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    Home > Biochemistry News > Biotechnology News > Zha villain curses his boss can improve the morale of employees and work efficiency research won the funny Nobel Prize.

    Zha villain curses his boss can improve the morale of employees and work efficiency research won the funny Nobel Prize.

    • Last Update: 2020-08-08
    • Source: Internet
    • Author: User
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    (Original title: Funny Nobel Prize revealed: Zha boss villain, with stamps to detect morning bur... Who is this year's Funny King? The Funny Nobel Prize was founded in 1991 and is sponsored by annals of the Annals of Improbable Research, a scientific humor journal, to recognize research that is "funny at first sight and is worth thinking about."
    " the 28th First Funny Nobel Prize Ceremony was held at harvard's Sanders Theater at 6:00 bst on September 14th.
    this year's theme is "The Heart."
    , as in previous years, has awarded 10 awards this year.
    in addition to five of the same awards set as the Nobel Prize (note: there are no physics awards this year), there are five random awards that you die and don't name.
    all the winners will also receive 10 trillion Zimbabwean dollars! High! That's it! Bonus.
    (don't know how much Zimbabwe is worth?) Baidu back, you won't be disappointed) finishing . . . This year's trophies and prizes go to two urologists, David Wartinger and Marc Mitchell, who have been rewarded with kidney stones: If you're waiting for stones to be discharged on their own, take a roller coaster ride.
    they found that roller coasters can speed up the discharge of kidney stones from the body - and sit in the back row better.
    in the study, although not all roller coasters were effective, the roller coaster at Disneyland Orlando was really useful for kidney stone patients.
    ancient human remains retain traces of similar food, pictured: James Cole, a British scientist at the American Museum of Natural History, proves that cannibals are nutritionally uneconomical: eating human meat gets far fewer calories than eating traditional meat.
    in the study, Cole also analyzed in detail the energy provided by different parts of the body.
    but the editor believes that this research that breaks off some people's evil thoughts can also compete for the Peace Prize ... The True Peace Award went to the likes of Francisco Alonso, who studied road rage.
    these scientists from Spain and Colombia studied the frequency, motivation and effect of swearing and cursing people while driving.
    they found that most drivers thought it was harmless when they were swearing, but in fact, anger while driving was positively related to the chance of a car accident.
    John Barry et al., the study was to use stamps to detect whether the genital erections of sleeping men were functioning properly.
    researchers say that whether Tintin has an erection in sleep is an important indicator for distinguishing between psychosexual impotence and physiological impotence.
    but how can you detect the pattern of Tintin in sleep? It's not a good idea for others to stare at their tints all night, and the researcher's approach is to wrap the stamps around the dingding when you sleep, and if you wake up to find that the ring is broken, you'll be at ease.
    the scene, the team also showed a series of unique and beautiful stamps... The award was awarded to Japanese doctor Akira Horiuchi.
    colonoscopy of who does who suffers.
    to alleviate the suffering of patients, Horiuchi used his own experiment, hoping to compare sitting positions with traditional lying positions, which position spent more comfortable in patients with enteroscopes.
    Unfortunately, the pain varied widely in several trials, so he called on more people to continue with the trial.
    in addition to the diagram above, Horiuchi also tried to conduct a live demonstration, but fortunately (ke) good (xi) was stopped in time.
    Paula Romao et al. have proven an efficient, environmentally friendly, free cleaner for cleaning dirty surfaces - your saliva.
    don't believe it? Guests from the Harvard Museum of Art also gave a live demonstration: easily destroying an oil painting with saliva. in the paper
    , the team also analyzed the specific ingredients that work: alpha-amylase.
    don't be too surprised if you see artificial saliva cleaners in the store in the future.
    this year's Anthropology Awards went to Tomas Persson, Gabriela-Alina Sauciuc and Elainie Madsen, who found that chimpanzees in zoos mimic the frequency and ability of humans to mimic chimpanzees.
    Biology Award went to Paul Becher et al., and their study concluded that if a fruit fly were drunk in a glass of wine, the taster could smell the fruit fly and even distinguish between the male and the female.
    this is because female fruit flies release a unique and unpleasant pheromone (Z4-11Al).
    (so if it's a male fruit fly that falls in, might it be drunk in your belly?) Thea Blackler et al. have studied a kind of literature that everyone used, but everyone rejects, the product specification.
    they found that the more they buy complex products, the less likely people like to read the instructions, even if the chair is installed below... The final economic award focuses on an important workplace issue.
    Lindie Liang and others have found that cursing their brutal bosses can really boost employees' morale and improve their productivity.
    (you use it, the boss of the small editor is very good and kind, I don't need to use it.)
    boss look at me! The Funny Nobel Prize was founded in 1991 and is sponsored by the annals of the scientific humor journal Annals of The Improbable Research, which aims to recognize research that "looks funny at first and is worth thinking about."
    , though called "Funny," has a rather luxurious lineup: not only are the judges and prize-winners among the winners of the eight-time Nobel Prize; Andre Haim, who won the 2000 Redhot Funny No. Award for his work on "Magnetic Maglev Frogs," won the Nobel Prize in Physics 10 years later; and even the physicist Roy Glauber, who won the Real Nobel Prize in 2005 for his work on "optically dry quantum theory."
    Source: Global Science.
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