Wapakoneta Daily News

Poop knives, arachnopho­bid entomologi­sts win 2020 Ig Nobels

- By MARK PRATT

Maybe this year's Ig Nobels, the spoof prizes for dubious but humorous scientific achievemen­t, should have been renamed the Ick Nobels.

An anthropolo­gist who tested an urban legend by fashioning a knife out of frozen human feces, and a man who found that spiders oddly give scientists who study insects the heebie-jeebies, are among the 2020 winners.

Because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, Thursday's 30th annual Ig Nobel ceremony was a 75-minute prerecorde­d virtual affair instead of the usual live event at Harvard University. Even so, it managed to maintain some of the event's traditions, including real Nobel Prize laureates handing out the amusing alternativ­es.

"It was a nightmare, and it took us months, but we got it done," said Marc Abrahams, editor of the Annals of Improbable Research magazine, the event's primary sponsor.

This year's winners also included a collection of world leaders who think they're smarter than doctors and scientists, and a team of Dutch and Belgian researcher­s who looked at why chewing and other sounds people make drive us crazy.

Metin Eren has been fascinated since high school by the story of an Inuit man in Canada who made a knife out of his own excrement. The story has been told and retold, but is it true?

Eren and his colleagues decided to find out. Eren, an assistant professor of anthropolo­gy at Kent State University in Ohio and co-director of the university's Experiment­al Archaeolog­y Lab, used real human feces frozen to minus-50 degrees Centigrade and filed to a sharp edge. He then tried to cut meat with it.

"The poop knives failed miserably," he said in a telephone interview. "There's not a lot of basis empiricall­y for this fantastic story."

The study is a little gross but makes an important point: There are a lot of narratives out there based on phony or unproven science.

"The point of this was to show that evidence and fact checking are vital," he said.

Richard Vetter won an Ig Nobel for his paper looking at why people who spend their lives studying insects are creeped out by spiders.

His paper, "Arachnopho­bic Entomologi­sts: Why Two Legs Make all the Difference," appeared in the the journal American Entomologi­st in 2013.

Vetter, a retired research associate and spider specialist who worked in the entomology department at the University of California Riverside for 32 years, found during the course of his work that many insect lovers hate spiders.

"It always struck me as funny that when I talked to entomologi­sts about spiders, they would say something along the lines of, 'Oh, I hate spiders!'" he said in a telephone interview.

He found that many bug lovers had had a negative experience with a spider, including bites and nightmares. The fact that spiders are often hairy, fast, silent and have all those creepy eyes freaks out entomologi­sts, he said.

This year's Ig Nobel for Medical Education was shared by a group of world leaders including U.S. President Donald Trump, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Russian President Vladimir Putin for their attitude around the pandemic.

"These are all individual­s who realized that their judgment is better than the judgment of people who have been studying this their entire lives, and were more insistent about it," Abrahams said.

Abrahams made efforts to reach out to the world leaders to accept their awards, with no luck. "It would have been fun for them to take part," he said.

Damiaan Denys and his colleagues earned the Ig Nobel in medicine for pioneering a new psychiatri­c diagnosis — misophonia — getting annoyed by noises others make.

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