Up to a third of women surveyed would admit to going on a romantic date just to be invited to free dinner

By portal-3

Hasta un tercio de las mujeres encuestadas admitiría acudir a una cita romántica solo para ser invitada a cenar gratis

Despite the lack of romantic attraction towards a suitor, there are women who would choose to go on a romantic date to receive a free dinner from the suitor. It is what has come to be called Foodie Calls.

Although the idea of the gastronomic call has been discussed in popular media for some time, psychologists Brian Collisson, Jennifer Howell and Trista Harig have been the first to address its study in the next investigation published in
Social Psychological and Personality Science.

Foodie Call

The research is based on two studies in which women were surveyed regarding their behavior regarding foddie calls, dark triad personality traits, traditional gender role beliefs, and online dating history.

The research concludes that between 23 and 33% of the women surveyed had on some occasion deliberately misrepresented their romantic interest towards a man to have dinner at his expense.

In Study 1, dark triad beliefs and traditional gender roles significantly predicted foodie calls' prior behavior and perceived acceptability. Study 2 used more comprehensive measures and again suggested that dark triad traits (narcissism, psychopathy and Machiavellianism) predicted foodie calls and their perceived acceptability.

Collisson and his colleagues point out that the foodie perpetrator can be a man or a woman, and can happen in both same-sex and opposite-sex contexts. However, it is usually described as a case of a woman receiving a dinner offer from a man and pretending to be romantically interested just to get a free meal at a nice restaurant. For this reason, The researchers only surveyed women who identified themselves as heterosexual.

Scoring high in the traits of the dark triad means displaying these traits with greater intensity:

  • Machiavellianism. They manipulate and deceive others for their own benefit.
  • Psychopathy. They lack empathy for the plight of others and feel no remorse for their own harmful actions.
  • Narcissism. They have an inflated sense of their own importance and rights. Additionally, although they are socially skilled, they have little interest in building deep relationships with others.

More than a thousand women completed questionnaires that assessed the following:

  • Frequency of foodie calls. First, they were asked if they had ever participated in a foodie call. If they responded positively, they were asked to estimate how many times they had done it. Finally, they rated the social acceptability of this practice.
  • dark triad. Respondents answered questions from commonly used scales designed to assess the degree of Machiavellianism, psychopathy, and narcissism.
  • Gender role beliefs. Items in this questionnaire assessed respondents' endorsement of traditional gender roles. Among these, of course, was the belief that it is a man's duty to pay all expenses on a date.

However, it should be noted that the majority of the women surveyed did not approve of foodie calls or get involved in them.


The news

Up to a third of women surveyed would admit to going on a romantic date just to be invited to free dinner

was originally published in

Xataka Science

by
Sergio Parra

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These are the oldest (and also the most expensive) false teeth

By portal-3

Estos son los dientes postizos más antiguos (y también los más caros)

Finds in Etruscan tombs suggest that as early as 700 BC. c. partial dentures were used in the present-day territory of Tuscany, Italy.

Some were permanently attached to existing teeth, and others were removable.

The first European sets of dentures date back to the 15th century, although as mentioned above, they existed long before then. The teeth were carved from bone or ivory, or were simply prepared from teeth recovered from cemeteries, since apparently there were dead or even living donors.

Diagramme De Pierre Fauchard Sur La Restauration Des Dents

Throughout history, as more knowledge has been acquired and techniques have been perfected, the materials with which dental prostheses are manufactured have varied. From primitive replacements with ivory and even natural human and animal teeth, to the most current and innovative materials.

And the most expensive

Dentadura Washington

A set of false teeth from the president of the United States George Washington (1732-99) is insured for ten million dollars. It is currently on display at Mount Vernon, Washington's former home, in Virginia. What was it made of? Made of hippopotamus ivory, among other materials. Modern historians suggest that George Washington lost his teeth at a young age due to the mercury oxide he took to treat diseases such as smallpox and malaria.

