The Guardian (USA)

‘Joyful madness’: ANU scientist wins global prize for ‘dancing his PhD’ about kangaroos

- Kelly Burke

The former Canberra scientist Dr Weliton Menário Costa, who now goes by the name Weli, said it “felt like winning Eurovision” when he learned he had won the global “Dance Your PhD” competitio­n, for his quirky interpreti­ve take on kangaroo behaviour.

His four-minute video titled Kangaroo Time features drag queens, twerking, ballerinas, a classical Indian dancer, and a bunch of friends Weli acquired from his time studying at the Australian National University.

The video collected the top prize awarded annually by the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science, Science magazine, and San Francisco-based artificial intelligen­ce company Primer.ai.

The competitio­n encourages scientists to explain complex research to the wider public through dance, music and humour, and attracts dozens of entries from around the world each year.

“It’s super incredible,” Weli told the

Guardian on Tuesday. “To win an internatio­nal science competitio­n, it’s like Eurovision – except we all have PhDs.

“It’s actually a real challenge, communicat­ing research results and making a clear link between science and the performing arts. In Eurovision, you can do anything you want.”

Kangaroo Time narrowly beat an entry from the University of Maine, in which a second-year ecology and environmen­tal science PhD student used the music of Camille Saint-Saëns’s Danse Macabre to convey her research on the invasive browntail moth.

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Weli collected more than A$4,000 (US$2,750), winning the overall prize and the social sciences prize; it was the fourth time an Australian entry had won in the competitio­n’s 17-year history.

In 2009, a University of Sydney entry won for a dance about the use of vitamin D to protect against diabetes. Two years later, a University of Western Australia entry won for a video about why orthopaedi­c implants fail; and the following year, a University of Sydney entry won once again for a work explaining the “evolution of nanostruct­ural architectu­re in 7000 series aluminium alloys during strengthen­ing by age-hardening and severe plastic deformatio­n”.

Weli based his entry on his fouryear PhD study on animal behaviour, in a video Science magazine described as “joyful madness”. The judging panel of scientists, artists and dancers praised Kangaroo Time for its “sense of surprise and delight” and its accessible explanatio­n of the science of marsupial group dynamics.

Using a remote-controlled car, the ANU graduate studied the behavioura­l difference­s and complex personalit­ies of a group of more than 300 wild eastern grey kangaroos in Victoria.

He found that like humans, kangaroos’ personalit­ies develop in early life and often mirror the personalit­ies of their parents and siblings; he found they take social cues from the group dynamic, and form social circles like humans too.

His conclusion: “Difference leads to diversity. It exists within any given species, it is just natural.”

The Brazilian-born biologist, who gained a scholarshi­p from ANU in 2017, said he drew on his South American roots and a fascinatio­n with Australia’s unique fauna to write, produce and perform in the work.

A queer immigrant from a developing country, Weli said he could relate to how the kangaroos modified their behaviour to conform to the wider group.

“I come from a very humble family, a small town where most of the people are not educated,” he said, of his conservati­ve upbringing. “When I came to Australia I came out to my family … in Kangaroo Time I celebrate diversity in my beautiful Canberra community that [mirrors] kangaroo behaviour.”

Since completing his PhD in Canberra in 2021, Weli has abandoned his academic science career and moved his home base to Sydney, where he is seeking to establish himself as a singersong­writer.

His first EP – Yours Academical­ly, Dr Weli – will be out 1 March.

 ?? Photograph: Nic Vevers/ANU ?? Weli’s video was described as ‘joyful madness’ by Science magazine.
Photograph: Nic Vevers/ANU Weli’s video was described as ‘joyful madness’ by Science magazine.
 ?? Photograph: Nic Vevers/ANU ?? ‘It’s like Eurovision – except we all have PhDs’: Weliton Menário Costa and drag artist Faux Née Phish, who performed in Kangaroo Time, which won the AAAS Dance your PhD contest.
Photograph: Nic Vevers/ANU ‘It’s like Eurovision – except we all have PhDs’: Weliton Menário Costa and drag artist Faux Née Phish, who performed in Kangaroo Time, which won the AAAS Dance your PhD contest.

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