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Vampires

What flying creature can hop, leap, and turn somersaults? Another hint: it can fit in the palm of your hand and weighs about the same as a penny. One more hint: its entire diet is blood. Desmodus rotundus, the vampire bat, packs a lot of punch into its 3-inch body. Using special 'thumbs' on its wings, it can push off into the air to perform ...

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Vampires
Biology

Potassium Iodide To The Rescue

Since the end of the Cold War, the focus of the nuclear threat has changed from hostile countries to terrorist cells. What should we do if terrorists set off a dirty bomb in a populated area, or ... Continue reading

PotassiumIodide
Chemistry

Knocking the NOx Out of Coal

Nitrogen is the most common part of the air we breathe. In fact, about 80% of the air is nitrogen. Normally, nitrogen atoms float around joined to each other like chemical couples. But when air is ... Continue reading

KnockingtheNOxOutofCoal
Geology

Flipping Magnetic Fields

North and south. We take these directions for granted. Pull out a compass and the needle will swing to the north in response to the magnetism in the Earth's crust. The magnetic poles roughly coincide ... Continue reading

FlippingMagneticFields
Medicine

What Is a Bruise?

A bruise is a deposit of blood under the skin. It flows from tiny capillaries that break when you bump your shin on the furniture or take the batter's pop fly in the eye. The injury starts out looking ... Continue reading

WhatIsaBruise

What's So Funny?

LaughterThere's an oft-repeated scientific definition of laughter as one or more forcibly voiced, acoustically symmetric, vowel-like notes (75 ms duration) separated by regular intervals (210-218 ms), and a decrescendo. That's pretty precise. Humor, on the other hand, is much harder to define. You can't really understand a complex cognitive construct like humor by knowing what part of the brain handles it, but it's a start. Right-brain stroke patients can lose their sense of humor even if their other cognitive abilities, including language, remain intact. So the right hemisphere is more important than the left for getting the point of a joke. A recent brain-imaging study has narrowed it down further, and identified a precise locus of humor appreciation in the right frontal lobe.

The frontal lobe of the brain is the locus of working memory, an on-line information-processing faculty that helps you hold several pieces of information in your mind while you solve a problem. In the case of humor appreciation, the problem to be solved is getting the joke, and in order to do that it's often necessary to reconcile a punch line with what you were set up to expect. (A Groucho Marx example: Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.) Most attempts to define humor refer to the notion of incongruity, or putting two things together in an unexpected way. Those two things can be expectations and a punch line, for example, or someone's behavior and the setting in which it occurs. Part of the right frontal lobe seems to be doing the job of holding these different things in mind at the same time, so that you can recognize the incongruity that results in laugh.

Of course, nobody has the right to tell you what the definition of humor is, any more than a biologist can tell a cat what a purr means. But it can be fun to see how the definitions proposed by psychologists hold up to the data provided by actual jokes. Here is another classic from Groucho Marx: Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read.