The most expensive false teeth sold at auction were the British Prime Minister's wartime dentures. Winston Churchill, which sold for $23,703.

That figure is triple the estimated price, and the bidder took it on July 29, 2010.

Churchill1

The most expensive individual tooth sold at auction, however, was one belonging to John Lennon, the ex-Beatle. On November 5, 2011, the Canadian dentist Michael Zuk He bought this molar for $36,857. Apparently, Lennon had given the tooth to his maid.

 56132909 Lennon Tooth


The news

These are the oldest (and also the most expensive) false teeth

was originally published in

Xataka Science

by
Sergio Parra

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Climbing 60 steps in less than a minute would indicate good heart health, according to this study

By portal-3

Subir 60 escalones en menos de un minuto indicaría una buena salud cardíaca, según este estudio

It has already been suggested to us in A study conducted with firefighters that men who can do 40 push-ups in a minute are 96 percent less likely to have cardiovascular disease than those who do fewer than 10.

Another new study from the University Hospital of A Coruña presented at 'EACVI – Best of Imaging 2020', a scientific congress of the European Society of Cardiology, indicates that Climbing four flights of stairs (60 steps) in less than a minute indicates good heart health.

Heart health

The study included 165 patients referred for exercise testing due to known or suspected coronary artery disease. Exercise capacity was measured as metabolic equivalents (MET).

Participants walked or ran on a treadmill, gradually increasing the intensity and continuing until exhaustion. After resting for 15 to 20 minutes, patients were asked to climb four flights of stairs (60 steps) at a fast pace without stopping, but also without running, and the time was recorded.

The researchers analyzed the relationship between the METs achieved during the exercise tests and the time it took to climb four flights of stairs.

Patients who climbed the stairs in less than 40-45 seconds achieved more than 9-10 METs. Previous studies have shown that 10 METs during an exercise test are related to a low mortality rate (1% or less per year, or 10% in 10 years). However, patients who took 1.5 minutes or more to climb the stairs achieved fewer than 8 METs, which translates to a mortality rate of 2 to 4 percent per year, or 30 percent over 10 years.


The news

Climbing 60 steps in less than a minute would indicate good heart health, according to this study

was originally published in

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by
Sergio Parra

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Collingridge's dilemma when facing technology

By portal-3

El dilema de Collingridge para enfrentarnos a la tecnología

Basically there are two ways to confront a new technology due to its sociological effects. Namely:

Regulate a technology when it is still young and little known and then still hides its unexpected or undesirable consequences; or choose to wait to see what these consequences are, although then we will lose control over its regulation.

David Collingridge Dilemma

This dimea was initially silvered by David Collingridge, an academic at Aston University in the United Kingdom, in 1980, through his book The Social Control of Technology:

When change is easy, its need cannot be anticipated; By the time the need for change is apparent, the change has already become expensive, difficult, and laborious.

As abounds in it Eugeny Morozov, visiting professor at Stanford University, in the book That explains everything (edited by John Brockman):

Collingridge's dilemma is one of the most elegant ways to explain many of the complex ethical and technological dilemmas (think drones or facial recognition systems) that plague our globalized world.

Another way of facing new technologies also has to do with our predisposition to new things, which is strongly linked to our age, as he satirically wrote Douglas Adams, author of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, in an article published in Sunday Times, August 29, 1999::

I imagine that previous generations had to put up with grumbling and huffing at the appearance of inventions such as television, the telephone, the cinema, the radio, the car, the bicycle, the printing press, the wheel, etc., but don't think that we have learned how the thing works, namely:

  1. Everything that is already in the world when you were born is normal.

  2. Everything that is invented between now and before you turn thirty is incredibly exciting and creative, and with a little luck, you can make a living from it.

  3. Everything that is invented after you have turned thirty goes against the natural order of things and is the beginning of the end of civilization as we know it, until it has been used for about ten years and slowly begins to considered normal.


