannot be too mad. Especially if there’s followup work.
To conclude, maybe a too tight bra DOES inhibit your ability to relax and heave a Havana. But if a bra can do that, what about other articles of clothing? Did women throughout the age of the corset suffer chronic constipation? Not only that, the bra may pinch a nerve (heh), but what about things lower down? What about tight PANTS?! Belts?! LEGGINGS?! What about underwear?! Will no one test the thong?! Boxers vs briefs?! Should we all wear mu-mus for the sake of a good poop?
What would happen with one of those?Lee, Y., Kikufuji, N., & Tokura, H. (2000). Field Studies on Inhibitory Influence of Skin Pressure Exerted by a Body Compensatory Brassiere on the Amount of Feces. Journal of PHYSIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY and Applied Human Science, 19 (4), 191-194 DOI: 10.2114/jpa.19.191
PS: I thought you all might get a hoot out of this. BEHOLD! Sci’s Twitter feed (presented in pics because I’m not tech savvy), and her many fabulous peeps who offered their insights. I didn’t get them all, but to all of you, THANK YOU. The writing of this post was made hilarious by your efforts.
Peggy says:Those bras in the top photo are pretty. Not that that has anything to do with !Science!!
My hypothesis: when the ladies went braless they were more likely to wear multiple layers of clothing and heavy jackets to prevent shocking their friends and family with their bouncing bosoms. That made them hot and thirsty, so they drank more water and ate more plums from their iceboxes. All that liquid and fiber kept things moving.
At least that’s what I imagine happening if I went braless for a week.
Marcus says:What would happen with one of those?
oh my. Poop scheduling is the last thing that comes to mind.
Where can I get an outfit like that?
Reply
scicurious says:I know, I want one. Not red though. Much as I love Uhara, I couldn’t stand to walk around knowing I was red shirted.
Apparently it used to be for sale on Etsy, but no longer exists, however, you can get custom builds here: http://www.eveningarwen.com/modules/messaging/?action=custom_request
groki says:I got all the euphemisms except “upper decker,” so I checked urban dictionary.
yikes! that’s some specialized terminology there.
tideliar says:Excellent Sci!
and re-corset, #2 would be the last thing on my mind…then again, the first thing might be WTF am I doing wearing a Star Trek corset?
Pascale says:If my double-D’s were left to the mercy of gravity I would find it easier to poop because I would be HIDING FROM THE DAMN WORLD IN THE BATHROOM.
Peter Janiszewski says:Sci, I am wiping my tears as I write this comment. This was pure genius. I can’t believe how many euphemisms you managed to squeeze in there.
In terms of breasts and bras, I actually recently published a paper on
breast size and body composition and metabolic status. When I was doing teh background research for that study, I learned that approximately 50% of women do not wear the correct size bra. So yes, this would be a limitation to possibly the craziest study I have ever heard of.In terms of the ‘upper decker’ – I got this from a “MacGruber” movie ad. It is rather vile, and makes very little sense, but there you have it.
Karen says:The bra is a factor I have never considered in my intestinal adventures. But a “body compensatory brassiere” is a push-up bra, not just an underwire. (I have plenty of underwires that are not push-up; in fact, a couple of my bust-reducers have underwires.)
This study does not pass the smell test.
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You really need to read the rest of this... it's g'teed to make you smirk ;-)
"Outdated and cruel" ... a bullfight this week. Photo: Reuters
BARCELONA: Catalonia's parliament has voted to ban bullfighting in the first such prohibition in mainland Spain.
Regional legislators voted 68 to 55 for the ban yesterday on the grounds of cruelty, the speaker of the assembly said.
The vote on abolishing bullfights in the north-eastern autonomous region follows an intense campaign by animal rights activists to end an ''outdated and cruel'' part of Spanish culture.
Catalan nationalists also seized on it as a means of expressing independence from Madrid at a time of growing political unease between the regional and national governments.
The regional government was moved to propose the vote after 180,000 Catalan citizens signed a petition circulated by Prou! (Enough!), an anti-bullfight group.
Interest in Spain's ''national fiesta'' has waned in the region and dozens of local councils, including Barcelona's, have declared in the past few years that they are officially ''anti-bullfighting''.
The Plaza de Toros Monumental, the last of Barcelona's three bullrings to still stage ''corridas'', struggles to fill a third of its 19,000 seats and often attracts more tourists than locals.
The ban, which will be introduced from 2012, was preceded by furious debate.
In an editorial, the centre-right daily newspaper El Mundo expressed a sentiment echoed in much of Spain - that the move had little to do with animal cruelty but had become a ''political issue'' in a region where the ''idea is to ban everything that is Spanish''.
Telegraph, London; Bloomberg
Congratulations Cataluna!
Now - come on - let's see this ban extended across the rest of Spain!
