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Back to school - with the phone call your teacher can't hear
Students have always tried to best their teachers in the small-scale warfare that is school, and now they have biology and technology on their side - at least where mobile phones are concerned. The psycho ringtone has arrived in Austria.
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Mosquito device considered to tackle rowdy youths
AN ULTRASONIC device that deters teenagers with a high-pitched noise is being considered for a site in Yate plagued with anti-social behaviour.
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One Device Tracks Gunshots; Another Stops Teens from Loitering
Richland County deputies have unveilved two new high-tech devices which they say should help to combat and reduce crime.
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Latest bid to fight bad behaviour
The Richland County Sheriff’s Department is putting two pieces of technology in the field to detect gunshots and disperse young loiterers without the presence of deputies.
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Latest bid to fight bad behaviour
UNRULY teenagers are making the lives of people in Berkeley a misery according to residents. Frustrated residents claim criminal damage, noise, speeding and underage drinking are all becoming a common scene late at night in Berkeley town centre. The public toilets on Marybrook Street are also believed to be used for suspected drug abuse and sex acts.
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'Mosquito' deserves try
A recent letter writer was correct with his statement that the Mosquito ultrasonic teen repellent operates at 80 to 90 dB and emits a frequency of 18 kHz. This was an obvious miscommunication.
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Town turns to a teenage repellent
The mosquito device has been put up at the Willows Arts Centre in George Street
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The insider's guide: The IgNobel prize
WASHINGTON -- Research into smelly feet, a study on the sound of fingernails on a blackboard and a device that repels teenagers with an annoying high-pitched hum. It must be the IgNobel Prize.

What is the IgNobel Prize?
It's the annual award given at Harvard University by Annals of Improbable Research magazine for weird, whacky and sometimes worthless scientific research. According to editor Marc Abrahams: "The prizes are intended to celebrate the unusual, honor the imaginative -- and spur people's interest in science, medicine and technology."

Is it connected to the other Nobel awards?
All the research is real and has been published in often-prestigious scientific and medical journals. However, unlike the Nobel prizes awarded this week by the Swedish Academy of Sciences, IgNobel winners receive no money, little recognition and have virtually no hope of transforming science or medicine. Even the name of the award, a play on the word "ignoble," is meant to be deprecating.

Tell us about this year's awards.
This year's winners were honored -- or maybe dishonored -- at a raucous ceremony at Harvard's inappropriately opulent Sanders Theater. Winners included a doctor who put his finger on a cure for hiccups, two men who think there is something to the old adage that feet smell like cheese, and researchers who discovered that dung beetles won't tuck in to just any old pile of ... well, dung.

Much of the attention this year seems to have been on why we hate the sound of fingernails on a blackboard.

Randolph Blake and two colleagues earned an IgNobel award for work on that subject. They discovered that we hate the sound because of its frequency. The nails on a blackboard research was part of a bigger, legitimate project, according to Blake, a Vanderbilt University psychology professor who specializes in vision. He, along with Dr. D. Lynn Halpern and James Hillenbrand, did the research 20 years ago while at Northwestern University. Blake remembers some volunteers refusing to participate after learning they'd have to endure the obnoxious screeching.

Does the research honored at the IgNobels ever prove useful?
Howard Stapleton's research certainly has. He invented teenager repellant. His device, called the Mosquito, emits a high frequency siren-like noise that is painful to the ears of teens and those in their early 20s, but inaudible to adults. Hundreds of units have been sold to retailers, local governments, police departments and homeowners all over Britain. The company is shipping its first Mosquito units for sale in the United States next week. "The success of this has knocked my socks off," Stapleton says.

Tell us about the crazy stuff.
Other winning research included a U.S. and Israeli team's discovery that hiccups could be cured with a finger up the rectum and a study into why woodpeckers do not get headaches.

What are the award's origins?
What started as a small event in 1991 to honor obscure and humorous scientific achievements has grown into an international happening, with some of this year's winners traveling from Australia, Kuwait and France.

Who presents the awards?
The awards are given out by real Nobel laureates, including Harvard physics professor Roy Glauber, who stays behind afterward to sweep up.

Author -
Publication CNN
Date 06 October 2006
Link www.cnn.com

 

 

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