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Collingridge's dilemma when facing technology

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From the first dentist to the first electric toothbrush

By portal-3

Del primer dentista al primer cepillo de dientes eléctrico

The history of dentistry spans more than 2500 years, from the appearance of the first dentists in history to, just one hundred years ago, the first electric toothbrush.

Below, the most important milestones of this journey of dental innovation.

Oral history

2600 BC C.: The first dentist. An inscription on the tomb of the doctor Hesy-Re includes the title "the greatest of those who treat with teeth."

1700-1500 BC C.: The first treatise on Dentistry. He Ebers papyrus It is the oldest known description of dental diseases and remedies for toothache.

700 BC C.: The first false teeth. The Etruscans, an ancient civilization that lived in the territory of modern-day Italy, made false teeth from the remains of humans and animals.

1530: The first book of Dentistry. Artzney Büchlein writes Little Medicinal Book for All Kinds of Diseases and Infirmities of the Teeth.

Original F057fdaddf4be35d50680b2488ac2f20

1780: The first toothbrush: William Addis, from the United Kingdom, makes the first modern toothbrush. He made the first prototype with bristles and pig bone while in prison for rioting.

Addis Brush 1024x622

1790: The first dentist's chair: Josiah Flagg, from the United States, builds the first chair designed for dental offices. The Wilkerson chair, the first hydraulic dentist's chair, appears in 1877.

1880: The first tube of toothpaste. Maxillofacial surgeon Washington Sheffield, from the United States, invented the folding metal tube.

D1ebf519f08542adf00b26d63ab131bf

1885: The first dental assistant. C. Edmund Kells, a prominent dentist in New Orleans, hired Malvina Cueria to help him in his work.

1896: The first dental x-ray. Kells also becomes the first dentist to take a dental radiograph (X-ray) of a living patient.

1927: The first electric toothbrush. The Electro Massage Toothbrush Company manufactures its first model; In 1961, cordless and rechargeable versions would follow.

Motodent Electric Toothbrush


The news

From the first dentist to the first electric toothbrush

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Sergio Parra

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This is the primate with the most fingers: it has twelve (and it is very ugly)

By portal-3

Este es el primate con más dedos: tiene doce (y es muy feo)

He Aye Aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis) is a nocturnal lemur endemic to Madagascar that has an additional pair of "pseudothumbs", which is why it has twelve fingers on its hands.

It was previously believed that they were fleshy protrusions, but deeper analysis has revealed that they are made up of bone and carilage.

This extra finger on each hand is the finger he uses to bore holes in rotten logs and extract larvae. So the ayeaye with too short fingers had a harder time surviving and reproducing..

In addition, the finger has other really striking functions, such as detecting its prey by drumming the trunk with it to capture the change in tone that reveals the presence of an insect inside.

Aye Aye 1

The results of the ayeaye study were published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology, on October 21, 2019.

And it's very ugly

This creature lives in Madagascar, and there it is hunted mercilessly simply because it looks demonic. The natives of Madagascar, then, consider that this animal is possessed by evil spirits and that its mere existence is a risk to the world: there is even the extravagant idea that if you point your third finger at a person, they will die suddenly shortly after. : your middle finger is substantially longer and thinner than the rest, Nosferatu style.

a

The ayeaye is a nocturnal animal, it feeds on larvae and its tail is usually longer than the rest of its body; It weighs two to three kilograms and can live up to 23 years.

So ugly and distorted is the ayeaye that the writer Douglas Adams He dedicated these nice words to him in Tomorrow they won't be, a travel book with the zoologist Mark Carwardine:

Aye Aye 2

It is a very strange-looking creature that seems to be composed of loose pieces of other animals. It looks a bit like a big cat with bat ears, beaver teeth, a tail resembling a large ostrich feather, a middle finger resembling a long dry branch, and a pair of enormous eyes that seem to look at a totally different world that lies ahead. behind our backs...


The news

This is the primate with the most fingers: it has twelve (and it is very ugly)

was originally published in

Xataka Science

by
Sergio Parra

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