It's cruel, it's barbaric and does not represent the culture of the modern Spain!
No-one should subject an animal to this much torture and making it a spectator sport is just too ghastly.
Call for Papers and Presentations
BLOGTALK 2010 http://2010.blogtalk.net
The 7th International Conference on Social Software
Galway, Ireland, 26-28 August 2010Important Dates
===============Regular paper abstracts due: 7 June 2010 (mandatory)
Regular paper submissions due: 14 June 2010
Notification of regular paper acceptance or rejection: 30 June 2010
Camera-ready regular papers due: 14 July 2010Demonstration and poster abstracts due: 7 July 2010 (no full papers)
Notification of demo and poster acceptance or rejection: 14 July 2010Brief
=====* Audience: practitioners, developers, researchers (academia and industry)
* Topics: social software, social media, blogs, microblogs, networks, etc.
* Format: talks, demos and posters, discussion panels, breakout sessions
* Keynote speaker: Stowe Boyd (/Message)
* Conference: 26-27 August; workshop ("MicroBlogTalk"): 28 August
* Medieval castle banquet: 26 August (early booking advised)
* Website: http://2010.blogtalk.net/Introduction
============Following the international success of the past six BlogTalk events, the next BlogTalk - to be held in Galway, Ireland from 26-28 August 2010 - is continuing with its focus on social software, while remaining committed to the diverse cultures, practices and tools of our emerging networked society. The conference is designed to maintain a sustainable dialog between developers of innovative social software solutions, academics and researchers who study and advance social software and social media, practitioners and administrators in corporate and educational settings, and other general members of the social software and social media communities.
Due to the interdisciplinary nature of the conference, audiences will come from different fields of practice and will have different professional backgrounds. We strongly encourage proposals to bridge these cultural differences and to be understandable for all groups alike. For researchers, BlogTalk is an ideal conference for presenting and exchanging research work from current and future social software projects at an international level. For developers, the conference is a great opportunity to fly ideas, visions and prototypes in front of a distinguished audience of peers, to discuss, to link-up and to learn. For practitioners, this is a venue to discuss use cases for social software and social media, and to report on any results you may have with like-minded individuals.
We invite you to submit papers describing your research and applications at the BlogTalk 2010 conference. To encourage submission of various types of work by researchers, developers and practitioners, papers can be submitted in either of two tracks:
* Regular Track (full paper required, 12-14 pages in LNCS format). We expect papers that discuss mature and implemented work, both regarding (1) practical or industrial implementations and use-case reports for social software and social media, or (2) theoretical and research aspects of social networks and social data. Papers should clearly motivate the approach and provide relevant evaluations. Each submission will be reviewed by three members of the Program Committee.
* Demonstration and Poster Track (a two-page abstract describing what will be presented). This track gives the opportunity to present recent and in-progress work, in a forum that will encourage discussions since this track will be held in a special session with ample time for discussions and networking.Topics of particular interest include, but are not limited to:
* Applications of social networking;
* Architectures of social software applications;
* Business use cases and return on experience;
* Categorisation, folksonomies and social tagging;
* Collaboration and content sharing on the Web and in the enterprise;
* Data acquisition and data mining;
* Data portability;
* Digital rights;
* Ethnography studies of social networking platforms;
* Human computer interaction;
* Identity, privacy, trust and reputation;
* Real-time Social Web, microblogging and the Mobile Web;
* Semantic Web, Linked Data and knowledge representation for the Social Web;
* Uses in domains: e-government, health care, education, politics;
* Virtual worlds;
* Web standards for social data;
* Wikis and open collaboration.What is BlogTalk?
=================From its beginnings, the Internet has fostered communication, collaboration and networking between users. However, the first boom at the turn of the millennium was mainly driven by a rather one-sided interaction: e-commerce, portal sites and the broadcast models of mainstream media were introduced to the Web. Over the last six or seven years, new tools and practices have emerged which emphasise the social nature of computer-mediated interaction. Commonly (and broadly) labeled as social software, they encompass applications such as blogs and microblogs, wikis, social networking sites, real-time chat systems, and collaborative classification systems (folksonomies). The growth and diffusion of social software has in part been enabled by certain innovative principles of software development (e.g. open-source projects, open APIs, etc.), and in part by empowering the individual user to participate in networks of peers on different scales.
Every year, the International Conference on Social Software (BlogTalk) brings together different groups of people using and advancing the Internet and its usage: technical and conceptual developers, researchers with interdisciplinary backgrounds, and practitioners alike. It is designed to initiate a dialog between users, developers, researchers and others who share, analyse and enjoy the benefits of social software. The focus is on social software as an expression of a culture that is based on the exchange of information, ideas and knowledge. Moreover, we understand social software as a new way of relating people to people and to machines, and vice versa. In the spirit of the free exchange of opinions, links and thoughts, a wide range of participants can engage in this discourse.
BlogTalk enables participants to connect and discuss the latest trends and happenings in the world of social software. It consists of a mix of presentations, panels, face-to-face meetings, open discussions and other exchanges of research, with attendees sharing their experiences, opinions, software developments and tools. Developers are invited to discuss technological developments that have been designed to improve the utilisation of social software, as well as reporting about the current state of their software and projects. This includes new blog and wiki applications, content-creation and sharing environments, advanced groupware and tools, client-server designs, GUIs, APIs, content syndication strategies, devices, applications for microblogging, and much more. Researchers are asked to focus on their visions and interdisciplinary concepts explaining social software including, but not limited to, viewpoints from social sciences, cultural studies, psychology, education, law and natural sciences. Practitioners can talk about the practical use of social software in professional and private contexts, around topics such as communication improvements, easy-to-use knowledge management, social software in politics and journalism, blogging as a lifestyle, etc.
BlogTalk has attracted prominent speakers in the past, and previous keynote speakers include Yeonho Oh, Isaac Mao, Nova Spivack, Salim Ismail, Michael Breidenbrücker, danah boyd, Matt Mullenweg, and Rod Smith. 2010 will also feature a stellar lineup of keynotes, including Stowe Boyd, an authority on social tools and their impact on media, business, and society. Since one of the main motivations for organising and running BlogTalk every year is for attendees to be able to meet and connect with a diverse set of people that are fascinated by and work in the online digital world, we encourage you to attend and participate in BlogTalk 2010.
General Chair: John Breslin (NUI Galway / boards.ie)
Programme Chair: Alexandre Passant (DERI, NUI Galway)
Programme Committee:
* Gabriela Avram (University of Limerick)
* Anne Bartlett-Bragg (Headshift)
* Mark Bernstein (Eastgate Systems)
* Stephanie Booth (Climb to the Stars)
* Thomas N. Burg (Socialware)
* Rob Cawte (Web Heavies)
* Fabien Gandon (INRIA)
* Josephine Griffith (NUI Galway)
* Conor Hayes (DERI, NUI Galway)
* Renato Iannella (National ICT Australia)
* Akshay Java (Microsoft)
* Philipp Kaerger (L3S Research Center)
* Sheila Kinsella (DERI, NUI Galway)
* Pranam Kolari (Yahoo!)
* Cameron Marlow (Facebook)
* Daniel Olmedilla (Telefonica)
* Davide Palmisano (Fondazione Bruno Kessler)
* Christine Perey (Perey Research and Consulting)
* Jan Schmidt (Hans Bredow Institut)
* Amit Sheth (Wright State University)
* Hideaki Takeda (NII Japan)
* Mischa Tuffield (Garlik)
* Paolo Valdemarin (Evectors)
* Seokchan "Channy" Yun (Seoul National University)
* David Weinberger (Berkman Center for Internet and Society)
* Ton Zylstra (Interdependent Thoughts)Steering Committee: John Breslin, Thomas N. Burg (BlogTalk Founder), Anne Bartlett-Bragg
Contact
=======
This is a *not to be missed* event if you're a researcher or practitioner in the multi-disciplinary field of social software.
The program provides an opportunity to bring together global thought leaders and extend your network of contacts.
I would encourage anyone researching in this field to consider submitting a paper!
Seton Hill University will supply a new Apple iPad and a 13″ MacBook laptop to every full-time student arriving at its Greensburg, Pennsylvania, campus in fall 2010.
The giveaway kicks off the small liberal arts university’s Griffin Technology Advantage Program, which aims to cultivate digital literacy among its students. It also marks a growing shift to provide students with e-books rather than textbooks.
Students will have complete access to the devices during classes and for personal use. They can download textbooks from the iBook Store, take notes, communicate and share files with professors, advisers and classmates, conduct research and engage in interactive learning experiences. No word yet on whether the expected profusion of gaming apps for the iPad will be banned during class time.
If one free iPad and MacBook wasn’t a large enough lure for prospective students, Seton Hill has also promised to replace laptops with new ones after two years that students can then take with them when they graduate. The university boasts an on-site IT department trained in Mac repair and will even loan students MacBooks while theirs undergo restoration.
But do students really need both an iPad and a MacBook? Will the graduates of less technologically progressive schools be at a disadvantage without access to these devices?
The potential for iPads as a replacement for text books and mounds of paper-based "readers" is certainly demonstrated by this initiative.
Do students need both?
Well - the iPad isn't a laptop - and the story doesn't explain what subjects they're studying, but you could assume the laptop is used for more extensive computing experiences.
(Hope they don't ban the games function... if students are playing games in your lectures, then perhaps the question is more about how are you engaging them, as an educator?)